Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Strong quake hits off coast of Japan

- Yuri Kageyama

TOKYO – A strong earthquake hit off the coast of northeaste­rn Japan late Saturday, shaking Fukushima, Miyagi and other areas, but there was no threat of a tsunami, officials said.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. said there were no irregulari­ties at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, which experience­d meltdowns following a massive quake and tsunami 10 years ago.

There were no immediate reports of irregulari­ties from other plants in the area, such as Onagawa or Fukushima Dai-ni, government spokespers­on Katsunobu Kato told reporters.

The Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency said the quake had a magnitude of 7.3, raising it from a preliminar­y magnitude of 7.1.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. said that some 860,000 homes were without power as a result of the quake, but electricit­y was gradually being restored, according to Kato.

Kato said there was no danger of a tsunami from the quake. He said that some trains in northeaste­rn Japan had stopped running, and that other damage was still being checked.

Video from public broadcaste­r NHK TV showed some pieces of a building wall had broken off and fallen to the ground, and pieces of glass were scattered at a store. Items fell off shelves because of the shaking, NHK said. NHK aerial footage showed a portion of a highway blocked by a landslide in Soma, a city in Fukushima prefecture.

The extent of damage from the landslide was not immediatel­y clear, Kato said.

The Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency said the quake was centered about 34 miles beneath the ocean.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga headed into his office immediatel­y after reports of the quake, and a crisis center was set up there. He said there were no reports of major injuries.

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