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Cyclone season in the sub-continent

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India began evacuating thousands of villagers and halted port operations ahead of a cyclone expected to hit its east coast this week, piling pressure on emergency services grappling with the coronavirus pandemic.

The cyclone, expected to make landfall on Wednesday, comes as India eases the world’s longest lockdown, imposed in April against the virus, which has infected more than 96,169 people and killed 3,029.

The states of Odisha and West Bengal sent disaster management teams to move families from homes of mud and thatch to places of shelter from the severe cyclonic storm, Amphan, which is expected to gain strength in the next 12 hours.

“We have to evacuate people from low-lying areas, and protect them from the coronavirus too,” said a senior official of India’s home ministry who sought anonymity. “It’s not an easy task.”

The cyclone season usually runs from April to December, with severe storms forcing the evacuations of tens of thousands and causing widespread death and damage to crops and property, both in India and neighbouring Bangladesh.

Authorities at the port of Paradip in Odisha ordered ships to move out to sea to avoid damage as the cyclone formed over the Bay of Bengal.

The prime minister, Narendra Modi, is set to hold a meeting in New Delhi to plan how to mitigate damage and injuries.

“The extremely severe cyclonic storm ‘Amphan’...is likely to gain more strength and intensify further into a super cyclonic storm in the next 12 hours,” weather officials said in a statement, forecasting heavy rain in eastern and southern areas.
 
Extremely severe cyclonic storm Amphan over the west and central parts of Bay of Bengal has intensified into a super cyclone with wind speed above 200 kmph (kilometres per hour) on Monday afternoon, according to India Meteorological Department (IMD). Heavy rainfall is expected to hit coastal Odisha by Monday evening and then hit West Bengal’s coast the following day.

On Wednesday, the super cyclone is expected to marginally lose its strength and cross over to West Bengal and Bangladesh coasts as an extremely severe cyclonic storm with a wind speed of 180-190 kmph. The extremely severe cyclone is expected to cross in between Digha in West Bengal and Hatiya islands in Bangladesh, IMD authorities said on Monday.

Earlier on Monday morning, IMD was expecting it to cross the Indian coasts as a very severe cyclonic storm.

Scientists at IMD said this is the first time that super cyclones have been recorded in two consecutive years — Kyarr (2019) and now Amphan -- and this could be linked to higher sea surface temperatures in both the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal.

This is the first super cyclonic storm in the Bay of Bengal after the 1999 super cyclone, which impacted coastal Odisha and killed over 9,000 people. There was a super cyclone, called Kyarr, in the Arabian Sea last October and was concentrated only in the ocean. However, Kyarr did not claim any human life. Odisha also faced nature’s wrath last May in the form of cyclone Fani.

“All conditions are currently favourable for the development of a super cyclone. The sea surface temperature is in the range of 30 to 31 degrees Celsius, as compared to an expected temperature of 28 degrees Celsius over the region. There is vertical wind shear (change in wind speed with altitude) and sufficient moisture in the air,” said Sunita Devi, a scientist, who is in-charge of cyclones at IMD.

Widespread damage is expected in coastal West Bengal and Odisha, according to IMD’s latest bulletin.

IMD has warned that would be extensive damage to kutcha and even old or damaged pucca constructions, uprooting of communications and power transmission poles, disruption of rail and road links, crops and plantations; large boats, ships can get torn from moorings, etc.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...cyclone-imd/story-9AeCkY65vfznlO5SYeGcSN.html
 
What horrible timing, just as people fleeing from the cities due to coronavirus, now they are getting hit by a cyclone. Terrible.
 
India has begun evacuating millions of people along its eastern coast ahead of a super cyclonic storm in the Bay of Bengal.

The storm is expected to make landfall on Wednesday and hit West Bengal and Orissa (Odisha) states.

More than 20 relief teams have already been deployed, and several more are on standby, officials say.

The cyclone comes amid huge levels of migration from India's cities to its villages.

Tens of thousands of migrant workers are fleeing cities in the wake of a national lockdown to curb the spread of coronavirus.

West Bengal and Orissa are among the states that are seeing a larger number of them return.

Orissa has now cancelled trains which were due to arrive between 18 and 20 May with thousands of migrants.

And some district officials have barred entry into their areas and requested the state government to accommodate the migrants - many of whom are walking home - elsewhere until the storm passes.

The evacuation is expected to continue into tomorrow morning.

