A typhoon churned toward eastern Japan on Saturday, the country's meteorological agency said, issuing an alert over strong winds and high waves in the region.

Typhoon Chaba, which means hibiscus in Thai, was some 220 kilometres (136 miles) southeast of Wakayama, central Japan, packing winds of up to 144 kilometres per hour near its centre, said the agency.

It was moving northeast off Japan's Pacific coast at a speed of 35 kilometres per hour, on course to affect the Tokyo region this weekend, the agency said.

The agency said the typhoon may make landfall in eastern Japan, warning residents in the region "to be on alert over strong winds, high waves, thunderstorms and floods on low-lying land."

There were no immediate reports of damage or casualties because of the typhoon.

On Friday, more than 250 residents were evacuated to public halls and schools, while 19 flights were cancelled on the Amami islands, 1,300 kilometres southwest of Tokyo, as the typhoon bore down on the far-southern islands.

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