Foreign Policy Blogs

Magnitude-8.8 earthquake hits off the coast of Japan

A magnitude-8.8 earthquake hit off the coast of Japan near Miyagi prefecture at 2:46 p.m. local time today (a little over an hour ago), followed by a 7.4-magnitude aftershock about 30 minutes later. The earthquake triggered a 13-foot tsunami that wiped out cars along Miyagi’s coast.

Much of Japan’s northeast coast has been affected. Live footage on Fuji TV shows large fires in Chiba, near Tokyo, with ominous clouds of black and gray smoke obscuring the afternoon sky. Live footage from Sendai airport shows a wild river where there was once a runway. Most trains in Tokyo are stopped. People stuck under steel racks at their offices in Tokyo are posting cries for help on Twitter. A friend in Sapporo, on Japan’s northernmost island of Hokkaido, felt the shocks and took shelter under a desk.

I was leaving work right as the earthquake hit, but I felt nothing here in Okayama in central Japan.

The earthquake comes after a 7.3-magnitude earthquake hit off the coast in the same region on Wednesday.

More details as they come in…

UPDATE, Mar. 12: It turned out the man who claimed to be trapped under a steel rack at his office and posting for help on Twitter was making a sick joke. Perhaps someday he really will have an accident and require help, and no one will take him seriously, and I’m sure there will be some lesson to be learned in it.

 

Author

Dustin Dye

Dustin Dye is the author of the YAKUZA DYNASTY series, available through the Amazon Kindle.

He lived in Okayama, Japan, where he taught English at a junior high school through the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program for three years. He is a graduate from the University of Kansas, where he received a bachelor's degree in anthropology.

His interest in Japan began in elementary school after seeing Godzilla fight Ghidorah, the three-headed monster. But it wasn't until he discovered Akira Kurosawa's films through their spaghetti Western remakes that he truly became fascinated in the people and culture of Japan.

He lives in Kansas with his wife, daughter and guinea pig.

Visit him online at www.dustindye.net.
E-mail him: [email protected]