Cyclone Hits Bangladesh After Battering India, Mass Evacuations Save Lives

Reuters
By Reuters
May 4, 2019World News
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Cyclone Hits Bangladesh After Battering India, Mass Evacuations Save Lives
An auto-rickshaw and uprooted trees lie along a road in Puri district after Cyclone Fani hit the coastal eastern state of Odisha, India, on May 3, 2019. (AP Photo)

DHAKA/BHUBANESWAR, India—The strongest cyclone to hit India in five years killed at least 15 people in eastern Odisha state, before swinging north-eastwards into Bangladesh on Saturday were four more people died although more than a million had been moved to safety.

After it made landfall early on Friday, tropical cyclone Fani had lost some of its power and was downgraded to a ‘Deep Depression’ by the Indian Meteorological Department as the storm moved inland over Bangladesh.

“The fear of a major disaster is mostly over as it has weakened,” Shamsuddin Ahmed, director of the Bangladesh Meteorological Department, told reporters.

A storm surge still breached embankments to submerge dozens of villages on Bangladesh’s low-lying coast, a disaster ministry official in Dhaka said.

India Cyclone 1
Motorcycles lie on a street in Puri district after Cyclone Fani hit the coastal eastern state of Odisha, India, on May 3, 2019. (AP Photo)

About 1.2 million people living in the most vulnerable districts in Bangladesh had been moved to some 4,000 shelters.

The official said storm had damaged more than 500 houses. It destroyed several houses in the Noakhali district, where a two-year-old child and a 12-year-old girl were killed, and about 30 people were injured, local official Tanmoy Das told Reuters.

Bangladesh’s junior disaster minister Enamur Rahman told reporters that at least four people had been killed and 63 injured.

In India, authorities were assessing the damage left behind by Fani, which had spent days building power over the northern reaches of the Bay of Bengal before tearing into Odisha.

Indian media reported that at least 15 people had died across the state, with most deaths caused by falling trees, but a mass evacuation of 1.2 million people in the 24 hours before the tropical cyclone made landfall averted a greater loss of life.

The seaside temple town of Puri, which lay directly in the path of Fani, suffered extensive damage, as winds gusting up to 200 kph (124 mph) tore off tin roofs, snapped power lines, and uprooted trees on Friday.

“Destruction is unimaginable… Puri is devastated,” Odisha’s Special Relief Commissioner Bishnupada Sethi told Reuters, adding that 116 people were reported injured across the state.

Video footage taken from an Indian navy aircraft showed extensive inundation in areas around Puri, with wide swathes of land submerged in the aftermath of the storm.

At least six people died in Bhubaneswar, Odisha’s state capital, where fallen trees blocked roads and electricity supply was still to be fully restored.

Ashok Patnaik, director of Capital Hospital, one of the largest state-run hospitals in n Bhubaneswar, said four people were received dead on Friday and two on Saturday. “All are cyclone-related,” he said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is in the midst of a general election, said in a tweet that he would visit Odisha on Monday.

Bhubaneswar airport suffered considerable damage, but would re-open on Saturday afternoon, India’s aviation ministry said.

Shelters were set up in schools and other safe buildings to accommodate the evacuees, who included scores of tourists.

Neighboring West Bengal state escaped substantial damage, but authorities moved nearly 45,000 people to safer locations.

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Cars are damaged by an uprooted tree in a residential area following Cyclone Fani in Bhubaneswar, capital of the eastern state of Odisha, India, on May 4, 2019. (Jatindra Dash/Reuters)

The cyclone season in the Bay of Bengal can last from April to December.

In 1999, a super-cyclone battered the coast of Odisha for 30 hours, killing 10,000 people.

But since then, technology advances have helped weather forecasters track the cyclones more accurately, giving authorities more time to prepare, and a mass evacuation of nearly a million people saved thousands of lives in 2013.

By Jatindra Dash and Ruma Paul

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