Kuwait Times

Super cyclone hits Bangladesh, India

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KHULNA: Several million people were taking shelter and praying for the best yesterday as the Bay of Bengal’s fiercest cyclone in decades roared towards Bangladesh and eastern India, with forecasts of a potentiall­y devastatin­g and deadly storm surge. Authoritie­s have scrambled to evacuate low lying areas in the path of Amphan, which is only the second “super cyclone” to form in the northeaste­rn Indian Ocean since records began.

But their efforts have been hampered by the need to follow strict precaution­s to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s pandemic, with infection numbers still soaring in both countries. “At least 50 people took shelter in my concrete-built house. They came last evening. We gave them food,” Abdur Rahim, a Bangladesh­i shrimp farmer on the edge of the Sundarbans mangrove forest told AFP. “There is panic. The women are worried... A few months ago Cyclone Bulbul smashed our village, destroying at least 100 homes. We hope Allah will save us this time.”

Early yesterday the vast weather system - visible from space - was 125 kilometers offshore with gusts up to 200 kilometers per hour, the equivalent of a category three hurricane, the Indian Meteorolog­ical Department said. It was expected to ease slightly but still pack a ferocious punch when it crosses the coasts of West Bengal state and neighborin­g Bangladesh with gusts up to 185 kph. Bangladesh­i forecaster­s said it would hit around 6:00 pm, with a potential storm surge up to five meters (15 feet). The storm could “cause large-scale and extensive damage”, said the head of India’s weather office Mrutyunjay Mohapatra, with a surge of several meters.

Storm surges can force a wall of water to cascade several kilometers inland, and are often the biggest killers in any cyclone, typhoon or hurricane. Sanjib Banerjee from West Bengal weather office said that parts of Kolkata could see “severe damage”. Early yesterday the sky there was ominously grey. At the coast it was raining and the sea rough. “We have mobilized more than 20,000 policemen, emergency workers and volunteers, boats and buses to evacuate around 300,000 people from coastal villages,” state premier Mamata Banerjee said. “It’s a very difficult task when the state is combating the coronaviru­s pandemic,” she said.

Regular victims Bangladesh’s low-lying coast, home to 30 million people, and India’s east are regularly battered by cyclones that have claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of people in recent decades. The eastern Indian state of Odisha was hit by a super cyclone that left nearly 10,000 dead in 1999, eight years after a typhoon, tornadoes and flooding killed 139,000 in Bangladesh. In 1970 Cyclone Bhola killed half a million. While the storms’ frequency and intensity have increased - a phenomenon blamed partly on climate change - deaths have fallen thanks to faster evacuation­s, better technology and more shelters. But Bangladesh authoritie­s still fear that Amphan will be the most powerful storm front since Cyclone Sidr devastated the country in 2007, killing about 3,500 people and causing billions of dollars in damage.

The country has been feverishly working to bring 2.2 million people to safety, while West Bengal was relocating 300,000 others. The Catholic Relief Services (CRS) aid group said people faced “an impossible choice” of braving the cyclone by staying put, or risking coronaviru­s infection in a shelter. Authoritie­s in both countries said that they were using extra shelter space to reduce crowding, while also making face masks compulsory and providing extra soap and sanitiser. “We are also keeping separate isolation rooms in the shelters for any infected patients,” Bangladesh’s junior disaster management minister Enamur Rahman said.

Rohingya refugees Although outside the predicted direct path of the storm, there are fears for the safety of almost a million Rohingya refugees from Myanmar in southeaste­rn Bangladesh - most living in vast camps and housed in flimsy and makeshift shacks. The first coronaviru­s cases were reported there last week, and by Tuesday there were six confirmed infections. The UN said emergency items such as food, tarpaulins and water purificati­on tablets had been stockpiled, while authoritie­s said the refugees would be moved to sturdier buildings like schools. “Heavy rains, flooding (and) the destructio­n of homes and farmland, will increase the likelihood of the virus spreading, particular­ly in densely populated areas like the refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar,” ActionAid said. “It will also undoubtedl­y increase the number of lives and livelihood­s already lost to this pandemic.”— AFP

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 ?? —AFP ?? KHULNA: Workers unload goods from a truck ahead of the expected landfall of cyclone Amphan, in Khulna yesterday.
—AFP KHULNA: Workers unload goods from a truck ahead of the expected landfall of cyclone Amphan, in Khulna yesterday.

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