Firefighters
search for missing victims after Typhoon Lionrock made landfall in Iwaizumi,
Iwate prefecture on September 2, 2016
|
The death toll from a
devastating typhoon in northern Japan rose to 14, officials said Friday, as
another powerful storm approached the country's south.
AFP
report continues:
Two
bodies were found separately near rivers on the island of Hokkaido, a police
spokesman told AFP.
On
Thursday evening, police also found a body near a flooded river in the hard hit
town of Iwaizumi in the northern part of Honshu Island, public broadcaster NHK
said.
Typhoon
Lionrock, which packed wind gusts of over 160 kilometres (100 miles) an hour
landed on Japan's northern Pacific coast on Tuesday evening, dumping torrential
rain over a wide area.
Overflowing
rivers wreaked havoc, stranding many communities in the country's largely
agricultural north.
Iwaizumi
was the hardest hit, with 12 people dying in the town, including nine who were
buried inside a building of an elderly care facility.
As
of Friday morning, more than 1,000 people were still cut off in isolated
communities in Iwate prefecture, which includes Iwaizumi, the prefectural
government said.
Lionrock
was the third typhon to strike Japan's northeast in about 10 days, the previous
two causing at least two deaths.
Japan
faced another strong typhoon, Namtheun, which was heading north toward the
southern main island of Kyushu with gusts of up to 180 kilometres per hour,
according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.
Namtheun
was on track to pass near the small subtropical island of Amami, which lies
between Okinawa and Kyushu, on Saturday, the agency said.
In 2013, a powerful typhoon that triggered massive landslides on Oshima island, 120 kilometres (75 miles) south of Tokyo, killed 40 people, while 82 died after a typhoon hit Japan in 2011.
No comments:
Post a Comment