An elderly woman was one of the more than 30 who have died in Japan from the devastating Typhoon Hagibis, officials said.

According to local reports, the woman in her 70s died after she fell more than 131 feet while she was being placed in a rescue helicopter.

The Tokyo Fire Department said the woman had not been strapped in properly while being airlifted in Iwaki City in Fukushima prefecture, a northern area devastated by the typhoon, Sky News reported.

SUPER TYPHOON HAGIBIS MAY BE STRONG TO HIS JAPAN IN DECADES

The death toll from a ferocious typhoon in Japan climbed to as high as 33, as one elderly woman fell to her death as she was being placed inside a rescue helicopter, according to reports.

The Tokyo Fire Department said a woman in her 70s was accidentally dropped 131 feet to the ground while being transported into a rescue helicopter in Iwaki city in Fukushima prefecture, a northern area devastated by the typhoon.

Department officials held a news conference to apologize, bowing deeply and long, according to Japanese custom, and acknowledged the woman had not been strapped in properly.

Officials said at least 33 people have died in the ferocious typhoon and more than 19 reported missing.

"The major typhoon has caused immense damage far and wide in eastern Japan," government spokesman Yoshihide Suga said, as Sky News reported.

HURRICANE LORENZO LASHES AZORES WITH HIGH WAVES, HEAVY RAIN AS STORM TAKES AIM AT BRITISH ISLES

The government’s Fire and Disaster Management Agency, which tends to be conservative in its counts, said late Sunday that 14 people died, 11 were missing and 187 were injured as a result of the typhoon. It said 1,283 homes were flooded and 517 were damaged, partially or totally.

Among the reported deaths were those whose homes were buried in landslides. Other fatalities included people who got swept away by raging rivers.

The authorities had repeatedly warned that Hagibis was on par with a typhoon that wreaked havoc on the Tokyo region in 1958, but the safety infrastructure that Japan’s modernization has brought was apparent. The typhoon six decades ago left more than 1,200 people dead and half a million houses flooded.

The typhoon made landfall south of Tokyo on Saturday evening and battered central and northern Japan with torrents of rain and powerful gusts of wind. The typhoon was downgraded to a tropical storm on Sunday.

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The Rugby World Cup match between Namibia and Canada, scheduled for Sunday in Kamaishi, in northern Japan, was canceled as a precautionary measure, but Japan played Scotland, to a win, as scheduled Sunday evening.

Fox News' Travis Fedschun and the Associated Press contributed to this report.