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                      | Rescuers  conduct a search operation at the site of a landslide in Mimata, Miyazaki  Prefecture, southern Japan. |  Storm hits southwest Japan, leaves 1 dead, another  missing
 TOKYO (AP) -- A tropical storm slammed  southwestern Japan with rainfall and winds Monday, leaving one person dead and  another missing, as it swerved north toward Tokyo.
 Residential streets were flooded  with muddy water from rivers, and swathes of homes lost power after Typhoon  Nanmadol made landfall in the Kyushu region Sunday then weakened to a tropical  storm.
 A man was found dead early  Monday in his car that was sunk in water on a farm, said Yoshiharu Maeda, a  city hall official in charge of disasters at Miyakonojo, Miyazaki prefecture.  Separately, one person was missing after a cottage was caught in a landslide, according  to a Miyazaki prefectural official.
 Nanmadol has sustained winds  blowing at 108 km per hour (67 mph) and gusts up to 162 km (100 miles) per  hour, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.
 Tens of thousands of people  spent the night at gymnasiums and other facilities in a precautionary  evacuation of  vulnerable homes. More than 60 people were injured, including those who fell  down in the rain or were hit by shards of glass, according to Japanese media  reports.
 Torrential winds  smashed signboards. A construction crane snapped and a window at a pachinko  parlor was shattered in Kagoshima city, southwestern Japan. Bullet trains and  airlines suspended service. Warnings were issued about landslides and swelling  rivers. Convenience store chains and delivery services temporarily shuttered in  southwestern Japan, while some highways were closed and people had some  problems with cell phone connections.
 (Latest Update September 20, 2022)
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