August
2015 – JAPAN– At
least 75 people have been injured and a 70-year-old man is missing
after a powerful typhoon wreaked havoc across southern Japan, causing
widespread disruptions to flights and train services, power outages
and the evacuation of more than 200,000 households. Japan Airlines
was forced to cancel about 130 flights and All Nippon Airways
canceled 100 flights, mainly to and from airports in Kyushu, while
some railway services, including bullet trains on the Kyushu and
Sanyo shinkansen lines, were suspended temporarily. Typhoon Goni made
landfall near Arao in Kumamoto Prefecture just after 6 a.m. Tuesday
and reached the ocean off Kitakyushu by 10 a.m., the Meteorological
Agency said.
Although
now moving away from the Japanese archipelago, the typhoon is
expected to bring heavy rain to western and eastern Japan through
Wednesday, the Japan Meteorological Agency said, warning of further
landslides and flooding. The 15th typhoon this year prompted the
agency to issue landslide warnings for Fukuoka, Saga, Oita and
Kagoshima prefectures on Kyushu, Tokushima Prefecture on the island
of Shikoku and Yamaguchi and Hiroshima prefectures on the Honshu
mainland. The city of Hiroshima, which experienced a deadly landslide
last August, issued an evacuation order to some 67,700 residents, the
first such order since last year’s нdisaster.
On
Tuesday, some 83,000 households in Fukuoka Prefecture were instructed
to evacuate, while evacuation advisories were issued to 22,000
households in Kumamoto, and 130,000 households in Shimonoseki,
Yamaguchi Prefecture. Power outages temporarily affected more than
470,000 households on Kyushu, according to Kyushu Electric Power Co.
Shigetoshi Morita, 70, who drove a truck carrying newspapers, went
missing in Kagoshima Prefecture. Police fear he may have been
involved in a landslide early in the morning and are searching for
him. More than 50 people were injured across Kyushu with other
injuries reported in western and central Japan. –Japan
Times
Ten
killed in the Philippines:
One of the twin typhoons in the Pacific has claimed its first
casualties, killing 10 people in the Philippines and forcing the
evacuation of almost 13,000 people, authorities said Saturday.
Typhoon Goni, known as Ineng in the archipelago country, delivered
its deadly blows in the islands’ Mountain Province, Benguet and
Ilocos Norte, authorities reported. Goni and Typhoon Atsani made for
a startling image in a satellite photograph this week. Goni unleashed
a load of havoc: nine floods, eight landslides, two tornadoes and a
collapsed bridge in the Philippines. At least three people remained
missing and at least seven people were injured, authorities there
said. As of Sunday morning, the storm had weakened slightly and had
86 mph sustained winds, with gusts of up to 106 mph.
The
eye of Goni was 164 miles northeast of the Philippines’ far-flung
northern province of Batanes and is projected to continue on its path
to clip Taiwan, according to Philippine authorities and the Pacific
Disaster Center. The only projected landfall for Goni is the Japanese
Ryuku Islands and Japan’s southern mainland, CNN meteorologist
Brandon Miller said. Meanwhile, Typhoon Atsani continue to twirl over
open waters in the Pacific at 92 mph winds and 115 mph gusts, but it
isn’t projected to strike any land, the Pacific Disaster Center
said Saturday.
Twin
typhoons are common in the western Pacific, occurring several times a
year, but two super typhoons at the same time would be rare event,
Miller said. Atsani was categorized earlier this week as a super
typhoon with winds of 155 mph gusting to 186 mph, but has since been
downgraded to a typhoon, according to the Pacific Disaster Center.
–CNN
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