Japan on high alert for 'huge' second quake after issuing tsunami warning

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Japan's meteorological agency warns another, stronger earthquake may hit in the next week,

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Thousands of people were told to leave coastal areas for higher ground after the quake in waters off Iwate prefecture, 530km (330 miles) north of the capital Tokyo.

The biggest waves measured 80cm but the meteorological agency in earthquake-prone Japan warned that quakes "causing even stronger shaking" could occur in the next week, producing bigger waves.

Later, the agency warned the risk of a quake measuring 8.0 or higher was now "relatively higher than during normal times".

People in Japan are still scarred by memories of a huge quake in 2011 that triggered a tsunami which killed more than 18,000 people and caused a meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant.

After Monday's undersea quake, recorded at a depth of 10km, warnings of possible bigger waves were issued to residents in areas nearest the epicentre - in Japan's main island, Honshu, and the northern region of Hokkaido.

In Hokkaido tsunami alerts remained in place two hours after the quake struck at 16:52 local time (08:52 BST).

"As soon as we heard the earthquake alert, everyone ran downstairs," Chaw Su Thwe, a Myanmar national living in Hokkaido, told the BBC. "However, this time the shaking was relatively mild.

"Right now, local authorities are using loudspeakers in the neighbourhood to warn people about a possible tsunami and to stay alert," she added. "Office workers have been allowed to leave work early."

A number of bullet trains were affected, and 100 homes were without power, Japan's Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara told reporters. He said there were no immediate reports of major damage or injuries.

A tsunami warning was issued across part of Japan's east coast. The warning is the second-highest of three levels of alert, with people being told to evacua

Source: BBC

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