Hundreds of thousands of people forced to flee their homes as two months worth of rain falls in Japan in just three days

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Eleanor Rose6 July 2018

Hundreds of thousands of people in Japan have been evacuated from their homes as torrential rain sparked catastrophic floods and landslides, killing at least four.

The Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) issued its strongest possible warning about the "historic" rainfall saying even more was set to batter already-saturated areas through Sunday.

One part of the main island of Honshu had been hit with twice the total amount of rain for a normal July by Friday morning, and the rain was relentless through the day.

44 inches of rain fell on Yanasa in Umaji village, Kochi prefecture, on Shikoku, in only three days - that's double the total amount that usually falls in the whole of July.

The swollen Katsura River in Kyoto
AFP/Getty Images

At least four people have been killed across the country, one when he was sucked into a drainage pipe and another, an elderly woman, died after being blown over by powerful wind.

Several people were missing, including a man whose car was swept away as he delivered milk and a boy who was swept into a ditch, NHK national television said.

"The situation is extremely dangerous," wrote one person in Kochi, a city on the smallest main island of Shikoku, where the rain was especially intense.

Several dozen people were injured, four seriously, the Fire and Disaster Management Agency said. Several people were buried in a landslide and rescuers rushed to dig them out.

About 210,000 people were ordered from their homes due to the danger of further landslides and flooding, nearly half of them in a wide area surrounding Japan's ancient capital of Kyoto, and nearly 2 million more were advised to leave, as of Friday afternoon, the Agency added.

Trains across western and central Japan were halted, including several sections of the Shinkansen bullet train.

The danger was particularly high in a part of the southwesternmost main island of Kyushu, where dozens of people were killed by torrential rain and floods a year ago.

The rain appeared to have been sparked off by warm, humid air flowing up from the Pacific Ocean and intensifying the activity of a seasonal rain front.

Remnants of a now-dissipated typhoon that brushed Japan this week also contributed, officials said.

Japan's weather woes are far from over. Typhoon Maria, forming deep in the Pacific, is set to strengthen, possibly into an intense Category 4 storm, and may directly target the southwestern islands of Okinawa early next week.

Additional reporting by Reuters

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