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Evacuation ordered in northern Japan as typhoon approaches

Flights and trains in the Tokyo area were also cancelled as warnings were issued for strong winds and heavy rainfall from Typhoon Ampil.

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A man holding an umbrella struggles with strong wind as Typhoon Ampil approaches the Tokyo area of Japan

Thousands of people in northern Japan have been ordered to evacuate because of the risk of flooding and mudslides from a powerful typhoon approaching in the Pacific Ocean.

Flights and trains in the Tokyo area were cancelled as warnings were issued for strong winds and heavy rainfall from Typhoon Ampil, expected to reach waters near Tokyo in the evening and then continue north, bringing stormy conditions to the northern Kanto and Tohoku regions on Saturday.

It had sustained winds of 162kph (101mph) with higher gusts on Friday morning and was moving north at 15kph (9.3mph), the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

High waves hit a beach in Choshi, Chiba prefecture, east of Tokyo, as Typhoon Ampil moved past the area
High waves hit a beach in Choshi, Chiba prefecture, east of Tokyo (Kyodo News via AP)

Ampil was not expected to make landfall and could weaken to a tropical storm by Sunday.

Power was out in more than 5,000 households, mostly in coastal Chiba and Ibaraki prefectures, east of Tokyo, but also in Saitama to the north.

An evacuation order was sent to the more than 320,000 residents of the city of Iwaki in Fukushima prefecture.

More than 30 places were offered as safe locations to stay, including school gymnasiums and community centres.

Evacuation warnings were also sent to at-risk areas in the cities of Asahi and Mobarashi in Chiba prefecture east of Tokyo.

Ampil was expected to reach the waters off Chiba by Friday evening.

Tokyo’s Disneyland, usually open until 9pm local time, closed at 3pm because of the typhoon.

Yamato Transport, which makes Amazon and other deliveries in Japan, said no deliveries would be made in Tokyo and nearby affected areas on Friday and Saturday.

Shinkansen bullet trains running between Tokyo and Nagoya were halted for the entire day, a common response to typhoons.

Station posters show the cancellation of Shinkansen bullet train services due to an approaching typhoon, at JR Tokyo station in Tokyo, Japan
Station posters show the cancellation of Shinkansen bullet train services due to an approaching typhoon, at JR Tokyo station (Kyodo News via AP)

Bullet trains serving northeastern Japan and some local Tokyo trains were halted or switched to a slower schedule.

A decision will be made early on Saturday on whether trains will start running again as usual, the railway company said.

Dozens of departing and arriving flights were cancelled at Tokyo’s two airports, Haneda and Narita, as well as at Kansai, Osaka and Chubu airports.

The flight cancellations affected about 90,000 people, according to Japanese media reports.

Airports and train stations had been packed on Thursday with people seeking to avoid travel disruption from the typhoon.

Friday was drizzly and windy in Tokyo.

Traffic and crowds on the streets were sparse, mostly because of the Obon summer holiday period, not just the weather.

Stores remained open.

“We foresee extremely fierce winds and extremely fierce seas,” said Shuichi Tachihara, the meteorological agency’s chief forecaster.

Japanese TV broadcasts showed residents of the island of Hachijojima boarding up windows.

Ampil moved past the Hachijo group of islands south of Tokyo by midday as it headed northward.

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