State officials are also struggling to find shelters for evacuees. In Orissa, for instance, 250 of the more than 800 existing shelters are being used as quarantine centres.

So both states have asked for schools and other buildings in the areas likely to be impacted by the super cyclone to be turned into temporary shelters - they need more than the usual numbers in order to house people while enforcing social distancing norms.

This would be the first super cyclonic storm in the Bay of Bengal since the 1999 super cyclone that hit the Orissa coast and killed more than 9,000 people, according to BBC Weather.

India's meteorological department has issued a "yellow alert" for the region, advising fishermen not to "venture into the south Bay of Bengal during the next 24 hours, and north Bay of Bengal from 18-20 May".

The weather department said the storm is likely to move across the north-west Bay of Bengal and cross West Bengal and Bangladesh coasts from noon local time on 20 May as a "very severe cyclonic storm".

It also warned of rough seas, with storm surges that could inundate coastal areas.
 
Top officials from the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and the India Meteorological Department (IMD) briefed the media over cyclone Amphan on Tuesday and said that Amphan will be ‘extremely severe cyclonic storm’ when it makes landfall on May 20.

NDRF Director General SN Pradhan said that there are 24 teams on standby and every battalion that has been deployed has 4 teams.

IMD chief Mrutyunjay Mohapatra said Amphan is the most intense cyclone and the second super cyclone which has been formed in the Bay of Bengal after 1999.

“Its wind speed in the sea right now is 200-240 kilometre per hour (kmph). It is moving towards the north-northwestward direction,” Mohapatra said.

Pradhan informed that 15 teams are deployed in Odisha currently. “They are carrying out awareness drives, communication drives, and evacuation. 19 teams are deployed in West Bengal, 2 in standby there.” he said.

The NDRF chief added that the country is facing a dual challenge of Covid-19 and cyclone Amphan.

Mohapatra said, in West Bengal, the cyclone could affect districts like North and South 24 Parganas and East Midnapore districts. Kolkata, Hooghly, Howrah and West Midnapore districts will face wind speed of 110-120 kmph gusting up to 135 kmph, he added.

Telecom secretary Anshu Prakash said that SMS alerts are being generated for people in affected districts for evacuation purposes.

“It is up to state governments to decide the frequency of those alerts. It’s free of cost. It’ll be in local languages,” Prakash said.

Super cyclonic storm Amphan, over west-central Bay of Bengal, moved north-northeastwards with a speed of 17 kmph and lay centred at around 11:30 am on May 19 as an ‘extremely severe cyclonic storm’ over west-central Bay of Bengal.

According to the IMD, Amphan is likely to move north-northeastwards across the northwest Bay of Bengal and cross West Bengal – Bangladesh coasts between Digha (West Bengal) and Hatiya Islands (Bangladesh) close to Sundarbans during the afternoon to evening hours of May 2020.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/ranc...reaches-231/story-xAb3kCwsqewtEg8IQXYtWK.html
 
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Heavy rains and winds have been reported in eastern India and Bangladesh, with a super cyclone expected to make landfall in hours.

Both countries have evacuated millions of people in preparation for Cyclone Amphan, which is approaching from the Bay of Bengal.

India's met department tweeted that Amphan was on course to make landfall "between afternoon and evening".

The coronavirus outbreak is making it harder for officials in both countries.

India and Bangladesh have asked for schools and other buildings to be turned into temporary shelters - but they need more than usual, in order to house people while maintaining social distancing.

Police in India's West Bengal state, which is expected to be badly affected by the storm, told the BBC that people were unwilling to go to the shelters because they were afraid of contracting Covid-19.

More than 20 relief teams have already been deployed, and several more are on standby, Indian officials say.

Amphan is one of the biggest storms in a decade, meteorologists warn. It is expected to hit the coast with winds gusting up to 185km/h (115mph) - the equivalent of a category five hurricane.

Officials in Bangladesh fear it will be the most powerful storm since Cyclone Sidr killed about 3,500 people in 2007. Most died as a result of sea water surging in.

While the storm's current wind speed is likely to reduce slightly before it makes landfall, India's weather department is predicting the surge of water caused could be as high as 10-16 feet (3-5 metres).

The cyclone comes as ten of thousands of migrant workers flee cities for their villages during India's lockdown to curb the spread of coronavirus.

West Bengal and Orissa (Odisha) are among the Indian states that are seeing a larger number of them return.

