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One dead, dozens injured as Typhoon Ma-On sideswipes Japan

Update: 21-07-2011 | 00:00:00

Typhoon Ma-On swerved away from Japan's Pacific coast on Wednesday, leaving one person dead and dozens of others injured and damaging a centuries-old castle in Kyoto, officials and reports said.

 

 The storm system, packing winds of up to 108 kilometres (68 miles) per hour, was located 140 kilometres (88 miles) offshore late Wednesday, slowly heading east and further from the main island of Honshu.

 The Japan Meteorogical Agency said Ma-On was still expected to bring downpours overnight in the country's eastern and northern regions including coastal areas hit by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami which sparked a crisis at a nuclear power plant in the area.

 The drowned body of an 84-year-old man was found on the bank of a river on Shikoku Island on Wednesday after he went missing a day earlier while checking his boat, local police said.

 The eye of Ma-On, which spanned 1,600 kilometres (1,000 miles), made landfall on Shikoku in southwestern Japan late Tuesday, bringing up to 120 centimetres (48 inches) of rain since Sunday, the weather agency said.

 It also sideswiped a peninsula south of Osaka later as it moved at 15 kilometres per hour.

 A total of 60 were injured in 18 of the country's 47 prefectures and more than 100 flights were cancelled, the public broadcaster NHK reported.

 In the ancient capital of Kyoto, a treasured white plastered wall at the 385-year-old Nijo Castle peeled off after it was exposed to rain and wind from the typhoon, the city office said.

 The castle is designated by the UN agency UNESCO as one of World Heritage sites.

 The weather agency warned that the tsunami-hit northeast coastal area would see rainfall of up to 50 millimetres per hour overnight, urging the region to brace for possible landslides and floods.

 - AFP/fa/al

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