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Typhoon Nangka Kills at Least Two, Wreaks Havoc Crossing Japan

Typhoon Nangka barreled across the western end of Japan's largest main island on Friday, snarling transport, leaving at least two men dead and prompting authorities to advise nearly 100,000 people to evacuate.
Image: High waves caused by Typhoon Nangka break on the shores of Senjojiki, Shirahama town
High waves caused by Typhoon Nangka break on the shores of Senjojiki, Shirahama town, Wakayama prefecture, Japan.KYODO / KYODO via Reuters

TOKYO — Typhoon Nangka barreled across the western end of Japan's largest main island on Friday, snarling transport, leaving at least two men dead and prompting authorities to advise nearly 100,000 people to evacuate.

Rivers burst their banks in the western prefecture of Wakayama after some parts of Honshu, Japan's largest main island, received more than 23 inches of rain since the storm began to near on Thursday.

Two men drowned, one of them a 71-year-old man who fell into a flooded ditch while repairing a window, NHK national television said. Some 35 people were injured.

Nangka, named for a tropical fruit, had been downgraded to a tropical storm by Friday morning but still packed sustained winds of 51 mph, with gusts of up to 120 kph(75 mph) an hour. It was expected to dump a further 11 inches of rain on parts of Japan by Saturday morning.

Authorities advised nearly 100,000 people to evacuate across a wide swathe of western Japan due to the threat of flooding and landslides. At one point on Thursday, nearly 400,000 people were advised to leave their homes.

Image: Typhoon Nangka approaches western Japan
Japanese women wearing kimono walk in the approaching rains of Typhoon Nangka in downtown Kyoto, Japan, 16 July 2015.EVERETT KENNEDY BROWN / EPA

Some 165 flights were canceled, trains in western Japan suffered delays and highways near the ocean were closed.

The storm is expected to head into the Sea of Japan later on Friday and weaken into a tropical depression, then head northeast across the northern tip of Honshu on Sunday.

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