Typhoon batters southern Japan, injuring more than a dozen

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TOKYO — More than a dozen people were injured and nearly 600,000 advised to evacuate Tuesday as a powerful typhoon pounding southern Japanese islands.

TOKYO — More than a dozen people were injured and nearly 600,000 advised to evacuate Tuesday as a powerful typhoon pounding southern Japanese islands.

Typhoon Neoguri was expected to pick up more power before it makes landfall, the Japan Meteorological Agency said, as it issued a storm surge warning for Okinawa’s main island.

Almost all flights to and from Naha, the capital of Okinawa, and ships linking the island with others were canceled as the agency also warned of high waves, heavy rains and strong winds in the region.

About 100,000 households in the prefecture suffered power outages, local media reported.

Neoguri, the eighth typhoon of the season, was 99 miles west-northwest of Kume Island as of 6 p.m. Japan time, traveling north-northwest at 18.6 mph, the agency said.

The typhoon had maximum sustained winds of 100 mph and gusts of 134 mph, the agency said.

The agency projected Neoguri to make landfall on the southern island of Kyushu on Thursday.

With the typhoon approaching Kyushu, heavy rains already lashed the island.

Rainfall of up to 8 inches was forecast for southern Kyushu through Wednesday evening, up to 6.3 inches for Okinawa and Amami islands and up to 4 inches for the southwestern island of Shikoku, the agency said.