Orissa has now cancelled trains that were due to arrive with thousands of migrants between 18 and 20 May.

And some district officials have barred entry and requested the state government to accommodate the migrants - many of whom are walking home - elsewhere until the storm passes.

Bangladesh's disaster management minister told the BBC that they planned to evacuate about two million people - an operation they expected to continue into Wednesday morning.

Extra shelters have been prepared to allow for social distancing, while masks are also being distributed.

But state officials in India are struggling to find shelters for evacuees. In Orissa, for instance, 250 of the more than 800 existing shelters are being used as coronavirus quarantine centres.

Around 50,000 people have also been evacuated from areas near the Sunderban islands in India.

This would be the first super cyclonic storm in the Bay of Bengal since the 1999 super cyclone that killed more than 9,000 people.

The weather department said the storm is likely to move across the north-west Bay of Bengal and cross West Bengal and Bangladesh coasts from noon local time on 20 May.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-52734259
 
India and Bangladesh evacuated millions of people from the path of the most powerful storm in 20 years, which is expected to hit on Wednesday evening and has raised fears of extensive damage to houses and crops.

The authorities' move to save lives was complicated by continuing efforts to curb the coronavirus pandemic and enforce social distancing.

Approaching from the Bay of Bengal, super cyclone Amphan was expected to hit the coast of eastern India and southern Bangladesh with winds gusting up to 185 kilometres per hour (115 miles per hour) - weakening from the equivalent of a Category 5 hurricane.

Al Jazeera’s Tanvir Chowdhury, reporting from Bangladeshi capital Dhaka, said the cyclone was expected to land on the South Asian nation's southeastern coastal belt about 6pm local time.

He said 1.4 million people have been evacuated and put into shelter but at least 46,000 people remained in the clear line of danger on some of the islands in the coastal areas.

"There is accommodation for at least five million people and there is medical team, rescue operation team, coastguard and the navy have been put on alert and standby in the coastal areas," he said.

"This would be one of the biggest cyclones so they are taking it very seriously."

The Indian weather department forecast a storm surge of 10 to 16-foot (3-4 metre) waves - as high as a two-storey house - that could swamp mud dwellings along the coast, uproot communication towers and inundate roads and railway tracks.

There will be extensive damage to standing crops and plantations in the states of West Bengal and Odisha, the weather service said in a bulletin late on Tuesday.

Authorities were hastily repurposing quarantine facilities for the looming cyclone soon after easing the world's biggest lockdown against the coronavirus. India has reported more than 100,000 cases with 3,163 deaths.

About 300,000 people had been moved to storm shelters, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee said. The state capital Kolkata lies near the cyclone's path and there was concern about people living in about 1,500 old, dilapidated buildings.

Kolkata was battered by heavy rain and the muddy Hooghly River was rising under dark skies, while in the coastal resort of Digha, large waves were pounding the shore.

Rohingya refugees vulnerable

In neighbouring Bangladesh, officials said the cyclone could set off tidal waves and heavy rainfall, unleashing floods.

It was expected to hit land between the districts of Chittagong and Khulna, just 150 km (93 miles) from refugee camps housing more than a million Rohingya in flimsy shelters.

The UN said food, tarpaulins and water purification tablets had been stockpiled, while authorities said the refugees would be moved to sturdier buildings if needed.

"We are fully prepared. But right now, there is no need to take them to cyclone shelters," said Mahbub Alam Talukder, Bangladesh's refugee commissioner.

Authorities in Bangladesh have also moved hundreds of Rohingya refugees living on a flood-prone island in the Bay of Bengal to storm shelters as the super cyclone barrels down.

The eastern edge of the storm headed for Bangladesh and neighbouring India is expected to batter Bhasan Char island, where 306 Rohingya, members of a persecuted minority from Myanmar, were sent this month after being rescued from boats.

"Each block has a cyclone centre and they have been moved to the centre," said Bimal Chakma, a senior official of the Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commission.

The United Nations has called for the refugees to be moved to the mainland to join more than a million more who live in sprawling camps outside the town of Cox's Bazar.

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 people.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...largest-cyclone-20-years-200520022755647.html
 
Millions hunker down in India and Bangladesh as cyclone Amphan arrives

Ferocious wind and rain is lashing parts of eastern India and Bangladesh as Cyclone Amphan makes landfall.

