The Pak Banker

Mass evacuation­s for cyclone in South Asia

- KOLKATA -AP

Millions of people were being moved to safety as one of the fiercest cyclones in years barrelled towards India and Bangladesh on Tuesday, but with evacuation plans complicate­d by coronaviru­s precaution­s. "Amphan" is expected to pack winds gusting up to 185 kilometres (115 miles) per hour when it hits eastern India and Bangladesh on Wednesday afternoon or evening, and with a storm surge of several metres, forecaster­s said.

Bangladesh authoritie­s fear it will be the most powerful since cyclone Sidr devastated the country in 2007, killing about 3,500 people-mostly due to a deluge of sea water sweeping in. Junior disaster management minister Enamur Rahman said Tuesday that they have already evacuated several thousand people from low-lying areas. "We will evacuate up to 2.2 million and try to keep casualties at zero," Rahman told AFP.

To ensure social distancing in view of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the number of cyclone shelters has been doubled by using schools, with masks compulsory, Rahman said. "We are also keeping separate isolation rooms in the shelters for any infected patients," he added.

Yamin Chowdhury, an official in Bangladesh's Barisal province, said the coast guard was helping to bring back thousands from remote islands.

Fishing boats have been ordered to return to shore and all ports and fish landing stations shut down. "Coastal dwellers in Bangladesh are facing an impossible choice," Snigdha Chakrabort­y from aid group Catholic Relief Services (CRS) said in a statement.

"There is limited space in existing evacuation shelters and people who have been on COVID19 lockdown might hesitate to leave their less-sturdy homes to go to a central-and possibly crowdedshe­lter." She warned of "grim days ahead", with poor sanitation, limited access to safe water and health facilities.

of people

The coronaviru­s lockdown had also cut off many people's income and eaten up their cash reserves, she added.

" Diggers and chainsaws - In India, West Bengal state official Manturam Pakhira said more than 200,000 people were being evacuated from coastal districts and the Sundarbans, a vast mangrove forest area.

"Authoritie­s are also supplying masks and sanitisers and making arrangemen­ts so that they can maintain safe distance from each other," he said.

Arjun Manna, who works for the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) in the Sundarbans, told AFP that loud speakers were urging locals "to wear a mask and maintain social distancing in the shelters".

In Odisha state, relief commission­er Pradeep Kumar Jena told AFP that 20,000 people have been evacuated, with 600 disaster teams "pre-positioned" and contractor­s standing by with diggers and chainsaws.

"We will evacuate more people depending on the situation. No one will be allowed to stay in huts with thatched roofs in coastal areas," Jena said.

He too said that in order to ensure social distancing, additional temporary shelters have been identified, with the state ready to house 1.1 million people if needed.

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