Typhoon Goni damages buildings, drenches western Japan

No deaths were reported, but at least 26 people were injured.

August 25, 2015 10:20 am | Updated November 16, 2021 04:29 pm IST - TOKYO:

Telephone poles lean after Typhoon Goni hit Kamimine town, Saga prefecture, south-western Japan, on Tuesday. The powerful typhoon damaged buildings, tossed around cars and flooded streets in south-western Japan on Tuesday before heading out to the Sea of Japan

Telephone poles lean after Typhoon Goni hit Kamimine town, Saga prefecture, south-western Japan, on Tuesday. The powerful typhoon damaged buildings, tossed around cars and flooded streets in south-western Japan on Tuesday before heading out to the Sea of Japan

A powerful typhoon damaged buildings, tossed around cars and flooded streets in south-western Japan on Tuesday before heading out to the Sea of Japan.

No deaths were reported, but at least 26 people were injured, according to Japan’s Fire and Disaster Management Agency.

The same storm struck the Philippines earlier, where the death toll rose to 21 with 15 still missing as search and rescue efforts continued.

Typhoon Goni made landfall after daybreak on Tuesday on Japan’s southernmost main island of Kyushu, bringing fierce winds and heavy rain to much of western Japan.

Flights cancelled

Flights to and from Kyushu were cancelled, and train and bus service suspended. Japanese television showed uprooted trees, downed power lines and sheared-off building walls and roofs. More than 4,70,000 households temporarily lost power, Kyodo News service reported.

After sweeping across the island, Goni was heading north with maximum sustained winds of 126 kph (78 mph) and gusts to 180 kph (112 mph), the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

In the northern Philippines last weekend, the typhoon triggered landslips and flash-floods. A deadly mudslide in the mountainous province of Benguet buried gold miners in three work camps.

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