Millions of people were evacuated in anticipation of the storm, which originated in the Bay of Bengal.

The storm, the first super cyclone to form in the area since 1999, is forecast to cause deadly storm surges, severe flooding and mudslides.

Covid-19 and social-distancing measures have made mass evacuations more difficult for authorities.

Cyclone Amphan began hitting the Sundarbans, a mangrove area around the India-Bangladesh border, on Wednesday afternoon and is forecast to move north and north-eastwards near the major city of Kolkata in India's West Bengal state.

Amphan is expected to move further into Bangladesh on Thursday, and later Bhutan.

The storm was the first super cyclone in the Bay of Bengal since one in 1999 that killed thousands of people but its winds have since weakened slightly, according to BBC Weather.

The eye of the storm was forecast to be fully over land by 18:30 local time (13:00 GMT), with wind speeds of 150-160km/h (93-99mph) and gusts of up to 175km/h.

A Bangladesh Red Crescent volunteer helping villagers to evacuate became the first fatality after the boat he was in capsized in strong winds, the organisation said.

_112377045_amphan_map_640-nc.png


Read more: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-52734259
 
Cyclone Amphan, one of the most powerful in decades, has made landfall along the coastline of India and Bangladesh, killing at least five people and leaving a trail of devastation.

In Bangladesh, officials on Wednesday evening confirmed three deaths, including a five-year-old boy and a 75-year-old man, both hit by falling trees, and a cyclone emergency volunteer who drowned.

Two other fatalities were reported by the Indian media, including an infant crushed when the mud wall of the family's hut collapsed in heavy rain in Odisha state, AFP news agency reported.

Bangladesh evacuated 2.4 million people to shelters. Another 650,000 people were moved to safety in the eastern Indian states of Odisha and West Bengal, authorities said, an operation carried out amid surging coronavirus infections.

The region, with 58 million people in the two bordering countries, has some of the most vulnerable communities in South Asia: poor fishing communities in the Sunderbans and over a million Rohingya refugees living in crowded camps in Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh.

Houses "look like they have been run over by a bulldozer," said Babul Mondal, 35, a villager on the edge of the Sunderbans, a vast mangrove forest area home to India's biggest tiger population.

"Everything is destroyed."

It was too early to estimate a toll on life or damage to property.

Cyclone Amphan began moving inland with winds gusting up to 185kph (119 miles an hour), Mrutyunjay Mohapatra, director general of the India Meteorological Department, told reporters.

Mohapatra said the storm surge could rise to around five metres in the Sundarbans delta, home to around four million people and thick mangrove forests that are a critical tiger habitat.

"Our estimate is that some areas 10-15 kilometres from the coast could be inundated," Mohapatra said.

Coconut trees swayed wildly, electric poles lay scattered on the roads of Kolkata, rain pounded fishing villages, and rivers surged as the storm battered the coast.

'Next 24 hours crucial'
"The next 24 hours are very crucial. This is a long haul," said Mohapatra.

Al Jazeera's Tanvir Chowdhury, reporting from Bangladeshi capital Dhaka, said the storm is crossing into the country's southwestern coastal region, hitting the Sundarbans forest adjoining India.

"We have got reports from some of our contacts in those areas saying water level is rising in the low delta areas. A lot of houses have been washed away," he said.

"We will know the effect of the storm probably by tomorrow... Power lines are going to snap."

Amphan is the first "super cyclone" to form over the Bay of Bengal since 1999.

The Indian weather department forecast a storm surge of 10 to 16-foot (3-4 metre) waves - as high as a two-storey house - that could swamp mud dwellings along the coast, uproot communication towers and inundate roads and railway tracks.

There will be extensive damage to standing crops and plantations in the states of West Bengal and Odisha, the weather service said in a bulletin.

Authorities were hastily repurposing quarantine facilities for the looming cyclone soon after easing the world's biggest lockdown against the coronavirus.

India has reported more than 100,000 cases with 3,163 deaths.

Rohingya refugees vulnerable

In neighbouring Bangladesh, officials said the cyclone could set off tidal waves and heavy rainfall, unleashing floods in areas close to refugee camps housing more than a million Rohingya in flimsy shelters.

The UN said food, tarpaulins and water purification tablets had been stockpiled, while authorities said the refugees would be moved to sturdier buildings if needed.

"We are fully prepared. But right now, there is no need to take them to cyclone shelters," said Mahbub Alam Talukder, Bangladesh's refugee commissioner.

