Bullet trains were also seen engulfed by floodwater at East Japan Railway Co.'s railyard near Nagano Station.
According to the company, 10 trains, with a total of 120 carriages, have been confirmed damaged, which means one-third of its bullet trains used for the Hokuriku Shinkansen line have been damaged by flooding.
The Japan Meteorological Agency had issued the highest downpour warning on its one-to-five scale for Tokyo and other 12 prefectures and gradually lifted all the warnings at Saturday night.
So far the typhoon has weakened to an extratropical cyclone off Japan's northeastern coast.
Most train services resumed operations after large-scale suspensions, while Japan Airlines Co. and All Nippon Airways Co. officials said most of their flights will return to normal on Monday.
Stores and supermarkets that were closed on Saturday in Tokyo have also gradually started operation on Sunday afternoon.
【国际英语资讯:Death toll rises to 35 as Typhoon Hagibis lashes Japan】相关文章:
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