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Powerful 7.6 quake strikes off Japan, tsunami warning lifted

Kihara said he had ‘received no reports yet of anomalies’ from two nuclear power plants in northern Japan, adding that probes are ongoing in other nuclear facilities.
A vehicle rests on the edge of a collapsed road in Tohoku town in Aomori Prefecture following a 7.5 magnitude earthquake off northern Japan. A big quake off northern Japan left at least 30 injured, authorities said on 9 December, damaging roads and leaving thousands without power in freezing temperatures.
A vehicle rests on the edge of a collapsed road in Tohoku town in Aomori Prefecture following a 7.5 magnitude earthquake off northern Japan. A big quake off northern Japan left at least 30 injured, authorities said on 9 December, damaging roads and leaving thousands without power in freezing temperatures.STR/JIJI Press/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
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Tokyo (AFP) — A major earthquake rocked Japan’s northern coast late Monday, with the country’s meteorological agency recording several tsunami waves reached the shoreline and local media reporting injuries.

The magnitude 7.6 quake — which struck off Misawa on Japan’s Pacific coast — reportedly forced residents to flee their homes and left thousands of people without power.

The Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) issued a tsunami warning, with one wave hitting a port in the northern region of Aomori, where Misawa is located.

Several more waves reached the coast, measuring up to 70 centimeters (two feet, four inches), JMA reported.

Early Tuesday the agency lifted the tsunami warning, according to Kyodo news agency. JMA kept lower-grade advisories in effect for parts of northern Japan for several hours, but those, too, were eventually canceled.

Public broadcaster NHK cited a hotel employee in the city of Hachinohe in Aomori as saying there had been some injuries as a result of the quake, which hit at 1415 GMT.

The US Geological Survey recorded the temblor at a depth of 44 kilometers.

Live footage showed shattered glass fragments scattered across roads.

Hachinohe residents fled their homes to seek shelter in the city hall, NHK said.

Some 2,700 homes in Aomori were without power, according to Kyodo, and there were numerous reports of fire.

The quake was also felt in the northern hub of Sapporo, where alarms rang on smartphones to alert residents.

A reporter for NHK in Hokkaido described a horizontal shaking of around 30 seconds that made him unable to remain standing as the earthquake struck.

The meteorological agency earlier warned a tsunami of up to three meters (10 feet) was expected to hit Japan’s Pacific coast.

Top government spokesperson Minoru Kihara had urged residents to stay in a safe place until the warning had been lifted.

The area could see strong quakes in the coming days, the government warned in a separate press conference.

With the quake rattling much of northern Japan, Shinkansen bullet-train service was suspended between Fukushima and Aomori, with the operator posting online that some service was expected to resume later Tuesday morning.

Kihara said he had “received no reports yet of anomalies” from two nuclear power plants in northern Japan, adding that probes are ongoing in other nuclear facilities.

In 2011, a magnitude-9.0 quake triggered a tsunami that left 18,500 people dead or missing and caused a devastating meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant.

Shortly after Monday’s earthquake, Tohoku Electric Power said in a post on Japan sits on top of four major tectonic plates along the western edge of the Pacific “Ring of Fire” and is one of the world’s most tectonically active countries.

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