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Biggest Typhoon in 60 yrs, Japs already killed before landing! Hagibis DK MAX!

Tony Tan

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https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asia/japan-typhoon-hagibis-blackouts-evacuations-11994142

One dead as 'unprecedented' Typhoon Hagibis nears Japan
Surging waves hit against the breakwater and a lighthouse as Typhoon Hagibis approaches at a port in the town of Kiho, Mie prefecture, central Japan on Oct 12, 2019. (Photo: AP/Toru Hanai)
12 Oct 2019 10:11AM(Updated: 12 Oct 2019 05:17PM)
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TOKYO: Powerful Typhoon Hagibis roared towards Japan's coast on Saturday (Oct 12), killing one person and bringing "unprecedented" downpours that prompted authorities to issue their highest-level rain disaster warning.
More than 3.2 million people have been placed under non-compulsory evacuation orders as authorities warn of imminent flood and landslide danger after hours of torrential rains.

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READ: Japan's capital braces for what could be worst typhoon in 60 years

Typhoon Hagibis hits the Tokyo region just weeks after another powerful storm that killed two people. (Photo: AFP/Kazuhiro Nogi)

Even before making landfall, Hagibis has caused enormous disruption, forcing the cancellation of two Rugby World Cup matches, delaying the Japanese Grand Prix and grounding all flights in the Tokyo region.
It is forecast to crash into land in central or eastern Japan early Saturday evening, packing maximum gusts of 216kmh, Japan's Meteorological Agency (JMA) said.

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But hours before the worst of the storm arrived, its outer bands claimed a first casualty in Chiba, east of Tokyo, which was also badly hit by a powerful typhoon last month.
"A 49-year-old man was found in a toppled mini truck. He was sent to hospital but confirmed dead," Hiroki Yashiro, a spokesman at Ichihara Fire Department, in Chiba, told AFP.

Pedestrians hold onto their umbrellas as rain falls amid strong winds in Tokyo
Pedestrians hold onto their umbrellas as rain falls amid strong winds in Tokyo on Oct 12, 2019, ahead of Typhoon Hagibis' expected landfall in central or eastern Japan later in the evening. (Photo: AFP/Kazuhiro Nogi)

Hours of torrential rain prompted the JMA to issue their highest-level emergency rain warning for heavy rain for parts of Tokyo and surrounding areas.
"Unprecedented heavy rain has been seen in cities, towns and villages for which the emergency warning was issued," JMA forecaster Yasushi Kajiwara said at a press briefing.
"The possibility is extremely high that disasters such as landslides and floods have already occurred. It is important to take action that can help save your lives."

michiyo ishida@MichiyoCNA

https://twitter.com/MichiyoCNA/status/1182893165499437056

West exit of Shinjuku is closed as it prepares for #TyphoonHagibis None of the departments stores are open. This is at 2 pm on a Saturday.

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At least one landslide was already confirmed, engulfing three homes in Sagamihara, southwest of Tokyo, where an elderly man was rescued.
Hagibis is forecast to be the first storm rated "very strong" to hit the main island of Honshu since 1991, when the category system was introduced, local media said.
By early afternoon, 3.25 million people were under non-mandatory evacuation orders, and more than 13,500 people had moved to shelters, including some whose homes were damaged by a powerful typhoon that hit the region last month.
"I evacuated because my roof was ripped off by the other typhoon and rain came in. I'm so worried about my house," a 93-year-old man told national broadcaster NHK as he sheltered at a centre in Tateyama in Chiba east of Tokyo.
POWER OUTAGES
Hours before the storm neared land, its outer bands brought tornado-like gusts of wind to Chiba, east of Tokyo, where one home was destroyed and several damaged.
Five people including a three-year-old boy were sent to hospital, but none suffered serious injuries, the local fire department told AFP.
READ: SIA, Scoot flights to Japan affected ahead of Typhoon Hagibis


