Typhoon Hagibis makes at least 26 dead

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(Tokyo) At least 26 people were killed, according to Japanese media, by the devastating typhoon Hagibis while 110,000 rescuers were preparing Sunday night to spend the night to help the people trapped by the many floods.


Miwa SUZUKI
France Media Agency

Submerged houses, landslides, furying streams: the record-heavy rainstorm has wreaked havoc across central and eastern Japan on Saturday night.

Residents were buried in landslides, drowned in their homes or in their water-washed vehicles, including a child whose body was found in a river.

PHOTO YOHEI KANASASHI, ASSOCIATED PRESS

Rescuers were called in Tomioka, north of Tokyo, where a landslide occurred after the typhoon Hagibis.

On Sunday night, the NHK public broadcaster and the Kyodo news agency both reported 26 deaths and at least 18 were missing. The government counted 14 dead, 11 missing and 187 wounded.

Significant flooding still affected the central Nagano region, where a dike dropped, spilling the waters of the Chikuma River into a residential area whose homes were flooded to the first floor.

PHOTO KYODO, REUTERS

View of Nagano,

"Currently 110,000 police, firefighters, coast guards and Self-Defense Forces soldiers are doing their best in search and rescue operations and this should continue all night," said Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Among them, 31,000 soldiers equipped with 130 aircraft. Images of the NHK showed one of their helicopters hauling residents from the rooftops in the Nagano area.

A septuagenarian, who was trying to hoist in a helicopter in Iwaki in the Fukushima region (north-west), made a fatal fall of 40 meters, told AFP a spokesman for the Tokyo Fire Department.

In Kawagoe (north-west of Tokyo), rescuers were evacuating elderly people in wheelchairs, some still wheelchair-bound, whose retirement home was surrounded by floods, AFP reported.

PHOTO STRINGER VIA AFP

View of Kawagoe

" Where to start ? "

Some four million people were still affected by evacuation instructions late Sunday afternoon. More than 135,000 had followed these non-binding notices and were in shelters.

The "unprecedented" intensity of rainfall according to the Japanese Weather Agency (JMA) had pushed it to issue its maximum rainfall warning level, reserved for foreseeable disaster situations.

Hagibis had arrived on Saturday shortly before 7 pm (6 pm ET) and reached the Japanese capital around 9 pm, accompanied by gusts of up to 200 km / h.

A Panamanian-flagged cargo ship sank Saturday night in Tokyo Bay, killing two of the crew. Four other crewmembers were saved, but six more were still wanted.

More than 111,000 homes were also left without electricity Sunday at 18 pm in the country, according to the electricity companies.

"In the house, the water rose higher than the level of my head, which turned all the furniture inside. It's like in a washing machine now, "told AFP Hajime Tokuda, a finance employee living in Kawasaki (west of Tokyo). He took refuge with relatives whose home was also flooded. The mishap ended well: on the lifeguard boat.

In Higashi Matsuyama, in the Saitama region (north-west of Tokyo), rice and flower growers were counting their losses on Sunday as water flooded warehouses full of fresh crops.

"I do not know where to begin to clean up this disaster," a farmer told AFP, saying he had never experienced such floods.

Rubgy: Japan-Scotland maintained

The storm also disrupted the organization of two sports competitions held in Japan: Suzuka Formula 1 Grand Prix qualifiers (center) were postponed to Sunday morning, while two Rugby World Cup matches were to be held on Saturday ( France-England and New Zealand-Italy) were canceled on Thursday.

A third match, Namibia-Canada, scheduled for Sunday in Kamaishi (north), was also canceled. A heartbreaker for this town almost scratched the map by the tsunami of 2011 and who saw in this meeting a symbol of his resurrection.

The Canadian rugby team showed solidarity with the residents by participating Sunday in the cleaning of the city.

PHOTO KYODO, REUTERS

Peter Nelson and his teammates help remove the mud inside a Kamaishi home.

The meeting between Scotland and Japan Sunday night, decisive for Scotland, but long threatened, was finally maintained.

PHOTO WILLIAM WEST, AGENCY FRANCE-PRESS

A moment of silence was observed before the match between Japan and Scotland.

Hagibis has also paralyzed transport in the greater Tokyo area, this weekend extended by a holiday Monday. Train traffic resumed Sunday, but Tokyo's air links were only partially restored.

Japan is hit by twenty typhoons each year. Before Hagibis, Faxai had killed at least two people in early September and caused significant damage to Chiba.



Source link
https://www.lapresse.ca/international/asie-et-oceanie/201910/13/01-5245232-japon-le-typhon-hagibis-fait-au-moins-26-morts.php

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