A powerful magnitude 5.9 earthquake in Tokyo, 32 injured ; no danger of a tsunami.
A powerful magnitude 5.9 earthquake shook the Tokyo area on
Thursday night, injuring more than 30 people, damaging underground water pipes
and halting trains and subways.
Traffic disruptions continued Friday morning, with local
trains delayed and commuters overflowing from stations.
The Meteorological Agency said the quake was centered in
Chiba prefecture, just east of Tokyo, at a depth of about 80 kilometers (48
miles). There was no danger of a tsunami.
It caused buildings to sway and hanging objects such as
signs to swing violently. Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno said there
were no abnormalities at nuclear power facilities in the area.
Most trains operated Friday morning but with major delays
and entry restrictions to avoid overcrowding. There was a long waiting line
outside of Shinjuku station in Tokyo, and hundreds of morning commuters were
overflowing from the Kawaguchi station.
The Fire and Disaster Management Agency said Friday that 32
people were injured, three of them seriously, from the quake.
Police in Chiba prefecture, where 11 people were injured,
said two women in separate locations sprained their ankles when they were
thrown to the floor during the quake. A commuter train partially derailed in
eastern Tokyo when it made an emergency stop, causing three passengers to fall
and get slightly injured, according to the disaster management agency.
Others were injured in Kanagawa, Saitama and Gunma
prefectures.
Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings said about 250 homes
in downtown Tokyo temporarily lost power.
“Shinkansen” super express trains in and out of Tokyo were
halted for safety checks but later resumed operation, East Japan Railway Co.
said.
Tokyo’s Yamanote loop line and subways restarted late
Thursday, but with major delays. Outside of Tokyo’s Shinagawa station, where
local trains were temporarily halted because of power outages, there was a long
line of people trying to get taxis home.
Dozens of people in Tokyo, Kanagawa and Chiba were stranded
at stations, and some took shelter at facilities set up by local
municipalities.
Many elevators automatically stopped, including those at
Tokyo’s metropolitan government building, temporarily trapping some people.
Fire and disaster officials said underground water pipes
were damaged in dozens of locations in Tokyo. In one district, water was
gushing from the ground.
Source apnews.com
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