Powerful
Typhoon Nangka has lashed Japan, killing at least two people and
triggering floods as authorities urged more than 230,000 residents to
evacuate.
The
storm was passing near Tottori prefecture in western Japan by Friday
noon, moving north at 15 kilometres per hour towards the Sea of Japan,
the country’s meteorological agency said.
Packing
gusts up to 126 kilometres per hour, Nangka barrelled over the nation’s
main island of Honshu after making landfall near Cape Muroto on Shikoku
island late on Thursday, the Reuters news agency reported.
Nangka,
Malaysian for jackfruit, paralysed traffic, grounding at least 94
domestic flights, as torrential rain and violent winds swept large areas
of western Japan, officials said.
Television
footage showed muddy water overflowing Naka river in Tokushima flooding
up to the second floor of nearby school buildings.
The weather agency has issued warnings for floods, gale-force winds, landslides and high waves in southern Japan.
Local authorities urged at least 230,000 people in the storm’s path to evacuate, according to Japan’s public broadcaster NHK.
A
71-year-old who was trying to reinforce window panes was found dead on
Thursday in Awaji island, Hyogo prefecture, a local official said,
adding that a few landslides had also been reported.
“Winds are getting weaker but rain remains quite heavy,” the official said.
“We are still asking our residents to stay on alert.”
An 85-year-old who had apparently gone out to check on farmland was found dead Thursday night in Shiso, also in Hyogo prefecture, another official said.
NHK said at least 39 people had been injured in the storm.
(Al-Jazeera)
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