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Strong Japan quake leaves 39 injured, hits popular ski resort

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A strong 6.2 magnitude earthquake in central Japan left 39 people injured, seven seriously, and wrecked homes in a popular ski resort, the government said Sunday.

The quake struck at 10:08 pm local time (1308 GMT) Saturday at a depth of 10 kilometres (six miles) at the epicentre, in the north of Nagano Prefecture, northwest of Tokyo, according to the US Geological Survey.

The government confirmed Sunday that the quake injured 39 people, destroying houses and snapping water pipes, with the worst damage in mountainous areas.

A man stands amid collapsed houses after a strong earthquake hit Hakuba  Nagano prefecture on Novemb...
A man stands amid collapsed houses after a strong earthquake hit Hakuba, Nagano prefecture on November 23, 2014
, Jiji Press/AFP

In Nagano Prefecture's famous Hakuba Village -- a popular ski resort that hosted part of the 1998 Winter Olympic Games -- many homes were toppled and destroyed, local authorities said. Bird's-eye footage by public broadcaster NHK showed houses reduced to rubble.

Around 30 people were trapped in the collapsed village houses soon after the quake, but were all rescued, Jiji Press said.

The meteorological agency warned strong aftershocks could still occur in the coming week.

There was no damage to the seven nuclear reactors at the sprawling Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant in neighbouring Niigata prefecture as they have been off-line since 2011.

Japan Meteorological Agency officer Yohei Hsegawa speaks during a press conference in Tokyo on Novem...
Japan Meteorological Agency officer Yohei Hsegawa speaks during a press conference in Tokyo on November 23, 2014
, Jiji Press/AFP

Other nuclear plants were also intact.

Japan is hit by around a fifth of the world's powerful quakes every year and sits at the conjunction of several tectonic plates.

A strong tremor revives memories of the 9.0 earthquake in March 2011, which triggered a tsunami that sparked the Fukushima atomic plant disaster and left 18,000 people dead or missing.

A strong 6.2 magnitude earthquake in central Japan left 39 people injured, seven seriously, and wrecked homes in a popular ski resort, the government said Sunday.

The quake struck at 10:08 pm local time (1308 GMT) Saturday at a depth of 10 kilometres (six miles) at the epicentre, in the north of Nagano Prefecture, northwest of Tokyo, according to the US Geological Survey.

The government confirmed Sunday that the quake injured 39 people, destroying houses and snapping water pipes, with the worst damage in mountainous areas.

A man stands amid collapsed houses after a strong earthquake hit Hakuba  Nagano prefecture on Novemb...

A man stands amid collapsed houses after a strong earthquake hit Hakuba, Nagano prefecture on November 23, 2014
, Jiji Press/AFP

In Nagano Prefecture’s famous Hakuba Village — a popular ski resort that hosted part of the 1998 Winter Olympic Games — many homes were toppled and destroyed, local authorities said. Bird’s-eye footage by public broadcaster NHK showed houses reduced to rubble.

Around 30 people were trapped in the collapsed village houses soon after the quake, but were all rescued, Jiji Press said.

The meteorological agency warned strong aftershocks could still occur in the coming week.

There was no damage to the seven nuclear reactors at the sprawling Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant in neighbouring Niigata prefecture as they have been off-line since 2011.

Japan Meteorological Agency officer Yohei Hsegawa speaks during a press conference in Tokyo on Novem...

Japan Meteorological Agency officer Yohei Hsegawa speaks during a press conference in Tokyo on November 23, 2014
, Jiji Press/AFP

Other nuclear plants were also intact.

Japan is hit by around a fifth of the world’s powerful quakes every year and sits at the conjunction of several tectonic plates.

A strong tremor revives memories of the 9.0 earthquake in March 2011, which triggered a tsunami that sparked the Fukushima atomic plant disaster and left 18,000 people dead or missing.

AFP
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