Powerful typhoon approaches southern Japan, charts course for main island
TOKYO (Reuters) - A powerful typhoon brought heavy rain and high winds as it approached southern Japan on Saturday, leading to flight cancellations and power outages in several cities.
A passer-by walks in heavy rain and wind caused by Typhoon Trami in the prefectural capital Naha, on the southern island of Okinawa, in this photo taken by Kyodo September 29, 2018. Mandatory credit Kyodo/via REUTERS
Typhoon Trami, rated category 2 by Tropical Storm Risk, with category 5 the highest, is the latest storm to threaten Japan in a year of grim weather-related woes, including punishing heat, heavy rains and landslides.
Outlying islands in the Okinawan chain, some 1,000 km southwest of Tokyo, were being pounded by heavy rain and high tides a day before an Okinawan gubernatorial election on Sunday.
Strong wind knocked down trees, blew off an outer wall from a building and left nine people injured in Okinawa. Trami also caused power outages in more than 30 towns, according to public broadcaster NHK.
A residential fence breaks open due to heavy rain heavy rain and wind caused by Typhoon Trami in Itoman city, Okinawa prefecture, Japan in this September 29, 2018 photo by @MAXIOKINAWA. Twitter @MAXIOKINAWA/Social Media/via REUTERS
NHK also said airlines had cancelled more than 380 flights, mainly those flying in and out of Okinawa.
Trami was about 60 km (37.3 miles) north of the Okinawan city of Naha, with winds gusting as high as 216 kilometres an hour (134 mph).
Churning north across Okinawa on Saturday, Trami is then predicted to move across the islands of Kyushu and the main island of Honshu on Sunday, a path similar to that taken by typhoon Jebi early in September.
Bullet trains running between the two western Japan cities of Osaka and Hiroshima will suspend operations Sunday morning in anticipation of heavy rain and wind, operator West Japan Railway said on Saturday.
Jebi, the most powerful storm to hit Japan in 25 years, brought some of the highest tides since a 1961 typhoon and flooded Kansai airport near Osaka, taking it out of service for days.
Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Shri Navaratnam
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