Disaster Japan hit by Typhoon Hagibis

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Death toll rising in Typhoon Hagibis aftermath

Emergency crews in Japan are searching for over a dozen people who are still missing after Typhoon Hagibis ravaged the nation over the weekend. Officials say the death toll stands at 58.
The storm caused about 200 rivers to overflow, including the Chikuma River in Nagano Prefecture, located north of Tokyo.
Levees burst on about 50 rivers, causing widespread flooding across the country. NHK has also learned that more than 10,000 houses were damaged.

Fukushima Prefecture in northeastern Japan suffered the highest number of casualties. At least 18 people died there.
Among them was a young boy and his mother who were found four kilometers apart. Another son is still missing.
Officials say many areas received up to 40 percent of their annual rainfall over a span of two days.
The heavy rain also caused about 140 landslides across the country. In Gunma Prefecture, four people were killed when their homes washed away.

The full extent of the damage is still being assessed.
Some industries have been hit hard, including apple farming in Nagano.
A train operator says 10 trains and their 120 carriages were damaged when water levels rose by an estimated four meters.
Authorities are urging people to remain cautious near swollen rivers and to be on alert for more landslides.


Japan typhoon death toll rises to 67 as hopes for missing fade
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe warns of prolonged economic impact from typhoon, which swept across country at the weekend.
an hour ago

A man pulls a wheelbarrow, in the aftermath of Typhoon Hagibis, in Koriyama, Fukushima prefecture, Japan October 15, 2019. REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun [Reuters]

A man pulls a wheelbarrow, in the aftermath of Typhoon Hagibis, in Koriyama, Fukushima prefecture, Japan October 15, 2019. REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun [Reuters]

The death toll in the worst typhoon to hit Japan for decades climbed to 67 on Tuesday as rescuers slogged through mud and debris in an increasingly grim search for the missing.
Thousands of homes remained without power or water.

National broadcaster NHK said 67 people were known to have died, after Typhoon Hagibis swept across central and eastern Japan. Some 15 people remain missing, while more than 200 were injured in the storm, whose name means "speed" in the Tagalog language.
About 138,000 households were without water while 24,000 had no electricity, well down on the hundreds of thousands who were initially left without power but a cause for concern in northern areas where temperatures are forecast to fall.

The highest toll was in Fukushima prefecture north of Tokyo, a largely agricultural area where the Abukuma River burst its banks in at least 14 places.

At least 18 people died in Fukushima, including a mother and her child who were caught in flood waters. The woman's son, who was also with her in the flood, remains missing.
Japan Hagibis

Typhoon-damaged cars on a mud-covered street in Hoyasu after Typhoon Hagibis swept through central and eastern Japan. [Jae C. Hong/AP Photo]

Survivors described how water rose rapidly to chest height in about an hour and mainly at night, making it hard to escape to higher ground. Many of the dead in Fukushima were elderly, NHK said.

"I couldn't believe it, the water came up so fast," one man in Fukushima told the broadcaster.

Major highways remained closed in Koriyama city in Fukushima prefecture as people began returning to work after the storm and a long weekend. Children in uniforms walked to school and while some stores remained closed, others were open.

Around the nation, manufacturers took stock. Electronics maker Panasonic Corp said flooding had damaged its factory in a large industrial park in Koriyama.

Carmakers Nissan, Honda and Subaru said there was no major damage to their factories, while Toyota said all its plants were operating normally.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe warned that the economic impact could be prolonged.
"The national government will continue to do everything possible so that the victims of this disaster can return to their normal lives as soon as possible," Abe told a parliamentary committee.
Finance Minister Taro Aso said there was 500 billion yen ($4.6 billion) in reserves for disaster recovery and more money would be considered if needed.

Thousands of police, fire officials and military personnel continued to search for people who may have been cut off by floodwaters and landslides, with hope diminishing that the missing would be found alive.