Authorities in Bangladesh have also moved hundreds of Rohingya refugees living on a flood-prone island in the Bay of Bengal to storm shelters.

The first coronavirus cases were reported in the teeming Rohingya camps last week, and by Tuesday there were six confirmed infections.

Al Jazeera's Tanvir Chowdhury said the cyclone is a "clear danger" for the refugees during the pandemic.

"If the storm actually hits, it's only five kilometres from the coastal area of Cox's Bazaar," he said, referring to the district hosting the camps.

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 people.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...largest-cyclone-20-years-200520022755647.html
 
KOLKATA/DHAKA (Reuters) - A powerful cyclone pounded eastern India and Bangladesh on Wednesday, killing at least 14 people and destroying thousands of homes, officials said, leaving authorities struggling to mount relief efforts amid a surging coronavirus outbreak.


The populous Indian state of West Bengal took the brunt of Cyclone Amphan, which barrelled out of the Bay of Bengal with gusting winds of up to 185 km per hour (115 mph) and a storm surge of around five metres.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee said at least 10 people had died in the state, and two districts been completely battered by one of the strongest storms to hit the region in several years.

“Area after area has been devastated. Communications are disrupted,” Banerjee said, adding that although 500,000 people had been evacuated, state authorities had not entirely anticipated the ferocity of the storm.

With rains continuing, she said the hardest hits areas were not immediately accessible. Federal authorities said they could only make a proper assessment of the destruction on Thursday morning.

“We are facing greater damage and devastation than the CoVID-19,” Banerjee said, referring to the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, which has so far killed 250 people in the state.

In West Bengal’s capital city, Kolkata, strong winds upturned cars and felled trees and electricity poles. Parts of the city were plunged into darkness.

An official in the adjoining Hooghly district said thousands of mud homes were damaged by raging winds.

In neighbouring Bangladesh, at least four people were killed, officials said, with power supplies cut off in some districts.

Authorities there had shifted around 2.4 million people to more than 15,000 storm shelters this week. Bangladeshi officials also said they had moved hundreds of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar, living on a flood-prone island in the Bay of Bengal, to shelter.

But officials said they feared that standing crops could be damaged and large tracts of fertile land in the densely-populated country washed away.

“Fortunately, the harvesting of the rice crop has almost been completed. Still it could leave a trail of destruction,” said Mizanur Rahman Khan, a senior official in the Bangladesh agriculture ministry.

Cyclones frequently batter parts of eastern India and Bangladesh between April and December, often forcing the evacuations of tens of thousands and causing widespread damage.

Surging waters broke through embankments surrounding an island in Bangladesh’s Noakhali district, destroying more than 500 homes, local official Rezaul Karim said.

“We could avoid casualties as people were moved to cyclone centres earlier,” Karim said.

Embankments were also breached in West Bengal’s Sundarban delta, where weather authorities had said the surge whipped up by the cyclone could inundate up to 15 km inland.

The ecologically-fragile region straddling the Indian-Bangladesh border is best known for thick mangrove forests that are a critical tiger habitat, and is home to around 4 million people in India.

On the Sundarbans’ Ghoramara island, resident Sanjib Sagar said several embankments surrounding settlements had been damaged, and some flooding had started.

“A lot of houses have been damaged,” he told Reuters by phone.

Anamitra Anurag Danda, a senior fellow at the Observer Research Foundation think-tank who has extensively studied the Sundarbans, said that embankments across the area may have been breached.

“The cyclone surge coincided with the new moon high tides. It is devastation in the coastal belt,” he said.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...sh-leaving-trail-of-destruction-idUSKBN22W0MT
 
Coronavirus restrictions have been hampering emergency and relief efforts in eastern India and Bangladesh where a super cyclone has made violent landfall, killing at least 15 people as it lashed coastal communities with ferocious wind and rain.

Cyclone Amphan uprooted trees and toppled homes in both countries, including in the Indian city of Kolkata in West Bengal.

Nearly 3m people were evacuated - most of them in Bangladesh - before the storm hit.

Covid-19 and social-distancing measures have made mass evacuations more difficult for authorities, with shelters unable to be used to full capacity.

The storm is expected to have caused deadly storm surges although its winds have now weakened.
 
The eastern Indian city of Kolkata has been devastated by a powerful cyclone.

