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Typhoon Mawar losing strength as it heads toward Japan’s Okinawa Islands

By JOHNSON LAI and DAVID RISING, Associated Press
Published: May 31, 2023, 8:22am
3 Photos
Fishing boats, back, are tied with rope to brace for Typhoon Mawar in Itoman, southern Japan, Wednesday, May 31, 2023, as it was moving towards the Okinawa islands. Typhoon Mawar appears to be losing force as it heads toward Japan's Okinawa Islands, after largely skirting Taiwan and the Philippines.
Fishing boats, back, are tied with rope to brace for Typhoon Mawar in Itoman, southern Japan, Wednesday, May 31, 2023, as it was moving towards the Okinawa islands. Typhoon Mawar appears to be losing force as it heads toward Japan's Okinawa Islands, after largely skirting Taiwan and the Philippines. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae) Photo Gallery

NAHA, Japan (AP) — Typhoon Mawar appeared to be losing force as it headed Wednesday toward Japan’s Okinawa Islands, where the United States maintains a significant military presence, after largely skirting Taiwan and the Philippines.

After tearing across Guam last week, Mawar passed by Taiwan on Tuesday with sustained winds of 155 kph (96 mph) and gusts of up to 190 kph (118 mph), sending high waves crashing on the island’s east coast.

In the Philippines, authorities said heavy rains were expected to continue in the country’s north through at least Thursday and warned of flooding, possible landslides and gale-force winds before the typhoon exits the country’s area of responsibility.

As it turns toward the Japanese islands of Okinawa, Philippine meteorological authorities said Mawar’s strength had dropped with sustained winds now of 120 kmh (75 mph) and gusts of up to 150 kmh (93 mph).

Mawar is expected to gradually pick up speed but steadily weaken and may be downgraded to a tropical storm by the time it is predicted to hit the area on Friday, Philippine forecasters said.

Residents on Japan’s southern Sakishima Island chain, which includes the Okinawa Islands, were already preparing for the approaching typhoon when a warning siren woke them up Wednesday to alert them of a North Korean rocket launch. Officials urged people to stay indoors or take shelter underground in case of a falling debris.

The rocket failed and did not come anywhere near Japan, but residents already anxious about the typhoon said it added to their stress.

Japan had deployed a number of PAC-3 land-to-air interceptors on southern islands ahead of the launch, but some of them were kept on base instead of being set up at intended locations due to safety precautions ahead of the typhoon.

The U.S. military, which has some 20,000 troops stationed on multiple facilities on Okinawa, will take preparatory action as the storm draws closer, depending upon need, said Capt. Brett Dornhege-Lazaroff, spokesman for the 3rd Marine Expeditionary Force on Okinawa.

“Our installations are tracking the storm closely,” he said.

At the moment, it seems that Mawar will not make landfall on the main Okinawa island, home to the capital of Naha and where most of the U.S. forces are based, according to Japan’s meteorological agency.

Mawar lashed Guam last week, becoming the strongest typhoon to hit the U.S. Pacific territory in more than two decades, flipping cars, tearing off roofs and knocking out power.

In the Philippines, more than 8,000 people had been evacuated from flood- and landslide-prone communities to emergency shelters or relatives’ houses but many returned home on Wednesday as the weather started to clear. No major damage was reported.

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