Typhoon Halong is lashing Japan as it enters a holiday week, Killing One and injuring 33 people and causing authorities to order the evacuation of half a million people.
Tokyo, Japan:
A weakened typhoon slammed into Japan early Sunday, leaving one person dead, more than 30 injured and prompting evacuation alerts for some 1.1 million residents near swollen rivers.
Tropical Storm Halong disrupted land and air traffic just as Japan began its annual "Obon" Buddhist holiday week.
The storm slowed down as it made two landfalls - over Shikoku Island and Hyogo prefecture in western Japan - and was on track to move out into the Sea of Japan later Sunday. It was forecast to further lose strength in the next 12 hours.
Japan's Meteorological Agency issued the highest alert for heavy rain in Mie prefecture in central Japan, prompting two towns to order more than 500,000 residents to move away from swollen rivers. Another 600,000 people were advised to evacuate across the country.
In Iwate, northern Japan, a 78-year-old man was found dead late Saturday after plunging into a swollen irrigation canal at his farm. In Miyazai, southern Japan, a woman in her 70s broke her ankle as a portable toilet booth fell on her while she was walking by.
Japan's public television NHK said 33 people were injured.
More than 200 flights were canceled, stranding thousands of holidaymakers at airports around the country.
The storm, packing winds of up to 100 kilometers (60 miles) per hour, was expected to dump 30 centimeters (12 inches) of rain in central Japan by Monday morning. The meteorological agency warned of landslides and floods.
The agency also predicted heavy rain in Tokyo and northern Japan on Sunday.
Tropical Storm Halong disrupted land and air traffic just as Japan began its annual "Obon" Buddhist holiday week.
The storm slowed down as it made two landfalls - over Shikoku Island and Hyogo prefecture in western Japan - and was on track to move out into the Sea of Japan later Sunday. It was forecast to further lose strength in the next 12 hours.
Japan's Meteorological Agency issued the highest alert for heavy rain in Mie prefecture in central Japan, prompting two towns to order more than 500,000 residents to move away from swollen rivers. Another 600,000 people were advised to evacuate across the country.
In Iwate, northern Japan, a 78-year-old man was found dead late Saturday after plunging into a swollen irrigation canal at his farm. In Miyazai, southern Japan, a woman in her 70s broke her ankle as a portable toilet booth fell on her while she was walking by.
Japan's public television NHK said 33 people were injured.
More than 200 flights were canceled, stranding thousands of holidaymakers at airports around the country.
The storm, packing winds of up to 100 kilometers (60 miles) per hour, was expected to dump 30 centimeters (12 inches) of rain in central Japan by Monday morning. The meteorological agency warned of landslides and floods.
The agency also predicted heavy rain in Tokyo and northern Japan on Sunday.
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