Cyclone Amphan made landfall in eastern India and Bangladesh on Wednesday, killing at least 15 people as it lashed coastal areas with ferocious wind and rain.

Many of Kolkata's 14 million people are without electricity and communications have been disrupted.

West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee said the devastation was "a bigger disaster than Covid-19".

Kolkata is the capital of West Bengal state which has seen 3,103 confirmed cases of the infection.

"Area after area has been ruined. I have experienced a war-like situation today," Ms Banerjee was quoted as saying by the Press Trust of India news agency.

She said the storm had killed 10-12 people In West Bengal. The three districts of South and North 24 Parganas and East Midnapore were the worst affected.

BBC Bengali's Amitabha Bhattasali who is based in Kolkata, said much of the city and its neighbouring districts have been without electricity for 17 hours.

Mobile phone networks are not working in some of the worst hit areas, our correspondent adds.

Dramatic visuals recorded by residents and shared on social media showed electricity transformers exploding in busy neighbourhoods as the storm swept the city.

Local news networks showed visuals of uprooted trees, lampposts and traffic lights.

Images of water logged streets, vehicles crushed under fallen trees and broken river jetties were also all over local media.

Journalists on the field wore face masks to protect against Covid-19 and were struggling to report in the middle of the raging storm.

"It is like the vault of hell outside," wrote Kajal Basu, on Facebook after the storm began.

Mr Basu, who lives on the 12th floor of a high-rise building in the city, said his building seemed to be "swaying from side to side, mimicking an earthquake".

"Sounds of tortured metal, glass breaking. Palm trees uprooted. Power lines came crackling and spitting at three places nearby," he wrote.

Most people were home when the storm struck. The city is in lockdown because of the pandemic, and officials had also been preparing for the cyclone for days.

"Trees uprooted, power supply snapped, lamp posts unhinged, glass panes in the locality shattered, Internet connections flickered. Children screamed," Shamik Bag, a resident, told the BBC.

"Even with all doors and windows tightly shut, my house groaned under the pressure of the howling wind outside. Within 45 minutes, the streets outside got flooded, even as flood waters rushed into the ground floor of homes."

"When the power lines were restored after the storm, neighbourhood children, much like our own childhood when power-cuts were rampant, burst out in a spontaneous, cheerful chorus."

The Telegraph newspaper said Calcutta's waterlogged roads "looked like a dark and slithering reptile on Wednesday night as howling winds continued to haunt the city's deserted, Amphan-ravaged corridors".

Coronavirus restrictions have been hampering emergency and relief efforts.

Covid-19 and social-distancing measures have made mass evacuations more difficult for authorities, with shelters unable to be used to full capacity.

The storm is the first super cyclone to form in the Bay of Bengal since 1999. Though its winds have now weakened, it is still classified as a very severe cyclone.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-52749935
 
these almost always end up being much less impactful than feared. the final amage is often a tenth of what is projected by fear mongerers.

iA will be the same this time too
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">VIDEO: Social distancing scrapped as cyclone batters India, Bangladesh.<br><br>Social distancing was futile for frightened groups of people in Bangladesh and India fleeing Cyclone Amphan, taking refuge in packed shelters despite fears of coronavirus infection <a href="https://t.co/eot6RdxR3Z">pic.twitter.com/eot6RdxR3Z</a></p>— AFP news agency (@AFP) <a href="https://twitter.com/AFP/status/1263336801067913217?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 21, 2020</a></blockquote>
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Death toll from Cyclone Amphan reaches 84 as storm wrecks Indian city of Kolkata and moves across Bangladesh
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Heavy rain lashes Kolkata as <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/CycloneAmphan?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#CycloneAmphan</a> crosses the city <a href="https://t.co/2yb52KJXfG">pic.twitter.com/2yb52KJXfG</a></p>— NDTV (@ndtv) <a href="https://twitter.com/ndtv/status/1263113888775540742?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 20, 2020</a></blockquote>
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Amphan, the most powerful cyclone to strike eastern India and Bangladesh in 20 years, has killed at least 88 people, officials said, as rescue teams scoured devastated coastal villages, hampered by torn down power lines and flooding over large tracts of land.

In the Indian state of West Bengal, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee said on Thursday that at least 72 people had perished - most of them either electrocuted or killed by trees uprooted by winds that gusted up to 185km per hour (115 miles/h). In neighbouring Bangladesh, the official toll was put at 16.
 
