Typhoon forces evacuation of 500,000 in Japan

Published August 10, 2014
Kochi: A landslide threatens a group of houses after heavy rains caused by Typhoon Halong on Saturday. Japan’s weather agency issued its highest alert as Typhoon Halong barrelled towards south-western Japan, warning of heavy rains and strong winds.—AFP
Kochi: A landslide threatens a group of houses after heavy rains caused by Typhoon Halong on Saturday. Japan’s weather agency issued its highest alert as Typhoon Halong barrelled towards south-western Japan, warning of heavy rains and strong winds.—AFP

TOKYO: A typhoon lashed Japan on Saturday as the country headed into a holiday week, causing authorities to order the evacuation of half a million people living near swollen rivers and cancelling hundreds of flights.

Typhoon Halong also disrupted land traffic and injured at least six people as Japan began its annual “Obon” Buddhist holiday week. Japan’s Meteorological Agency issued a warning for heavy rain in Mie prefecture in central Japan, prompting two towns to order about 500,000 residents to evacuate due to a fear of flooding from swollen rivers.

The agency said heavy rain in the area would continue overnight. Strong winds left six people injured, one seriously, in Miyazaki prefecture in southern Japan.

A woman in her 70s broke her ankle as a portable toilet booth fell on her while she was walking by. More than 400 flights were canceled due to the storm, stranding thousands of holidaymakers at airports around the country.

Halong, packing winds of up to 180 kilometers per hour, was approaching the southwestern island of Shikoku late on Saturday.

The storm was expected to dump 70 centimeters of rain on Shikoku overnight, and 50-60 centimeters in western and central Japan, meteorological agency official Satoshi Ebihara said at a news conference. He warned of landslides and floods in those areas.

The agency predicted heavy rain in Tokyo on Sunday, though the storm was expected to veer off to the Sea of Japan before hitting the capital. “It’s an abnormal situation that poses a serious danger,” Ebihara said, urging residents in affected areas to follow local authorities’ instructions for safe evacuation.

Published in Dawn, August 10th, 2014

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