Eastern Eye (UK)

TAUKTAE FURY: CYCLONE HAMMERS WESTERN INDIA

⚫ TWENTY-FOUR DEAD AND NEARLY 100 MISSING ⚫ HOSPITALS ALONG COAST SHIFT COVID PATIENTS

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AT LEAST 24 people were dead and almost 100 missing on Tuesday (18) after a monster cyclone slammed into western India, compoundin­g the country’s woes as it battles a devastatin­g coronaviru­s surge.

Hundreds of thousands of people were left without power after Cyclone Tauktae hammered the Gujarat coast on Monday (17) evening. Wind up to 130 kilometres per hour smashed seafront windows and knocked over power lines and thousands of trees, blocking roads leading to affected areas, officials said.

The colossal swirling system is the latest of a growing number of increasing­ly severe storms in the Arabian Sea blamed on climate change. “I have never experience­d such intensity in my life,” a hotel owner in the town of Bhavnagar said. “It was pitch dark as power was cut off and winds were making a roaring sound. It was scary.”

One support vessel serving oil rigs that were walloped by eight-metre waves off Mumbai sank and 96 of the 273 people who had been on board were missing, the Indian Navy said on Tuesday. The defence ministry said 177 people were rescued, with operations continuing in “extremely challengin­g sea conditions”. Two other barges and an oil rig were also in trouble.

Elsewhere, four fresh casualties were reported on Tuesday, including a child crushed by a collapsing wall and an 80-year-old woman killed by a falling pole, Gujarat chief minister Vijay Rupani said. He added over 16,500 houses were damaged, 40,000 trees uprooted and 2,400 villages without power.

“Since the cyclone made landfall we have not had power or communicat­ions,” local official Aayush Oak said by phone from the coastal district of Amreli where 40-50 mobile phone towers were damaged. Although the cyclone was one of the fiercest in decades, better forecastin­g than in previous disasters meant that 200,000 people in danger zones were evacuated from their homes.

“Our planning over the last three days has paid off. We have managed to minimise human casualties,” said Rupani.

But challenges remain. Forecaster­s warned of a tidal wave of 1-2 metres (3-6 feet) in some areas as the cyclone barrelled inland weakening slightly but still bringing heavy rains and gale-force winds. In Gujarat, all Covid-19 patients in hospitals within five kilometres of the coast were moved.

Authoritie­s there scrambled to ensure there would be no power cuts in hospitals and 41 oxygen plants.

“Out of the 1,400 covid hospitals, power was disrupted in only 16. In 12 hospitals, power has been restored and four are working on generators,” Rupani said.

However, one Covid-19 patient died in the town of Mahuva after he could not be moved in time before the storm hit, doctors said. The state also suspended vaccinatio­ns for two days. Mumbai did the same for one day. The city also shifted about 600 Covid-19 patients from field hospitals “to safer locations”.

“This cyclone is a terrible double blow for millions of people in India whose families have been struck down by record Covid infections and deaths,” said Udaya Regmi from the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

Last May, more than 110 people died after “super cyclone” Amphan ravaged eastern India and Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal.

The Arabian Sea previously experience­d fewer severe cyclones than the Bay of Bengal, but rising water temperatur­es due to global warming was changing that, Roxy Mathew Koll from the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y said.

“(The) Arabian Sea is one of the fastestwar­ming basins across the global oceans,” he said.

The effects were felt far and wide with authoritie­s in Nepal – some 2,000km (1,200 miles) from Gujarat – advising climbers on Everest and other mountains to stay put.

But more than 200 climbers ignored the warnings and were heading up the world’s highest mountain, eyeing the summit by the end of this week, a government official at the base camp said.

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 ??  ?? TRAIL OF DESTRUCTIO­N: (Clockwise from this image) the damaged scaffoldin­g of a factory on Tuesday (18); a man who was rescued by the Indian Navy from a sunken barge in the Arabian Sea arrives at the naval air station INS Shikra in Mumbai; waves pound the promenade near the Gateway of India
TRAIL OF DESTRUCTIO­N: (Clockwise from this image) the damaged scaffoldin­g of a factory on Tuesday (18); a man who was rescued by the Indian Navy from a sunken barge in the Arabian Sea arrives at the naval air station INS Shikra in Mumbai; waves pound the promenade near the Gateway of India

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