The eastern Indian city of Kolkata has been devastated by a powerful cyclone which has killed at least 84 people across India and Bangladesh.

Amphan made landfall on Wednesday, lashing coastal areas with ferocious wind and rain. The storm is weakening as it moves north into Bhutan.

Thousands of trees were uprooted in the gales, electricity and telephone lines brought down and houses flattened.

Many of Kolkata's roads are flooded and its 14 million people without power.

The storm is the first super cyclone to form in the Bay of Bengal since 1999. Though its winds had weakened by the time it struck, it was still classified as a very severe cyclone.

Coronavirus restrictions have been hindering emergency and relief efforts. Covid-19 and social-distancing measures made mass evacuations more difficult, with shelters unable to be used to full capacity.

Amphan began hitting the Sundarbans, a mangrove area around the India-Bangladesh border home to four million people on Wednesday afternoon, before carving north and north-eastwards towards Kolkata, a historic city that was the capital of the British Raj and widely known as Calcutta.

Parts of West Bengal and Orissa (also known as Odisha) states in India, and areas in south-west Bangladesh, bore the brunt, with winds gusting up to 185km/h (115mph).

At least 72 people have died in India's West Bengal state, and 12 deaths have been confirmed in Bangladesh.

West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee said the devastation in Kolkata, the state capital, was "a bigger disaster than Covid-19".

"Area after area has been ruined," Ms Banerjee was quoted as saying by the Press Trust of India news agency. "I have experienced a war-like situation today."

Three districts in West Bengal - South and North 24 Parganas and East Midnapore - were very badly hit.

In Bangladesh, there are reports of tens of thousands of homes damaged or destroyed and many villages submerged by storm surges in low-lying coastal areas like Khulna and Satkhira. The authorities evacuated nearly 2.5 million people ahead of the cyclone.

Initial assessments of the damage are being hampered by blocked roads and flooding in all these areas.

A tale of two disasters
By Shamik Bag, Kolkata

On one of Kolkata's oldest streets, Rabindra Sarani, special prayers are being offered at the Kumartuli Sai Baba temple. Nobody died yesterday, a local says. A giant banyan tree has fallen, bringing down a small Shiva temple with it. While human casualties in have been low, the uprooted tree and temple are a reminder that gods or prayers couldn't halt the riotous run of the fierce Cyclone Amphan.

The conjunction of the two disasters - Covid-19 and Cyclone Amphan - and the challenging recovery effort facing administrators is highlighted by a narrow lane at a crossing point in the city. Its entrance is blocked as it's a Covid hotspot and containment zone but it is also immersed in flood waters which came with the cyclone.

Near the gates of the esteemed Presidency College, I spy the unique sight of a small catfish being preyed upon by a street dog. The catfish must have come with the floods but couldn't make it back home when the waters receded. The fish still has life and its sharp flailing about manages to keep the dog curious and a little intimidated too.

"Thank God, we are safe," said one resident, who shared footage of tiled roofs being peeled off by the force of the wind and blown away.

Local news networks showed uprooted traffic lights in flooded streets, as well as river jetties torn apart and vehicles crushed under fallen trees.

Kajal Basu, who lives on the 12th floor of a high-rise building in the city, wrote on Facebook after the storm began: "It is like the vault of hell outside."

The apartment building seemed to be "swaying from side to side, mimicking an earthquake", he said.

Most people were at home when the storm struck. Kolkata and the rest of India is in lockdown because of the coronavirus pandemic.

What's the latest from Bangladesh?

Officials in Bangladesh feared Amphan would be the deadliest storm since Cyclone Sidr which killed about 3,500 people in 2007. Most died as a result of sea water surging in.

India's weather department had predicted storm surges as high as 10-16 feet (3-5 metres) from Amphan. The rising of sea levels in this way can send deadly walls of water barrelling far inland, devastating communities.

The total level of devastation in Bangladesh remains to be assessed but it's clear that there has been widespread destruction in areas that were in the path of the storm. In the city of Khulna, north of the Sundarbans, at least 83,000 homes were either destroyed or damaged, the Dhaka Tribune reports.

Fewer people appear to have been killed than in India but the government fears about $1.5bn worth of damages, the newspaper says.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-52749935
 
Authorities in eastern India and Bangladesh have been struggling to restore road links, communication lines and electricity after a devastating cyclone in which at least 95 people were killed.

