Powerful Typhoon Roke hits still-recovering Japan
A powerful typhoon has strikes disaster-ravaged Japan, bringing heavy rains and floods that have so far claimed the lives of four, and is headed towards Fukushima.
Typhoon Roke is on course to hit the city of Fukushima, the site of a nuclear disaster following an earthquake and tsunami combo that all but wrecked a nuclear power plant operating in the area.
Months after the first disaster, engineers are still struggling to bring a nuclear plant under control after the March tsunami. There are concerns that rain could force radioactive water into the sea.
Across Japan more than a million people were urged to evacuate their homes; an advisory was later lifted in one area but 330,000 people remain at risk.
The typhoon made landfall on 0500GMT, and made its way up the main island of Honshu, bringing high winds and torrential rain.
The storm is tracking a path across Tokyo towards Fukushima prefecture and is then expected to travel up along the north-east coast, which was battered by the 11 March earthquake and tsunami.
The BBC is reporting that pools of radioactive water currently remain at the Fukushima nuclear site, and there is concern that a heavy downpour could cause them to overflow into the sea or groundwater.
Four people have been found dead after heavy rain and flooding in central and western Japan due to the storm's approach.
Two people are missing in the central prefecture of Gifu, including a nine-year-old boy.
Several motorways have been closed and hundreds of flights cancelled. Car maker Toyota is suspending production at 11 of its 15 factories.
Japan's Meteorological Agency has urged "the highest level of caution be used because of the heavy rain, strong wind, and high waves."
The agency has warned of downpours over a wide area of the country on Wednesday, saying some places could be deluged by as much as 50mm of rain in an hour.
This is the second time in less than a month that Japan is being lashed by a typhoon. Talas ripped through the west of the country, leaving about 90 people dead or missing.