Big
earthquake hits Japan, sparking landslides
A
powerful typhoon killed 10 people in Japan and an airport company
transferred some 3000 stranded passengers by boats from a flooded
airport, the Japanese government says.
6
November, 2018
People
are missing, buildings have collapsed, and roads have buckled amid
widespread landslides sparked by a strong 6.6-magnitude earthquake
that has struck the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido.
The
quake struck 27 kilometres east of Tomakomai at a depth of 33.4km at
3.07am (6.07am NZT). No tsunami warning was issued from the inland
quake.
The
shaking continued for at least 30 seconds, witnesses said. The quake
was followed by three aftershocks, measuring up to magnitude 4.8.
At
least 20 people were missing and 48 injured, Japan's national
broadcaster NHK said.
There
were reports of at least one person was found without vital signs,
with people trapped in elevators, buildings and houses following the
tremors.
Soil
oversaturated by recent heavy rains had caused widespread landslips
during the M6.6 quake, covering many houses and blocking roads.
Hundreds
of rescuers from fire departments were combing many areas for
survivors and further people who could be trapped.
A
woman covers her face as she takes shelter on a road in Sapporo city
following the strong earthquake.
Around
2.95 million households in regional capital Sapporo were without
power.
Walls
had collapsed at New Chitose airport - the country's fifth busiest
for passengers - and all flights were cancelled. All Shinkansen
bullet train services in the area were suspended, as were Sapporo
subway services.
Shaking
from the quake early Thursday morning measured an "upper 6"
on the Japanese quake intensity scale of 7 in Abira in western
Hokkaido.
That
was the strongest shaking felt in Japan since powerful quakes struck
Kumamoto, in southern Japan, in 2016.
There
was no impact from the earthquake to Hokkaido Electric Power Co's
Tomari nuclear plant, which has been offline since 2012, Chief
Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told reporters.
NHK
later reported that external power to the plant had been cut off, but
emergency generators were working and there was no impact on the
storage of the plant's nuclear fuel.
Two
other nuclear power plants in northern Japan, Tohoku Electric Power
Co's Higashi-dori, which is also offline, and the under-construction
Oma plant, were also unaffected, NHK said.
Earlier
in the week, a powerful typhoon struck western Japan around Osaka,
killing at least 10 people.
In undertand that Dutchsinse predicted this
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