A 6.8-magnitude earthquake has struck off the coast of
northeastern Japan, the US Geological Survey has said, but authorities have not
issued a tsunami warning and there were no immediate reports of damage.
The quake struck at 6:12am (21:12 GMT Tuesday) off the east
coast of Japan’s Honshu island in the Pacific Ocean at a depth of 38.9km,
according to USGS.
Japan’s meteorological agency said there was no immediate
tsunami threat from the earthquake, which hit 33km southeast of the nearest
city of Ofunato.
Large areas jolted by the latest tremor were among those
damaged by the 2011 quake and tsunami that killed more than 18,000 people and
triggered a nuclear meltdown at the Fukushima power plant.
Wednesday’s earthquake did not damage any of the nuclear
reactors in the region, including those at the crippled Fukushima facility,
Japan’s public broadcaster NHK said.
All of Japan’s reactors have been off-line since the
Fukushima disaster.
Train services in the region, including “Shinkansen” bullet
train operations, were temporarily suspended following the quake, officials
said.
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