19 September,2022 02:34 PM IST | Tokyo | Agencies
A woman makes her way through the strong wind and rain in Miyazaki Sunday. Pic/AP
A powerful typhoon slammed ashore in southern Japan on Sunday as it pounded the region with strong winds and heavy rain, causing blackouts, paralysing ground and air transportation and prompting the evacuation of thousands of people.
The Japan Meteorological Agency said Typhoon Nanmadol was heading north after making landfall in Kagoshima city on Japan's southern main island of Kyushu. It was packing maximum winds of 162 kilometers (101 miles) per hour, and is forecast to reach Tokyo on Tuesday. The weather agency predicted as much as 50 centimeters (20 inches) of rainfall by Monday evening. It also alerted residents urging them to evacuate early.
In Kagoshima, residents were told to stay in stable buildings on second floor or higher, if deemed a safer option than going to evacuation centres. More than 12,000 people took shelter at evacuation centres. In Miyazaki prefecture, about 8,000 people left their homes. Local officials said several people had been injured.
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Fiona strengthened into a hurricane on Sunday as it bore down on Puerto Rico, where people braced for severe wind and torrential rains. Forecasters said historic levels of rain could produce landslides and heavy flooding, with up to 25 inches in some areas.
A powerful storm sweeping north through the Bering Strait on Saturday caused widespread flooding in several western Alaska coastal communities, knocking out power and sending residents fleeing for higher ground. The force of the water moved some homes off their foundations, and one house in Nome floated down a river until it got caught at a bridge.
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