Typhoon
Jebi sent a tanker crashing into the only access road to Kansai International
Airport
|
Japan scrambled Wednesday
to evacuate passengers trapped at a major airport when a tanker slammed into
its only access bridge during the most powerful typhoon to hit the country for
25 years.
More
than 200-kilometre-an-hour winds caused havoc in the seas around Japan, sending
this ship crashing into a breakwater
|
AFP
report continues:
Typhoon
Jebi left a trail of destruction across the country, killing 11 people and
injuring hundreds more as it battered western Japan with ferocious winds and
lashing rain.
Winds
up to 216 kilometres (135 miles) per hour ripped off roofs, overturned trucks
and swept a 2,500-ton tanker into a bridge leading to Kansai International
Airport, the region's main international gateway and a national transport hub.
The
damage to the bridge left the artificial island housing the airport temporarily
cut off, stranding 3,000 travellers and staff overnight as high waves flooded
the runways and some buildings, knocking out the power.
On
Wednesday boats began ferrying people out of the airport, and buses began to run
on one side of the damaged bridge after safety inspections.
"There
were about 3,000 people stranded at the airport, but we think about 2,000 to
2,500 of them already got out. We think there are not many people left," a
transport ministry official told AFP.
Airport
spokeswoman Yurino Sanada told AFP: "We don't know how many hours we need
to bring everyone out but we're doing our best to finish it by the end of
today."
There
was no indication when the airport, which operates over 400 flights a day,
might reopen but local agency Kyodo News said it could take up to a week.
Rescued
passengers spoke of their discomfort in sweltering post-typhoon temperatures of
around 30 degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit) on Wednesday.
"We
had a blackout so there was no air conditioning. It was hot," a woman told
public broadcaster NHK after being ferried to Kobe. "I'd never expected
this amount of damage from a typhoon."
"I
couldn't sleep, but I'm relieved because I thought I might not be able to get
out," another woman told the station.
-
'Industrial heartland' -
Typhoon
Jebi made landfall at midday on Tuesday and moved quickly over the mainland,
smashing through the major manufacturing area around Osaka -- Japan's second
city -- wrecking infrastructure and destroying homes.
Government
spokesman Yoshihide Suga said 11 people had been killed and 470 injured.
According to Kansai Electric, more than 400,000 households were still without
power.
In
the tourist magnet of Kyoto -- home to ancient temples and shrines -- it
brought down part of the ceiling of the main railway station. In nearby Osaka,
the high winds peeled scaffolding from a multi-storey building.
Businesses,
factories and schools in the affected area shut down while the storm barrelled
across the country, forcing the cancellation of hundreds of flights, ferry
services and some bullet trains.
Pictures
showed containers piled up like dominos and vehicles thrown together by the
wind, with others overturned.
More
than 1.2 million people had been advised to leave their homes as Jebi
approached the Kansai area -- Japan's industrial heartland -- although it was
unclear how many had heeded the warning. Around 16,000 people spent the night
in shelters, local media said.
Economists
said it was too early to gauge the storm's impact on local industry, with much
depending on how long the airport remained closed.
Around
10 percent of Japan's exports leave from Kansai airport, said Yusuke Ichikawa,
senior economist at Mizuho Research Institute.
"Logistics
could be affected as it may take time for Kansai airport to restart
operations," he told AFP.
But
with other airports and ports nearby, companies might be able to reroute
shipments to minimise disruption, he added.
-
'Utmost efforts' -
Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe, tweeting on his official account, said the government was
battling to get the airport back online.
"We
continue to make utmost efforts to respond to disaster damage and restore
infrastructure," he said.
Japan
is regularly hit by powerful typhoons in the summer and autumn, many of which
cause flooding and landslides in rural areas.
And
Jebi was far from the deadliest Japan has seen in recent years.
In
2011 Typhoon Talas killed 82 people in the area, while in 2013 a storm that
struck south of Tokyo left 40 people dead.
Earlier this year, torrential rains lashed the west of the country, sparking flooding that killed more than 200 people as it laid waste to villages and caused hillsides to collapse.
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