News / International
Heavy snow kills 7 people in Tokyo
09 Feb 2014 at 07:17hrs | Views
A worker removes snow from a sidewalk in Tokyo on February 8, 2014 (AFP, Kazuhiro Nogi)
Tokyo - The heaviest snow in decades in Tokyo and other areas of Japan has left at least seven dead and more than 1 000 injured across the country, reports said Sunday.
As much as 27cm of snow was recorded in Tokyo by late Saturday, the heaviest fall in the capital for 45 years, according to meteorologists.
The storm hit Tokyo on the eve of its gubernatorial election. Observers say the heavy snowfall may affect voter turnout in the city of 13 million people.
Local media said at least seven people have been killed in snow-linked accidents - mostly crashes after their cars skidded on icy roads.
Public broadcaster NHK reported at least 1 051 people were injured across the nation, many of whom had slipped on the ground or fallen while shovelling the snow off their roofs, NHK said.
More than 20 000 households were without electricity early on Sunday while airlines cancelled nearly 300 domestic flights a day after more than 740 flights were grounded on Saturday.
Nearly 5 000 people were stranded at Narita airport on Saturday as traffic linking the airport to the capital was disrupted, NHK said.
Further snowfall is expected on Sunday in the northern part of the country, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.
As much as 27cm of snow was recorded in Tokyo by late Saturday, the heaviest fall in the capital for 45 years, according to meteorologists.
The storm hit Tokyo on the eve of its gubernatorial election. Observers say the heavy snowfall may affect voter turnout in the city of 13 million people.
Local media said at least seven people have been killed in snow-linked accidents - mostly crashes after their cars skidded on icy roads.
Public broadcaster NHK reported at least 1 051 people were injured across the nation, many of whom had slipped on the ground or fallen while shovelling the snow off their roofs, NHK said.
More than 20 000 households were without electricity early on Sunday while airlines cancelled nearly 300 domestic flights a day after more than 740 flights were grounded on Saturday.
Nearly 5 000 people were stranded at Narita airport on Saturday as traffic linking the airport to the capital was disrupted, NHK said.
Further snowfall is expected on Sunday in the northern part of the country, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.
Source - AFP