A woman walks past empty shelves in a store in Tokyo on Oct 11, 2019
A woman walks past empty shelves in a store in Tokyo on Oct 11, 2019, as Typhoon Hagibis heads towards the city. (Photo: AFP/Franck Fife)

In Gotemba, west of Tokyo, the fire department said it had rescued one man who fell into a swollen canal but was still searching for a second man.
The JMA has forecast half a metre of rain for the Tokyo area in the 24 hours to midday on Sunday, with more for the central Tokai region, but many rivers were already close to breaching their banks by Saturday afternoon.
Thousands of homes in Tokyo and the surrounding areas lost power, though in some cases only briefly, with crews working to reconnect people as quickly as possible.
Automakers, including Toyota and Honda, have shut down their factories, and many supermarkets and convenience stores in the capital have closed, a day after residents shopping for typhoon supplies emptied the shelves.
RUGBY, F1 DISRUPTED
The storm has forced the delay of Japanese Grand Prix qualifiers scheduled for Saturday and the cancellation of two Rugby World Cup matches: England-France and New Zealand-Italy.

michiyo ishida@MichiyoCNA

https://twitter.com/MichiyoCNA/status/1182848332953051136

The busiest train station in Japan #Shinjuku is awfully quiet as trains are about to stop in Tokyo preparing for the powerful #TyphoonHagibis.

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READ: Rugby: Fans frustrated as typhoon disrupts World Cup
It could also jeopardise a key match-up between Scotland and Japan on Sunday. Officials are not expected to make a final decision on that game until Sunday morning, after they have assessed any damage to the venue and transport links.
Scotland face elimination if the match is axed and have warned they could take legal action if the game is cancelled. World Rugby called the threat "disappointing".
Japan is hit by around 20 typhoons a year, though the capital is not usually badly affected.
Hagibis is bearing down on the region just weeks after Typhoon Faxai hit the area with similar strength, killing two and causing major damage in Chiba.
Source: AFP
 

Tony Tan

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https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/e...ds-to-evacuate-as-powerful-typhoon-approaches
Typhoon Hagibis: 1 dead, millions told to flee in Japan; quake triggers fresh mudslide warning
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Men watching the swollen waters of the Isuzu River in Ise, central Japan, after heavy rainfall caused by Typhoon Hagibis, on Oct 12, 2019.
Men watching the swollen waters of the Isuzu River in Ise, central Japan, after heavy rainfall caused by Typhoon Hagibis, on Oct 12, 2019. PHOTO: REUTERS/KYODO
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Walter Sim
Japan Correspondent

TOKYO – Millions in central and eastern Japan have been advised to seek safety amid the relentless onslaught of violent Typhoon Hagibis, which made landfall on central Shizuoka prefecture around 7pm local time (6pm in Singapore) on Saturday (Oct 12).
A moderate earthquake with a magnitude of 5.7 also struck eastern Japan, off the coast of Chiba prefecture east of Tokyo at 6.21pm local time. There was no tsunami risk.
But the quake, which could be felt in central Tokyo, prompted the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) to double up on its warnings of potential mudslides in hilly areas where the soil has already been loosened by the torrential downpour.

This comes after the agency triggered its highest emergency heavy rain warning, on a five-level scale, at 3.30pm local time, covering parts of Tokyo, Kanagawa, Saitama, Gunma, Yamanashi, Shizuoka and Nagano prefectures.
The violent gusts have killed at least one person, a 50-year-old man whose mini truck was flipped over in Chiba prefecture, east of Tokyo.
A landslide in Tomioka in Gunma prefecture buried two houses, leaving at least three missing. Swelling river waters also left one missing in Gotemba in Shizuoka prefecture.


At least 36 others were injured, including several in western Japan prefectures of Osaka, Tokushima and Hyogo who were blown off their feet by gusts.

