Well, friends, the almost worst is over here, it seems.
still rain and wind but the typhoon is moving past us now and
hopefully gone soon. Half the village is still evacuated and we are
sitting in our second building, a little safer than the old
farmhouse, at least I hope.
Never seen such water!
Pooring from the walls behind our houses like a wild river into a
gorge. The usually quiet drainage pipes roaring like a crazy dragon
river. Rain and more rain since yesterday, on end...
Read this news from about 1 hour ago.
AND GOODBY FROM ME; THIS COMPUTER IS NOT MY USUAL ONE AND KEZBOARD IS
CRAZY:
gabi SAN
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Two dead and eight missing as powerful typhoon pounds Japan
1 hour, 38 minutes ago Asia - AFP
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?
tmpl=story&u=/afp/20041020/wl_asia_afp/japan_typhoon_weather&cid=1530&
ncid=1112
TOKYO (AFP) - Two people have died and eight others are missing the
biggest typhoon to hit Japan for more than a decade pounded the south
of the country with heavy rain and powerful winds, officials said.
Typhoon Tokage, which also injured at least 31 people, became a
record 10th typhoon to land on the main Japanese islands in a year.
The storms have claimed at least 104 lives.
Nearly 500 domestic flights were cancelled Wednesday, affecting some
44,000 passengers, and tens of thousands lost electricity as the
typhoon raced northeast up the archipelago.
With an 800-kilometer (500-mile) radius of powerful winds, Tokage is
the biggest typhoon to land in Japan since the Meteorological Agency
began its classification system in 1991.
A 31-year-old man was found dead near a flooded river in Miyazaki
prefecture in southern Japan after his vehicle skidded at a bridge,
police said.
In southwestern Ehime prefecture, a 24-year-old woman died after
being buried by a landslide. Also in Ehime, two elderly men and a
woman went missing after separate landslides destroyed their houses.
Other people who went missing included a 75-year-old fishermen pulled
into the ocean as he inspected his boat in Kochi, a 63-year-old
farmer swept away in a ricefield in Miyazaki and a newspaper
deliveryman who disappeared in Oita prefecture.
In Chiba prefecture just east of Tokyo, two workers who were building
an embankment along a coastline were pulled into the Pacific by high
waves, a government official said.
Tokage, which means lizard in Japanese, struck the Pacific coast at
around 1:00 pm (0400 GMT) at Tosashimizu in Kochi prefecture, 700
kilometers (440 miles) southwest of Tokyo.
Packing wind speeds of 144 kilometers (90 miles) per hour, it
triggered landslides and sent objects flying.
Among the injured were four people trapped in an office building
which was crushed in Oita, a 68-year-old man in Saga Prefecture who
fell from his roof while fixing it and an 83-year-old woman who fell
and broke her thigh.
Typhoon Tokage was moving northeast at 50 kilometers (30 miles) an
hour and was expected to bring strong winds, heavy rain and high
waves through Thursday.
Authorities have issued evacuation warnings to 17,434 people who live
mainly in southern Japan. By Wednesday afternoon, 4,250 people had
voluntarily left for temporary shelters, the disaster agency said.
In the southern island of Kyushu 45,300 households lost power, while
29,713 customers lost electricity in neighboring Shikoku.
A 9,900-ton cargo ship was grounded on an island off the coast of
Ehime in southwestern Japan but all 12 crew members were unharmed.
The nine previous typhoons that have hit Japan this year caused a
total of 102 deaths and left 13 missing and presumed dead.
Typhoon Ma-on slammed into the Tokyo metropolitan area on October 9,
killing six people and paralyzing the capital's transport systems.
Just a week before Ma-on, Typhoon Meari wreaked havoc in the Japanese
islands, killing 22 and injuring 89 in floods, landslides and other
accidents.