The Free Press Journal

It seems there was a war: Fiercest cyclone; 76 dead

- PRADIPTA TAPADAR / PREMA RAJARAM Kolkata

West Bengal faces the twin challenge of grappling with the coronaviru­s as well as the aftermath of cyclone Amphan, which snuffed out 76 lives on Wednesday, including 15 in Kolkata.

"Never in my life have I seen a cyclone like this in Bengal," said 95-year-old Ashok Roy, a retired school teacher, visibly shaken by the ferocity of the cyclone 'Amphan' that left a trail of destructio­n in half a dozen districts, including the state capital.

Buses and taxis crashed against each other, small fishing boats turned topsy-turvy and grounded planes quivered at the inundated Kolkata airport as winds of up to 190 kmph rampaged through West Bengal, already reeling under the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Yet again at the receiving end were migrants. Fortyfive-year-old Jamal Mondal had just returned home from Bengaluru on Monday. But that relief was short-lived. His thatched mud house was flattened by 'Amphan' on Wednesday night. "On Monday, when I reached home, I thought my sufferings were over. But I was wrong.

The lockdown took away my job and the cyclone took away everything that was left. I do not know what would I do next, where would I stay and how would I feed my family," Mondal told a TV news channel.

A large part of the state was without power as electricit­y poles have been either uprooted. More than 14 lakh people in Kolkata are without electricit­y since Wednesday night.

The damage caused by the cyclone is worse than the Covid crisis. Nearly 99 per cent of South 24 Parganas has been wiped out. It is the worst cyclone in Bengal in 283 years – CHIEF MINISTER MAMATA BANERJEE

Mobile and internet services were also down as more than 1,500 mobile towers across the state have been destroyed. ‘‘Our situation is such that I am unable to connect with the district magistrate­s as there is no network,” said Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.

“Even our state secretaria­t was shaking and the window panes are broken. I thought the building would collapse,” added Mamata, who also said she will ask the Prime Minister to visit the affected areas. In Kolkata, thousands of trees were uprooted, lamp posts were blown away, power supply snapped, and pieces of shattered glass panes were strewn all over the streets. Homes in low-lying areas were swamped with rainwater while portions of several dilapidate­d buildings came crashing down. "It is not the city where I have grown up... It seems there was a war yesterday... I cannot believe this is my Kolkata," said Sudhir Chakrabort­y, a resident of south Kolkata's Rashbehari area.

Cargo and evacuation flights services resumed at the Kolkata Internatio­nal airport in the morning, even though a portion of the aircraft hangar is waterlogge­d. Authoritie­s have been trying hard to pump out the water. Felled trees, more than 4,000 of them, were blocking important roads and intersecti­ons. As it is, the lockdown had made it difficult for people to seek help and reach different parts of the city.

At Kolkata's Central Avenue, a small concrete temple situated at the base of a banyan tree was uprooted. Embankment­s in the Sundarban delta -- a UNESCO world heritage site -- were breached as the surge whipped up by the cyclone inundated several stretches of the islands.

According to the agricultur­al department, the paddy crop in Burdwan, West Midnapore and Hooghly has been destroyed. A compensati­on of Rs.2.5 lakhs has been announced for the families of the deceased. “I have told the Union Home Minister that I have never seen this kind of a disaster. We require help. For COVID also, we got no help,” lamented the Chief Minister hoping that the Centre lends a helping hand.

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