Homes destroyed
Rescuers paddled through flooded streets and canals in Okazaki in inflatable rafts on Friday, ferrying residents, many of them elderly, from destroyed homes to safety.
At the storm's peak, Okazaki was hit with 5.7 inches of rain per hour according to Japan's meteorological agency, a record for the area.
A 76-year-old woman was found drowned in her home in Okazaki and a man was in serious condition, Kazumi Yamagawa, a local police official
said. Three other people were reported to be missing.
Hachioji, a western suburb of Tokyo, was also hit by record rainfall, triggering landslides that destroyed several homes.
Several train lines were affected and hundreds of people on their way to work in the city suffered delays.
Japan is often hit in summer by heavy rains, which can trigger flash flooding.
Earlier this month, five workers were killed in Tokyo after being pulled down a manhole when sewage waters suddenly rose after a thunderstorm.
Last month, a woman, two girls and a boy were found dead after being washed away by a swollen river after a downpour in the port city of Kobe, west of Tokyo.
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