2019年10月13日日曜日

Bullet trains are submerged Sunday at their base in Akanuma, Nagano Prefecture, after the the Chikuma River overflowed due to Typhoon Hagibis.  Photo: KYODO
National

33 dead, 19 missing, over 100 injured after typhoon rips through Japan

38 Comments

Japan ramped up rescue efforts on Sunday for survivors of a typhoon that brought record-breaking amounts of rain, flooding huge swaths of residential districts and leaving at least 33 dead.
A day after Typhoon Hagibis lashed Tokyo and other areas in central, eastern and northeastern regions, 19 people are still missing, according to a Kyodo News tally based on information provided by rescuers and other authorities.
Some 27,000 members of the Self-Defense Forces have been dispatched to those regions, including Nagano, where they tried to rescue about 360 people who were stranded after an embankment of the Chikuma River collapsed, with the land ministry warning of the possibility of floodwaters up to 5 meters deep.
As the collapse was confirmed by around 3 p.m. and many were asleep at the time, the death toll could increase.
Ten rows of bullet trains parked at East Japan Railway Co's railyard near Nagano Station, countless facilities and houses in the city and elsewhere were inundated by muddy water.
naganoflod.jpg
Houses in Nagano are submerged Sunday after the Chikuma River overflowed due to Typhoon Hagibis.  Photo: KYODO
Rescuers used helicopters and boats to save stranded residents from their flooded homes, as some called for help from second-floor balconies.
But a 77-year-old woman in Iwaki, Fukushima Prefecture, died as rescuers of the Tokyo Fire Department, trying to save her by helicopter, dropped her to the ground from an altitude of about 40 meters as they failed to attach a hanger to the harness that she was in, it said.
As of 4 p.m., embankments of 21 rivers in Japan had collapsed, according to the infrastructure ministry.
"Water suddenly came from under the floor," said Shogo Kasama, 72, who protected himself by standing on a table after his house in Marumori, Miyagi Prefecture, was inundated up to two meters.
"I couldn't sleep at all," Kasama said, adding his 92-year-old bedridden mother managed to keep alive as her bed floated on the water. "The flood cut off roads and I can't even take her to hospital."
The government held a meeting of its major disaster management headquarters, during which Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said, "People's lives should come first and foremost. Utmost efforts should be made to rescue people from inundated houses and look for people whose whereabouts are unknown."
"Over 110,000 police officers, firefighters, coast guard officials and SDF personnel are currently engaged in rescue operations," Abe said. "I ask the people of Japan to remain vigilant against landslides and flooding rivers."
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A man looks out from an apartment with the first floor flooded from heavy rains due to Typhoon Hagibis, near the Tama River in Kawasaki, on Sunday.  Photo: REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
More than 6 million people across Japan's main island of Honshu were advised to evacuate, with train operators suspending most services and airports shut down in the metropolitan and surrounding areas between Saturday afternoon and early Sunday.
While evacuation advisories had been lifted by early Sunday in Tokyo and most of central and eastern Japan, the infrastructure ministry said at least 56 landslides and mudflows have been reported in 15 prefectures.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a press conference in the morning that 376,000 homes were without electricity and 14,000 had no running water after Typhoon Hagibis, meaning "swift" in the Philippine language Tagalog, made landfall on Japan's main island of Honshu before 7 p.m. on Saturday.
The typhoon, which also injured at least 100 people, weakened to an extratropical cyclone off Japan's northeastern coast Sunday afternoon.
Most train services resumed operations following large-scale suspensions, while Japan Airlines and All Nippon Airways officials said most of their flights are expected to return to normal on Monday.
The Japan Meteorological Agency had issued the highest downpour warning on its one-to-five scale for Tokyo and the prefectures of Gunma, Saitama, Kanagawa, Yamanashi, Nagano, Shizuoka, Niigata, Fukushima, Tochigi, Ibaraki, Miyagi and Iwate.
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A playground is submerged near Kitasenju in Tokyo's Adachi Ward on Sunday.  Photo: MASA
As an emergency measure, some dams released water to avoid them bursting.
A tornado hit parts of Ichihara, Chiba Prefecture on Saturday, destroying 12 houses and damaging more than 70 others.
Local officials said a man in his 50s was found dead in an overturned car.
In Gunma Prefecture, four people died after houses were swept away by a landslide, police said. In Kawasaki, southwest of Tokyo, a man in his 60s was found in an inundated apartment and confirmed dead at a hospital.
© KYODO

38 Comments Login to comment

I express heartful sympathy to everybody who suffered by the typhoon.
19+19 / -0 )

Seeing those Nagano Shinkansen trains sitting in the water is unbelievable...
15+16 / -1 )

tornado
Not a tornado, it is a typhoon.
-32+4 / -36 )

The tornado was part of the overall typhoon.
Anyway, hope everyone is ok this morning and didn't suffer any damages.
14+16 / -2 )

Not a tornado, it is a typhoon.
Tornados are sometimes spawned due to typhoons.
13+15 / -2 )

gogogo
There was the tornado in Chiba...
17+17 / -0 )

.
@ vanityofvanities
I concur.
.
The pervasive concentrated stillness after one of these typhoons always gives me a bit of an eerie feeling.
The photo above capture it well.
.
3+3 / -0 )

Widespread flooding in Nagano now. Very heavy rain throughout yesterday, Karuizawa got over 310mm!
4+4 / -0 )

@semperfi
Yeah, as if nothing has happened. Nature's poker face, I'd guess.
0+0 / -0 )

“The Japan Meteorological Agency had issued the highest warning on its one-to-five scale for Tokyo and the prefectures of Gunma, Saitama, Kanagawa, Yamanashi, Nagano, Shizuoka, Niigata and Fukushima.”
That’s only a partial list. The level five warning was also issued for Ibaraki, Tochigi, Miyagi and Iwate Prefectures.
6+6 / -0 )

