TOKYO — A typhoon that blasted parts of Japan with more than 200-kilometer-per-hour winds moved out to sea on Saturday, mostly sparing the capital and allowing trains and some flights to resume.
Tokyo and its surrounding areas had been on high alert on Friday for Ampil's approach, with transport services, trips, events and classes canceled en masse.
The storm was packing gusts of 216 kph (134 miles per hour) on Saturday morning when it veered away from the archipelago and headed northeast into the Pacific.
Even so, the Japan Meteorological Agency warned on Saturday that "some areas in the northern part of Japan are experiencing heavy rain due to warm, humid air around the typhoon."
"Please be advised that the risk of landslides has been significantly elevated by the heavy rain so far in some areas," the weather agency said in an advisory.
Although the feared catastrophe in Tokyo never came, some minor injuries and damage were reported, including broken windows, toppled trees and broken utility poles.
Most parts of Japan's bullet train network went back to normal on Saturday after the Central Japan Railway Co. closed a busy section between Tokyo and the central city of Nagoya the day before.
"JR Central bullet trains are business as usual today," the railway firm said on its website.
Airlines were still being affected to a degree, with the Japan Broadcasting Corp., or NHK, saying All Nippon Airways and Japan Airlines had together scrapped 68 flights as of Saturday morning, after hundreds of cancellations the day before.
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