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The gusts also blew off the roofs of several homes in Saitama and Chiba prefectures, and toppled a lighthouse in Kochi prefecture in western Japan.
Some 57,000 homes were without power as at 6pm, mainly in the Greater Tokyo region, the world’s most populous metropolitan area. Telecommunications firm KDDI of mobile carrier au reported service disruptions in parts of Tokyo and Chiba prefectures.
The storm has brought unprecedented rainfall and mudslides to wide areas including the popular mountainous tourist spot Hakone, in Kanagawa prefecture, which was lashed with a record 800 millimetres of rain since Thursday.
It has triggered flooding and landslide warnings in wide areas, with several cities in central Japan’s Mie and Shizuoka prefectures already submerged as rivers burst their banks.

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Houses damaged by Typhoon Hagibis are seen in Ichihara, Chiba prefecture, on Oct 12, 2019. PHOTO: AFP/JIJI PRESS

Footage shown on public broadcaster NHK showed rising waters in Tokyo’s Meguro, Tama and Sumida rivers.
The Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) has said that Typhoon Hagibis, which means “speed” in Tagalog, may drench Japan with rainfall unseen since Typhoon Ida, or the Kanogawa Typhoon, in 1958. Tokyo had experienced a record 371.9mm precipitation over 24 hours in that storm, which had led to widespread flooding and landslides that killed 1,269 people.
In a file picture taken on Sept 9, 2019, a police officer is seen inspecting a utility pole that was downed by Typhoon Faxai in Kamakura, Japan.

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While Tokyo is much more developed today, it remains vulnerable to Typhoon Hagibis, which may pack maximum gusts up to 216kph and lash the capital with up to 500mm of rainfall. Coastal Japan may also encounter tsunami-like waves of above 10 metres, the JMA said.
Japanese weather site Tenki.jp said that the high-rise buildings in central Tokyo may lead to a concentration of winds between skyscrapers, creating “localised gusts” that could cause even more damage.
It also warned of flooding in underground spaces such as subway stations, walkways and parking lots.
The ferocity of Typhoon Hagibis has brought Tokyo to a virtual standstill, as a largely anxious public heeded the weatherman’s call to be on high alert.
As of Friday, shelves at many supermarkets and hardware stores were wiped out of supplies such as groceries, bottled water, batteries and gas cylinders.

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Empty shelves at a supermarket as people rushed to stock up in preparation for Typhoon Hagibis in Tokyo, Japan, on Oct 11, 2019. PHOTO: REUTERS

Nearly 2,000 domestic and international flights were grounded and train services have been completely halted as of Saturday afternoon, while several expressways have been closed.
Convenience store operator 7-Eleven said nearly 1,000 stores are closed on Saturday, while Family Mart has shut 700 outlets. Eateries including ubiquitous beef bowl chain Yoshinoya are shut, as are department stores like Isetan, Mitsukoshi and Takashimaya.
The typhoon has also forced the closure of the Tokyo Disney Resort in Chiba, as well as the Universal Studios Japan in Osaka. It has also forced two Rugby World Cup matches and a host of other events to be shelved, and disrupted the Japanese Grand Prix this weekend.

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An empty street is seen in Yokohama as people prepare for the arrival of Typhoon Hagibis, on Oct 12, 2019. PHOTO: REUTERS

Automakers such as Toyota, Honda and Nissan have shut their factories, as has beer manufacturer Sapporo.
Typhoon Hagibis, which may make landfall as a “super tyhoon”, comes a month after Typhoon Faxai lashed eastern Japan with what had been record-breaking winds. The impact was largely felt in Chiba prefecture, which damaged 34,275 buildings and left as many as 935,000 homes without power at one point.
Related Story
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Rugby: England v France, All Blacks v Italy World Cup games cancelled as Super Typhoon Hagibis nears Japan
Past official projections have shown that up to 30 per cent of Tokyo’s central 23 wards may be flooded in the event of a “super typhoon”.
For the Greater Tokyo region, the worst of Typhoon Hagibis will pass overnight as it heads north-east towards the Pacific Ocean. But train services are only set to resume late on Sunday morning at the earliest, for authorities to assess the damage of the storm.

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