What does it take to be a real disaster?! There is two known dead, 11 missing, entire neighborhoods flooded, god knows how much damage. Let’s see once it’s over what the real death toll is. I bet it’s more than 11. It may not be 1000 but that’s only because of disaster preparedness and better technology to help stop major incidents from occurring.
4+4 / -0 )

I am sad for the people who died and suffered in this natural disaster. Stay safe everyone.
7+8 / -1 )

Some very serious damage and loss of life.
10+11 / -1 )

Latest figures are nine confirmed deaths and 22 missing. Some areas isolated and situation unconfirmed. Just saw a house collapse into the river in Nagano early this morning.
Ground conditions unstable in many areas.
4+4 / -0 )

Not a tornado, it is a typhoon
I see that tornadoes are more damaging than typhoons. Cars thrown 100 meters.
1+2 / -1 )

As powerful and dangerous as the 1958 typhoon, maybe fewer deaths thanks to better infrastructure and better preparations? Certainly an experience I wouldn’t like to repeat, and we came out of it more or less unscathed. I feel really sorry for those who lost their lives or loved ones, all the people who have been flooded out of their homes.
11+15 / -4 )

Terrible as it is, I wish the media would say how it is the worst typhoon to hit mainland Japan in sixty years, as Okinawa, notably Miyako island has had stronger ones pummel it, even last year Number 24 in terms of winds was stronger.
Stay safe in flooded areas, keep away from steep inclines etc.
10+10 / -0 )

What I saw from the video on TV it sure looked like a tornado. Sad for the folks downstream when the rivers crested. Why only 1 helicopter doing all the rescue? Is this what the new Minister of Environment meant by "cute and sexy" hmmm...
2+6 / -4 )

My heart breaks for you from over sea. Is there a donation fund set up? I would like to help.
2+3 / -1 )

Anyway, soon get things cleared up, and running again.
1+2 / -1 )

people be safe. prayers and love form Malaysia.
2+4 / -2 )

Honestly I didn’t even really notice anything in my area, Itabashi-Ku. Which is weird because my home is within 1km from the Arakawa River. I’ve been through many typhoons over the past 15 years here and this, at least in my area, seemed minuscule.
No power outages, just stayed home all day watching Netflix like any normal rainy day. No toppled trees, no damage to my apartment, nothing.
I guess other areas were not as fortunate.
4+5 / -1 )

This was a bad boy typhoon!
3+4 / -1 )

Sincere condolences to the tragic loss to families loved ones.
0+1 / -1 )

This is terrible. My thoughts are with the people of Japan today.
3+3 / -0 )

In terms of climate and natural disasters, Japan has it hard. There may have been a few disappointed rugby fans in Japan this weekend, but they will not forget the typhoon.
1+2 / -1 )

I was just looking at the picture of the trains in the pool of water, I don't think that these will be running soon as the trains electric motors could be saturated with water, I suspect that they will all have to be inspected before oppositions can resume, the financial loss for people and companies is going to be high. and the clean up has not started yet.
0+1 / -1 )

The toll of dead and missing continues to climb. More and more instances of rivers having overflowed their banks or broken levees have come to light. People are struggling to shovel the heavy wet fine mud from their homes. Many are without transportation as their cars were flooded/washed away. Many have no power.
5+5 / -0 )

Someone wrote in...just prior to Hagibis hitting Japan. "That Japan was so "overreacting" in their preparations! After the last two years....BETTER SAFE than SORRY. I tell my friends who come to Japan!!! If they warn you here! Pay attention!!! It might not be so bad....but it very well might be!!!! And flood waters are much much more deadly than 99% of people know!!! The energy water carries is absolutely mind boggling! I learned a lot about them last year!
3+3 / -0 )

The scenes of whole communities of houses one-floor or more deep in river water make me want to weep. The scale of the damage is mind-boggling; large swathes of central, eastern and northern Japan.
The cleanup will be back-breaking and heart-breaking.
3+4 / -1 )

The best laid plans o' mice an' men
Gang aft a-gley
In the face of Mother Nature
0+0 / -0 )

I’ve always been worried about the stability of those levy banks. I live near a large river with similar levies although, I don’t live in flats. Many of the flat areas are below the level of the river. They are definitely a disaster waiting to happen (as it has done).
this typhoon really stretched Japan’s safety measures. It also showed the flaws.
0+0 / -0 )

Gogogo, there was a tornado in Chiba as well as.
0+0 / -0 )

Doesn't Japan Today know a little more about these deaths? e.g. emergency services, deaths at sea, building collapses, rivers. Death tolls in modern countries usually some general details.
-2+0 / -2 )

Thanks to the Canadian rugby team for helping clear up the mud on the roads!
5+5 / -0 )

Abe's words are like whispers in the wind. Meaningless. He could show some mettle and lower the tax rate back to 8% or less. People need every penny after this, and the long term effects have yet to come.
0+1 / -1 )

"I ask the people of Japan to remain vigilant against landslides and flooding rivers."
And the winner of the most pointless public statement by a rich man who has never spent a moment in danger his whole life goes to...
-1+1 / -2 )

Apart from the sad cost to life, another cost has yet to be reckoned - namely that upon Japan's ability to produce food to feed the Nation. What assessment has been carried out yet of the impact of the Storm to that ? Perhaps, the Government may consider as a consequence, that funding better safeguards in food producing areas to enhance food security is worth more than buying a new Stealth fighter from the US ?
Within Central Tokyo...
Little damage, and no flooding. Though, Shelves in the local Supermarkets were almost bare again today. Supply chains presumably will take some time to recover, which may explain in part , the panic buying by locals.
0+0 / -0 )

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