Japan Wakes up to North Korean missile warnings

Japan's "J-alert" delivered ominous messages warning people to take cover after North Korea fired a missile over the north of the country


Millions of Japanese awoke to ominous text messages Tuesday warning them to take cover as a North Korean missile flew overhead, with one train operator bluntly explaining its halted service as "Reason: Ballistic missile launch."

Sirens blared out in northern communities that were on the flight path of the ballistic missile as it soared over Japanese territory for two minutes before crashing into the Pacific.
"Missile passing. Missile passing." warned an official text message sent to people across the north of Japan.
"A short time ago, a missile apparently passed above this area.
"If you find suspicious objects, please don't go near them and immediately call police or firefighters.
"Please take cover in secure buildings or underground."
North Korea's launch towards neighbouring Japan -- a key US ally and Korea's former colonial overlord -- marked a major escalation by Pyongyang amid tensions over its weapons ambitions.
And for the first time in the most recent round of weaponised brinkmanship from the North, it brought real worries to people in Japan.
Morning commuters in northernmost Hokkaido were greeted by warning signs at train stations -- bringing many rail services to a halt.
At one metro station in Sapporo, a major city of nearly two million, passengers were warned there would be delays.
"All lines are experiencing disruption," said one sign. "Reason: Ballistic missile launch."
Commuters took the government messages to heart.
News of the missile launch dominated Japanese TV broadcasts on Tuesday, many of which were relayed on big screens in Tokyoplay
News of the missile launch dominated Japanese TV broadcasts on Tuesday, many of which were relayed on big screens in Tokyo
 (AFP)
"Some passengers came down to take cover in a couple of subway stations," a Sapporo subway spokesman told AFP.
Others had little choice but to carry on with their usual schedule, including the crews aboard some 15 fishing vessels that had already left port off southern Hokkaido in an area under the missile's path.
"I was surprised that it went above our area. This has never happened before," Hiroyuki Iwafune, an official at the local fishery co-op, told AFP.
"I was worried. Everyone felt the same. But what can you do? Hide? But where?
"We called those who were at sea. But then they said, 'Even with this (warning), what are we supposed to do?'" Iwafune added.
- 'Very dangerous'-
In Tokyo, more than 700 kilometres (435 miles) south of the missile's flight path, some train services were temporarily halted.
"Currently, a North Korean missile is flying above Japan," said announcements at Tokyo stations handling bullet trains, minutes after the launch.
PAC-3 surface-to-air missile launchers were set up at an air base in Tokyo on Tuesday, in what had been a pre-planned drill that coincided with the launch of North Korea's latest missileplay
PAC-3 surface-to-air missile launchers were set up at an air base in Tokyo on Tuesday, in what had been a pre-planned drill that coincided with the launch of North Korea's latest missile
 (AFP)
"It is very dangerous. Please take cover at the waiting areas or inside the trains."
Yoshiaki Nakane, a retired government worker, said he feared Pyongyang's provocative launch would aggravate already tense US-North Korea relations.
"North Korea repeatedly launches missiles and don't seem to take any warnings seriously," the 68-year-old said.
"I'm hoping that the United States will not react too strongly to it and cause trouble. It would be Japan and South Korea that get damaged."
At a US military base in Tokyo on Tuesday, Japan deployed a Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) missile defence system as part of a previously scheduled drill.
Map showing the site of a North Korean missile launch Tuesday, according to South Korean military.play
Map showing the site of a North Korean missile launch Tuesday, according to South Korean military.
 (AFP)
The last time a North Korean rocket overflew Japan was in 2009, when Pyongyang said it was satellite launch. Washington, Seoul and Tokyo believed it was a clandestine test of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).
Japan has previously aired public service TV ads and held emergency drills -- with schoolchildren ducking on the street, covering their heads and running for cover -- to prepare for the ever-present threat from its erratic neighbour.
Tokyo university student Julia Kotake said she was scared that North Korean missile may strike Japan one day.
"But I don't think there is anything that we could do," the 18-year-old told AFP.

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