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Singapore: Tsunami warnings have been lifted for some densely populated Asia Pacific countries previously thought to be at risk after a huge earthquake that hit Japan on Friday, the US Pacific Tsunami Warning Center (PTWC) and national officials said.
Earlier, the center issued a warning for the entire Pacific basin except mainland United States and Canada, and including Hawaii, and extending from Mexico down to South American countries on the Pacific.
Australia and New Zealand, which had been on an initial warning list, were later removed. The Joint Australian Tsunami Warning Centre confirmed there was no tsunami threat.
China, Indonesia and the Philippines lifted their tsunami alerts after Taiwan and the US territory of Guam also said the threat of the massive waves had passed.
The tsunami was expected to head towards the Americas, where PTWC warnings were in effect for countries including Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama, Honduras, Chile, Ecuador, Colombia and Peru.
The tsunami waves passed through Hawaii, some 3,800 miles (6,200 km) from Japan, without any enormous impact and the United States appeared to be out of any major danger, White House chief of staff Bill Daley said.
Hawaii's civil defense agency had ordered all coastal areas, including the main tourist hub Honolulu, evacuated by 2 am local time (1200 GMT).
The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) said small tsunami waves of up to 70 cm hit the eastern coast of the Philippines facing the Pacific Ocean.
Ocean waves up to 6 feet (2 meters) above normal sea level were detected by deep-ocean gauges near Wake island, Midway and Guam in the North Pacific, said Chip McCreary, a spokesman for the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.
The Pacific islands of Palau, which had expected the tsunami waves to hit at 1030 GMT, did not feel any impact, Feremin Meriang, press secretary to Palau's president, said.
Earlier on Friday, the Red Cross in Geneva said the tsunami was higher than some of the Pacific islands it could wash over, warning that developing countries in the Asia Pacific region were particularly vulnerable to tsunami damage.
The biggest earthquake to hit Japan in 140 years struck the northeast coast on Friday, triggering a 10-metre tsunami that swept away everything in its path, including houses and cars.
By 1500 GMT, there had been no reports of a serious tsunami hitting anywhere beyond Japan.
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