
Typhoon Shanshan lashes Japan with torrential rain, strong winds; three killed
The Hindu
Typhoon Shanshan hits southern Japan, causing deaths, flooding, landslips, and extensive damage, with concerns for further impact.
A typhoon lashed southern Japan with torrential rain and strong winds on Thursday (August 29, 2024), causing at least three deaths as it started a crawl up the length of the archipelago and raised concerns of flooding, landslips and extensive damage.
“Typhoon Shanshan made landfall in the morning on the southern island of Kyushu and about 60 centimetres (nearly 2 ft) of rainfall had fallen in parts of Miyazaki prefecture,” the Japan Meteorological Agency said. “That 24-hour total was more than the August rainfall average and swollen rivers were threatening floods,” it said.
The typhoon ripped through downtown Miyazaki City, knocking down trees, throwing cars to the side in parking lots and shattering windows of some buildings. The prefectural disaster management task force said 40 buildings were damaged.
Footage on NHK public television showed the swollen river in a popular hot spring town of Yufu in Oita prefecture, just north of Miyazaki, with muddy water splashing against the bridge over it.
“The typhoon was forecast to bring strong winds, high waves and significant rainfall to most of the country, particularly the southern prefectures of Kyushu. Around midday, Shanshan was moving north at 15 kph (9 mph) and its winds had weakened to 126 kph (78 mph),” JMA said.
“More than a dozen people were injured in Miyazaki, many of them thrown to the ground. One each was also injured nearby Kumamoto and Kagoshima prefectures on their way to shelters,” the Fire and Disaster Management Agency said.
“Nearly a quarter million households were without power across Kyushu, most of them in the Kagoshima prefecture,” the Kyushu Electric Power Co. said.