
1 feared dead, others missing as heavy rain hits southwestern Japan
The Japan Meteorological Agency issued a special heavy rain warning for parts of Kumamoto Prefecture but downgraded it to a heavy rain warning in the afternoon, while still urging residents in the affected areas to remain alert.
A man, who was evacuating with his family, went missing after their car was swept away by a landslide in Kosa, Kumamoto Prefecture.
The mother and two children were rescued, while local police said they are confirming the identity of a man who was later found nearby with no vital signs.
There were also reports of people being swept away and landslides washing away houses and cars in the prefecture and neighboring Fukuoka Prefecture.
A man in his 60s was rescued from a collapsed house in Misato, Kumamoto, and taken to the hospital, according to local firefighters.
In Fukutsu, Fukuoka, two people in their 60s were swept away by a river on Sunday afternoon, and rescue operations are ongoing, according to local authorities.
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba told reporters Monday morning his government is "committed to implementing disaster response measures," while urging residents to remain vigilant.
JR Kyushu, which serves southwestern Japan, said it suspended all bullet train services from the start of operations in the morning but resumed them in the afternoon.
The weather agency has been warning of extreme rainfall in Kumamoto and Nagasaki prefectures as a rainband stretching across the Japanese archipelago has inundated wide areas of the country.
Tamana in Kumamoto recorded 370 millimeters of rainfall in six hours through early Monday, nearly double the city's average precipitation for all of August, according to the weather agency.

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