KONTAN.CO.ID - TOKYO. An earthquake struck northeastern Japan on Saturday, hitting areas devastated by the 2011 disaster and generating a tsunami of 1 metre, public broadcaster NHK said. The quake hit the coast of Miyagi Prefecture at 6:26 p.m. (0926 GMT) and had a magnitude of 7.2 at a depth of 60 km (40 miles), the Japan Meteorological Agency said. NHK warned the public against coming anywhere near the shore.
Baca Juga: Tense China-U.S. talks heighten need for improved crisis management: Chinese adviser Tohoku Electric Power Co has halted the Onagawa nuclear plant and is checking for any irregularities, NHK said. Tokyo Electric Power spokesman Ryonosuke Takanori said the company is checking the condition of the Fukushima Dai-Ichi power station that was wrecked by the massive March 2011 quake, which caused nuclear meltdowns and mass evacuations. Miyagi Prefecture was having power outages in some areas, according to the website of the Tohoku Electric Power Network. NHK said service on the Tohoku shinkansen bullet train had been halted. “It was a really bad, long shaking from side-to-side. It was even longer than the quake last month, but at least the building here is all right,” Shizue Onodera told NHK from the shop where she works in the city of Ishinomaki.