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Tokyo gets first 'heavy snow' alert in four years
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Jan 22, 2018


Japan's weather agency Monday issued a heavy snow warning for Tokyo for the first time in four years, urging people to go home early amid fears of public transport chaos.

Scores of domestic flights departing from and arriving at the Japanese capital were scrapped due to the snow, while some regional trains were also cancelled.

Japan's northern regions frequently see heavy blankets of snow but such weather is rare in Tokyo.

And with the snowfall expected to get heavier, Tsumoru Matsumoto, the agency's chief forecaster, urged people to cut short their working day.

"There will be heavy snow this evening" in Tokyo, Matsumoto said, warning that "the snow is likely to affect public transport" when the evening commute begins.

Large crowds battled through snow at Shinjuku, the world's busiest train station, as the nightly rush hour began.

One Twitter user complained it was impossible to move in Shinjuku as it was so packed.

The weather agency only issues a heavy snow alert when there are fears there could be damage to property or disruption to traffic.

"In Tokyo, we also warn of heavy snow if the snow is expected to accumulate more than 10 centimetres (4 inches) in 12 hours," Sakiko Nishioka from the weather agency told AFP.

The last time the alert was issued, in February 2014, Tokyo saw 27 centimetres of snow.

The country's northern regions that often see heavy snow have a higher bar for the warning.

This prompted some mockery on Japanese social media, with one user noting "public transport is paralysed with such little snow in Tokyo and a flood of people cannot go home.

"People in Asahikawa (in Hokkaido) live as if the snow didn't exist."

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Extreme cold snap hits Russia ahead of Epiphany icy plunges
Moscow (AFP) Jan 18, 2018
Temperatures in Siberia fell to extremely low levels on Thursday as Russian Christians prepared to plunge into ice holes in traditional celebrations marking the baptism of Jesus Christ. In the Sakha Republic, a region in Russia's Far East around 5,300 kilometres (3,300 miles) east of Moscow, temperatures dropped to minus 68 degrees celsius (minus 90 Fahrenheit). Local authorities had ... read more

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