Typhoon Khanun: Thousands without power, flights halted in Japan, S Korea

Flights cancelled and trains halted as heavy rains pound southern regions of Japan and South Korea.

Japan typhoon
On Wednesday, about 16,000 households were without power as heavy rain pounded Japan's southern island of Kyushu [Franck Robichon/EPA]

Flights and train services have been disrupted after Typhoon Khanun triggered heavy rain in southern regions of Japan and South Korea, just as another storm approached Tokyo ahead of the peak summer holiday season.

Khanun could make landfall at the southeastern South Korean port city of Tongyeong on Thursday, before tracking up the Korean peninsula, authorities said on Wednesday.

The storm is currently in the sea south of Kyushu, Japan’s southwestern main island some 860km (530 miles) from Tokyo, after wreaking havoc in the southwestern Okinawa region. It is maintaining its strength and moving at an unusually slow 10km/h (6mph), meaning the wind and rain will linger for longer.

On Wednesday, about 16,000 households were without power as heavy rain pounded Japan’s southern island of Kyushu. The area was already been inundated with a month’s worth of rainfall in the past week, the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) said.

The agency issued heavy rain and high wind warnings to many parts of southern and western Japan, prompting automakers including Toyota to suspend some production.

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Thousands of scouts evacuated

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida cancelled his attendance at a ceremony on Wednesday to mark the anniversary of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, in Kyushu.

Railway operator West Japan Railway Co suspended some bullet train services in Kyushu, while a professional baseball game scheduled there was cancelled.

South Korea issued its highest alert as Khanun forced the cancellation of nearly 80 flights and the closure of dozens of sea routes and roads, the interior ministry said.

On Tuesday, South Korean officials evacuated more than 30,000 scouts from their campsite in the southwest ahead of the typhoon, the latest snag to hit the World Scout Jamboree.

President Yoon Suk Yeol has ordered authorities to prevent any further damage, especially in regions hit by last month’s torrential rain.

Another storm, Lan, had formed in the Pacific Ocean south of Japan and was predicted to strengthen as it heads north, possibly affecting Tokyo early next week, JMA said.

The two storms arrive at the start of Obon, Japan’s peak summer holiday season when many people leave big cities for their ancestral hometowns.

Source: News Agencies

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