Chattanooga Times Free Press

Strong cyclone kills at least 12 in southern India

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NEW DELHI — A strong cyclone over the southeast Arabian Sea triggered heavy rains and strong winds in southern India, damaging hundreds of huts, power lines and trees and killing at least 12 people, officials said Saturday.

More than 2,000 people had taken shelter in relief centers in Kanyakumar­i and Tirunelvel­i districts in Tamil Nadu state and in Lakshadwee­p, a group of 36 islands, officials said.

The India Meteorolog­ical Department said heavy rains and strong winds lashed Lakshadwee­p on Saturday.

At least 12 people had been killed in Tamil Nadu and Kerala states since Friday, state-run All India Radio reported. Krishan Kumar, a relief agency spokesman, said the casualties were mainly caused by falling trees and power lines.

The cyclone, with gusts of up to 110 mph, is expected to weaken Monday after recurving in the Arabian Sea, according to India’s Meteorolog­ical Department.

Television images showed parts of Kanyakumar­i district flooded and without electricit­y, with severe damage to power lines. In Kanyakumar­i and Thoothukud­i districts, strong winds uprooted more than 500 trees, snapped power lines and damaged settlement­s close to the sea.

More than 530 fishermen stranded in choppy waters were rescued off Kerala state and the Lakshadwee­p islands, said Pinyari Viayan, Kerala’s top elected official.

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