Though the threat of rain is expected to ease on Tuesday, temperatures are likely to drop in many areas later this week, in some cases to unseasonably low levels, NHK said.
Japan Hagibis cars

Partially submerged cars near the Chikuma River in Nagano Prefecture after Typhoon Hagibis triggered widespread floods. [Soe Zeya Tun/Reuters]
 
That is one kick ass storm. I hope our Japanese friends stay safe and dry. It's reminiscent of the great Typhoon of 1945. After the end of WW2 and Japans surrender the US Navy Pacific Fleet was shuttling troops home as part of Operation Magic Carpet. A huge chunk of the fleet got caught in a massive Typhoon near Japan. The storm did more damage to the US ships than the Japanese Navy had in the last 2 years of the War. Sunk a few destroyers. Badly Mauled several of the Carriers and caused multiple deaths.
 
Japan's national helplessness before the various forces of nature - earthquakes, tsunamis, typhoons - really puts the Kaiju thing into proper perspective.
 
That is one kick ass storm. I hope our Japanese friends stay safe and dry. It's reminiscent of the great Typhoon of 1945. After the end of WW2 and Japans surrender the US Navy Pacific Fleet was shuttling troops home as part of Operation Magic Carpet. A huge chunk of the fleet got caught in a massive Typhoon near Japan. The storm did more damage to the US ships than the Japanese Navy had in the last 2 years of the War. Sunk a few destroyers. Badly Mauled several of the Carriers and caused multiple deaths.
Yes, it's a good thing that the atomic bomb prevented Operation Downfall from going forward, that typhoon probably would have plowed straight through the invasion fleet.
 
Japan's national helplessness before the various forces of nature - earthquakes, tsunamis, typhoons - really puts the Kaiju thing into proper perspective.

They could almost be Californian's the way Nature and the Earth itself mocks them.
 
Japan's national helplessness before the various forces of nature - earthquakes, tsunamis, typhoons - really puts the Kaiju thing into proper perspective.
They could almost be Californian's the way Nature and the Earth itself mocks them.
Yet somehow they don't blackout around 0.8mil people to avoid wildfire hazards. Seems to be the Japs will be alright. They'll probably finish cleaning everything up by the end of next week.
 
I didn't hear the Japanese complaining when hurricanes annihilated the Mongols trying to invade them in the 13th century
 
I'm impressed how in every photo of the aftermath, there's no food garbage stuck to anything. In America, every photo would have a whole pile of chip wrappers, soda bottles, fast food cups, burger wrappers, etc...
 
Yes, it's a good thing that the atomic bomb prevented Operation Downfall from going forward, that typhoon probably would have plowed straight through the invasion fleet.
A third divine wind? Jeez, if they had thought that Providence was on their side before, then just imagine that aftermath of that...
>inb4 a massive Cat 6 Hurricane forms out of nowhere and hits the Chinese invasion fleet during WW3
 
A third divine wind? Jeez, if they had thought that Providence was on their side before, then just imagine that aftermath of that...
>inb4 a massive Cat 6 Hurricane forms out of nowhere and hits the Chinese invasion fleet during WW3
Maybe the strong winds would have even blown the radioactive fallout from the planned atomic bombings of the beachheads back into the direction of the fleet.
 
I don't know whether to blame it on advances in architecture and technology or the just the global population being what it is, but I'm always underwhelmed by natural disaster death tolls.

Like c'mon nature, you can do better than that. A few dozen people, some millions in property damage? Weak.
 
I don't know whether to blame it on advances in architecture and technology or the just the global population being what it is, but I'm always underwhelmed by natural disaster death tolls.

Like c'mon nature, you can do better than that. A few dozen people, some millions in property damage? Weak.
Problem is the real bad storms either kill thousands of people or do billions in damage. Never both. This is because they only kill thousands of people in shithole countries like Honduras or Haiti which don't have billions of dollars worth of property to damage.
 
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