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| Passengers crowd at Tokyo
Station's Shinkansen, or bullet train, ticket barrier in
Tokyo. | TOKYO, Aug. 16
(Xinhuanet) -- A powerful earthquake registering an estimated magnitude of 7.2
struck northeastern Japan just before noon Tuesday, injuring at least 58 people
mostly in Miyagi Prefecture and jolting an extensive area across the country,
including Tokyo.
Four people sustained serious injuries in the 11:46
a.m. (0246 GMT) quake, but there had been no reports of deaths or missing people
as of 8 p.m. (1100 GMT), according to a Kyodo News tally. Injuries were also
reported in Tokyo, Fukushima, Iwate and Saitama prefectures.
The quake originated in the Pacific about 80
kilometers off the coast of Miyagi Prefecture and took place at a thrust fault,
the Japan Meteorological Agency said. The focus was about 42 km below the
surface of the sea.
The town of Kawasaki in southern Miyagi Prefecture
registered alower 6 on the Japanese seismic intensity scale of 7, and the
temblor was felt as far north as Hokkaido down to the Kinki regionin western
Japan, the agency said. The quake registered 4 on the Japanese scale in central
Tokyo.
An intensity of lower 6 is defined as being capable
of damaging wall tiles and windowpanes in many buildings and where many people
find it difficult to keep standing.
The meteorological agency warned of the possibility
of an aftershock with an intensity of around upper 5 on the Japanese intensity
scale taking place in the coming several days.
The agency also issued a tsunami warning and lifted
it after waves about 10 centimeters high were observed on the coast of
Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, just after noon.
Town officials in Shizugawa in the same prefecture
said a rise of 40 cm in the sea level was recorded twice at the town's port.
At a recently opened indoor pool in Sendai, the
capital of Miyagi Prefecture, one person was seriously injured and 25 others
sustained slight injuries when the ceiling collapsed. There were 265 people in
the pool at the time of the quake, according to Kyodo.
Several landslides and house collapses have been
reported in Miyagi Prefecture and other quake-hit areas, injuring other 33
people.
More than 19,000 households in Miyagi and Fukushima
prefectures were without electricity after the quake, with about 1,700
households in Ishinomaki and Miyagi prefectures still without power as of 5 p.m.
(0800 GMT), Tohoku Electric Power Co. said.
Operations at some nuclear power plants in Miyagi and
Ibaraki prefectures, including the Onagawa nuclear power plant in Miyagi
Prefecture, automatically stopped when the quake struck.
The quake wreaked havoc with the transportation
systems amid a rush of summer vacationers, many of whom were stuck at stations.
Bullet train services in the quake-hit areas were
suspended but there were no reports of derailments or injuries. The subway
system in Sendai was temporarily shut down as well.
A section of the Tohoku Expressway in Miyagi
Prefecture was reopened after being closed off briefly, and runways at Narita
andHaneda airports, which serve the Tokyo metropolitan area, and Sendai airport
were also temporarily closed.
The strong quake prompted the central government in
Tokyo to set up a task force to respond to quake damage and dispatch a team of
officials to Miyagi Prefecture to assess the damage and gather information.
The meteorological agency said Tuesday's temblor
"originated almost at the same spot as the 1978 (Miyagi) earthquake but the
magnitude was smaller than expected".
It was referring to the magnitude 7.4 earthquake
which struck Sendai and nearby areas in June 1978, killing 28 people and
injuring more than 10,000.
A government panel said in January there is a 99
percent chance that a quake of magnitude 7 or above would hit the area
within 30 years.
Nine quakes of magnitude 6.4 or above, including the
latest one,have occurred along the coast off Miyagi Prefecture since 1933.
On July 23, a magnitude 6.0 quake shook Tokyo,
injuring at least 27 people and paralyzing transportation in the Japanese
capital. Enditem |