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3 dead as M-6.1 quake hits Osaka / 170,000 households suffer power outages

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Bildresultat för 3 dead as M-6.1 quake hits Osaka / 170,000 households suffer power outages
The Yomiuri Shimbun :Damaged digital displays are seen on a platform at Hankyu Ibarakishi
Station in Ibaraki, Osaka Prefecture, following a strong quake on Monday morning.

OSAKA (Jiji Press) — A strong earthquake measuring up to lower 6, the third-highest level on Japan’s seismic intensity scale of 7, rocked western areas of the country on Monday morning, killing three people and disrupting transport and other infrastructure services.

Following the quake, estimated to have a magnitude of 6.1, a nine-year-old girl died after being trapped under a wall that collapsed onto a sidewalk next to an elementary school in Takatsuki, Osaka Prefecture, according to prefectural police.

The two other victims were an 80-year-old man in the city of Osaka, who was hit by a collapsed wall, and an 85-year-old man in Ibaraki in the same prefecture who was trapped under a bookshelf, the police said.

A total of 220 people sustained injuries in Osaka Prefecture, while 39 were injured in Mie, Shiga, Kyoto and Hyogo prefectures.

  • The Yomiuri Shimbun

    Train passengers walk in Kita Ward, Osaka, after service was suspended following the quake.

About 850 people took refuge at some 400 shelters in Osaka Prefecture, with many concrete block walls and other structures damaged by the quake.

The earthquake, which struck at around 7:58 a.m. Monday, is believed to have occurred at a depth of about 13 kilometers in the northern part of the prefecture, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

The quake logged lower 6 in Kita Ward in the city of Osaka, and in Hirakata and Minoo, as well as Takatsuki and Ibaraki, all in Osaka Prefecture.

It was the first quake with an intensity of lower 6 or stronger to hit Osaka Prefecture since the agency started quake observations in 1923.

The fourth-highest level of upper 5 was registered in Miyakojima, Higashiyodogawa and Yodogawa wards, all in the city of Osaka, and in the Osaka Prefecture cities of Toyonaka and Suita, as well as in the cities of Kyoto, Kameoka and Yawata in the neighboring prefecture of Kyoto.

The Osaka prefectural government called for the dispatch of Ground Self-Defense Force personnel for disaster-relief activities.

About 170,000 households, mainly in Osaka Prefecture, temporarily suffered power outages following the quake, Kansai Electric Power Co. said.

In some areas, gas and water supply remained unavailable as of late Monday afternoon.

No irregularities at N-plants

No irregularities were reported at Kansai Electric’s Oi, Takahama and Mihama nuclear power stations in Fukui Prefecture, and at Japan Atomic Power Co.’s Tsuruga nuclear plant, also in Fukui, according to the operators.

Shinkansen high-speed train services were briefly halted between Maibara and Shin-Osaka stations on the Tokaido Shinkansen Line of Central Japan Railway Co., or JR Tokai, and between Shin-Osaka and Okayama stations on the Sanyo Shinkansen Line of West Japan Railway Co.

All subway operations of Osaka Metro Co. came to a temporary halt, while other railway services were also disrupted by the quake, inconveniencing commuters in the morning rush hour.

Japan Airlines and All Nippon Airways canceled 60 and 14 flights, respectively, mainly at Osaka International Airport at Itami, in Hyogo, affecting a total of 7,400 passengers.

A series of aftershocks jolted the region on Monday. The meteorological agency warned of possible aftershocks of up to lower 6 on the Japanese scale over the next week or so.

Focus near fault zone

“As the focus of the quake is very close to the Arima-Takatsuki fault zone, we’re analyzing data to see whether a part of the zone moved,” Toshiyuki Matsumori, head of the agency’s earthquake and tsunami observation division, told a press conference.

In neighboring Hyogo Prefecture, the 7.3-magnitude Great Hanshin Earthquake occurred in January 1995, measuring the highest reading of 7 on the Japanese scale for the first time ever and leaving more than 6,400 people dead and 43,792 others injured.

Source:the-japan-news.com/news