'Worst
in decades': 11 dead, 1,200 injured in Japan snowstorm (PHOTOS,
VIDEO)
Local
media now report that at least eleven people have been killed in
snow-linked accidents – mostly caused by drivers crashing after
losing control on the icy roads. In central Aichi prefecture, a
50-year-old man died after his car lost traction and slammed into a
billboard, AFP reports, citing a local rescuer.
Meanwhile,
the Tokyo Electric Power Company said that as of 6 am local time,
more than 20,000 households in Ibaraki and Chiba prefecture were
without power, the Japanese public broadcaster reports. The heavy
snowfall and wind are believed to have caused the power outages.
The
massive snowstorms come as the Tokyo gubernatorial election commenced
on Sunday. The former governor, Naoki Inose, was forced to resign in
December over a political funds related scandal.
The hotly contested race could be damped by the weather, however, with observers saying heavy snowfall could affect turnout in the city of 13 million people.
The
heaviest snowstorm in nearly half a century in Tokyo and other areas
of Japan has caused a rash of snow-linked accidents, resulting in
nearly a dozen deaths and injuring more than a thousand people.
RT,
9
February, 2014
Watch more
pictures from snow-stricken Japan in RT's Galleries
Up
to 27 centimeters (10.6 inches) of snow was recorded in Tokyo by late
Saturday, the heaviest fall in the capital for 45 years, according to
meteorologists.
Approximately
35 centimeters (13.8 inches) of snow was dumped on the northeastern
city of Sendai as a depression moved along the Pacific coast on
Saturday, resulting in the heaviest snowfall in 78 years. Fukushima
was also blanketed in 44 centimeters (17.3 inches of snow.)
A jetliner of Japan's All Nippon
Airways (ANA) taxis at Tokyo's Haneda airport covered by the snow on
February 8, 2014 (AFP Photo / Kazuhiro Nogi)
NHK
reported at least 1,253 people have been injured nationwide, many of
whom slipped and fell while shoveling the snow off their roofs.
A woman walks in a park near the
Imperial Palace as snow falls in Tokyo February 8, 2014 (Reuters /
Toru Hanai)
The
inclement weather has also disrupted air travelers, with over 200
domestic flights being canceled on Sunday. Around 5,000 travelers
flying internationally were forced to spend the night in Tokyo Narita
Airport because of the weather. Train services in the capital were
also disrupted.
Weather
officials say that more snow, strong winds and high waves are
expected on Sunday.
Visitors take photos at the Imperial
Palace as snow falls in Tokyo February 8, 2014 (Reuters / Toru
Hanai)
Major
candidates include former Prime Minister Morihiro Hosokawa, former
health minister Yoichi Masuzoe, former Air Self-Defense Force chief
Toshio Tamogami, and Kenji Utsunomiya, former head of the Japan
Federation of Bar Associations, Kyodo News Reports.
Octogenarian
inventor, Yoshiro Nakamatsu, is also running for the governor's post
for the seventh time, along with Kazuma Ieiri, a 35-year-old company
executive who is crowd sourcing policy ideas from citizens.
The hotly contested race could be damped by the weather, however, with observers saying heavy snowfall could affect turnout in the city of 13 million people.
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