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Rare hurricane warning as Hawaii braces for major storm
By Ronen Zilberman
Honolulu (AFP) Aug 23, 2018

Strong typhoon barrels towards flood-hit western Japan
Tokyo (AFP) Aug 23, 2018 - A strong typhoon hurtled towards western Japan on Thursday, with forecasters warning of heavy rains and landslides, including in areas hit by deadly flooding last month.

"Please be on high alert and take every necessary measure," Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told cabinet members and officials at a meeting on storm preparedness.

He urged local governments to issue evacuation orders and take other necessary measures "without fear."

Typhoon Cimaron is packing maximum gusts of 216 kilometres (133 miles) per hour, Japan's Meteorological Agency said.

It was around 260 kilometres southeast of Ashizuri -- on the coast of Shikoku island -- in western Japan by 0300 GMT on Wednesday, the agency added.

The typhoon is expected to make landfall late Thursday and head north through Friday morning, bringing intensifying wind and rain.

"Please remain vigilant for landslides, inundation of low ground, flooding of rivers, storms, and high and tidal waves," the weather agency said.

Meteorological agency chief forecaster Ryuta Kurora warned the typhoon could bring "multiple hazardous phenomena" such as violent wind and high tides "simultaneously at night."

"Please evacuate early," he said at a press conference.

Some parts of central Japan could see up to 800 millimetres (31 inches) of rain in the 24 hours to noon Friday, the agency said.

The areas at risk include parts of the country still recovering from flooding and landslides caused by record rains in July that killed over 200 people.

Several cities and towns started to issue evacuation advisories, with television footage showing residents of Okayama, one of areas worst hit by last month's deadly flooding, working to pile up sandbags.

Some trains have suspended operations and more than 100 flights were cancelled, most of them domestic routes, reports said.

The approach of Cimaron comes as Typhoon Soulik was already bringing heavy rain to parts of the main southern island of Kyushu.

Residents of Hawaii were bracing for a rare landfall by a powerful hurricane as they stocked up on water, food and emergency supplies.

Hurricane Lane, which weakened slightly to a category 4 storm overnight, is packing 155-mile (250-kilometre) -per-hour winds and was expected to reach the archipelago's Big Island by nightfall Wednesday.

President Donald Trump urged residents to prepare for the storm, which was expected to bring torrential rains, high winds and dangerous surf.

"Everyone in the path of #HurricaneLane please prepare yourselves, heed the advice of State and local officials, and follow @NWSHonolulu for updates. Be safe!" he tweeted.

The National Weather Service said a hurricane warning has been issued for Maui County and Hawaii County while a hurricane watch was in effect in Kauai and Oahu.

"The center of Lane will track dangerously close to the Hawaiian Islands from Thursday through Saturday," it said.

It added that though Lane is forecast to weaken in the next 48 hours it will remain a dangerous hurricane as it nears the Hawaiian Islands.

"Lane is expected to produce total rain accumulations of 10 to 15 inches (250 to 380 millimetres) with isolated amounts greater than 20 inches over the Hawaiian Islands," the NWS said.

It added that regardless of the exact track of the storm, the state should brace for the potentially life-threatening impacts.

- Bracing for the worst -

"It's not a question of whether they're going to be hit or not," Brock Long, the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) told a press briefing. "They're going to see impacts from this storm."

He said the priority at this point was to ensure residents were prepared for the storm.

"Right now the priority that we have is life safety," he said. "We are asking citizens to proactively heed all of the warning order information coming from the governor and the local county emergency management agencies within the state."

Hurricanes rarely make landfall in Hawaii and the last major storm to strike the state was nearly three decades ago, when Hurricane Iniki barrelled into the island of Kauai, leaving six people dead and causing billions of dollars in damage.

In preparation for the latest storm, state officials have closed schools and public offices in the counties affected while residents rushed to stores to stock up on water, food and other supplies. Many were also boarding up their houses.

Governor David Ige on Tuesday declared a state of emergency on Big Island to help provide relief for damage from the hurricane.

"Hurricane Lane is not a well-behaved hurricane," he said in a statement. "I've not seen such dramatic changes in the forecast track as I've seen with this storm.

"I urge our residents and visitors to take this threat seriously and prepare for a significant impact."

FEMA associate administrator Jeff Byard said authorities were bracing for the worst, stocking up on emergency food and water and readying shelters.

"We have emergency food in the form of MREs (Meals Ready-to-Eat) and water that are currently on all four counties of the state," he said.

"And we're also working with the private sector, with the grocery retailers, to make sure that we are working in a coordinated fashion to provide food for a number of days should we lose power in a catastrophic manner."

He said FEMA was also working with utility companies to co-ordinate the repair of any damaged power infrastructure.

Ige also urged President Donald Trump to declare a federal state emergency and approve immediate US federal military help.

Hawaii "requires immediate support from Department of Defense assets for strategic airlift between the islands," Ige said

And Hawaii "anticipates the need for immediate access to federal resources for search and rescue, mass care and sheltering commodities, and temporary power generation," he warned.

Meanwhile the US Navy said some of its ships and submarines based in Hawaii had begun to deploy to avoid getting caught in the storm.

"Based on the current track of the storm, we made the decision to begin to sortie the Pearl Harbor-based ships," said Rear Adm. Brian Fort, commander of the Naval Surface Group Middle Pacific. "This allows the ships enough time to transit safely out of the path of the storm."


Related Links
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SHAKE AND BLOW
Hurricane Lane grows to category 5 as it heads toward Hawaii
Los Angeles (AFP) Aug 22, 2018
Hurricane Lane has grown to a category 5 storm as it approaches Hawaii with potential for torrential rain, flash flooding and landslides, forecasters said. As per the latest models, the center of Lane will move very close to or over the main Hawaiian Islands from Thursday through Saturday, the National Weather Service's Central Pacific Hurricane Center in Honolulu said. The storm was packing maximum sustained winds of 160 miles (260 kilometers) per hour. Starting Wednesday night it was forec ... read more

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