"I assure my brothers and sisters of West Bengal that the entire country stands with you in these difficult times," Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Friday after conducting an aerial survey of the devastation in the state.

He announced emergency aid of 10 billion rupees ($131.7m) for the state, which bore the brunt of Cyclone Amphan in India. More than 70 people have been killed in the state.

The state's chief minister, Mamata Banerjee, who accompanied Modi, had earlier said the cyclone was worse than the coronavirus that has killed more than 3,000 people in India.

"I haven't seen a disaster of this magnitude," she said on Thursday.

Cyclone Amphan made landfall on Wednesday accompanied by high-speed winds and torrential rain. It destroyed homes and crops, uprooted trees, submerged vast tracts of land and snapped power and communication lines in both India and Bangladesh.

So far at least 95 deaths have been reported: Eighty from West Bengal and Odisha states in India and 15 from Bangladesh, according to disaster management officials.

Most of the deaths were caused by trees falling on thatched houses, the collapse of parts of buildings due to the impact of the winds and rain, and electrocution, officials said.

The United Nations office in Bangladesh estimates some 10 million people were affected, and some 500,000 people may have lost their homes.

Improved weather forecasting meant Bangladesh was able to move some 2.4 million people into shelters or out of the storm's direct path, while India evacuated some 650,000.

At least 10 million people were without power on Thursday afternoon in the worst-hit districts of Bangladesh, rural electricity board chief Moin Uddin told AFP news agency.

The storm levelled more than 55,000 homes - most made of tin, mud and bamboo - across Bangladesh, junior disaster management minister Enamur Rahman told AFP.

Thousands of trees which blocked roads in West Bengal were being cleared, water pumped out and electricity gradually restored.

Police were using drones to assess the damage in Kolkata, a city of 14 million people, where an estimated 10,000 trees were brought down during the storm that lasted several hours and brought extensive flooding.

"The city is still in a state of shock," Kolkata's deputy mayor, Atin Ghosh, told Reuters News Agency.

"Municipal teams, civil defence personnel, police personnel have been working overtime to restore road connectivity first. But there is an acute shortage of manpower due to coronavirus related restrictions," Ghosh said.

"Private buses and trains are still not in service. We really need citizens of Kolkata to come forward and lend a helping hand in whatever way possible."

Reuters television footage showed some streets strewn with uprooted trees, while torn power lines lay amid pools of stagnant water.

The clean-up operations are complicated by the new coronavirus with millions now housed in emergency shelters after their homes were destroyed.

Cyclone Amphan unleashed torrential rain and storm surges in low-lying coastal areas that burst embankments protecting villages in the Ganges delta. Winds, gusting up to 185km/h (115mph), wrecked mud-walled houses.

Officials in West Bengal and Bangladesh said they were currently trying to assess the extent of loss and damage especially in the Sunderbans mangrove forest, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, about which information was still trickling in.

Reports were expected in two to three days, Bangladesh disaster management official Iftekharul Islam told DPA news agency.

Sunderbans is an ecologically fragile biosphere reserve area known for the famous Bengal tigers.

The cyclone weakened as it moved north through Bangladesh but still unleashed heavy rain and fierce winds in Cox's Bazar, the district which houses about one million Rohingya refugees from Myanmar.

The UN said the effect in the vast camps of flimsy shacks appeared to be "fairly minimal".

The area most affected by Amphan, the first "super cyclone" to form over the Bay of Bengal since 1999, was the Satkhira district of southwest Bangladesh.

There a storm surge - a wall of ocean water which is often one of the main killers in major weather systems - roared inland and destroyed embankments protecting villages and shrimp farms.

"My home has gone under water. My shrimp farm is gone. I don't know how I am going to survive," Omar Faruq, 28, told AFP.

Jessore, the district next to Satkhira and which borders West Bengal, was also hard hit with at least 12 killed.

"The coronavirus has already taken a toll on people. Now the cyclone has made them paupers," said local councillor Bhabotosh Kumar Mondal.

The last super cyclone in 1999 left nearly 10,000 dead in Odisha, eight years after a typhoon, tornadoes and flooding killed 139,000 in Bangladesh.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...ngladesh-clean-operation-200522082604410.html
 
Pakistan saddened by devastation caused by Cyclone Amphan in India, Bangladesh

Pakistan has expressed sorrow over the deaths and widespread devastation caused by Cyclone Amphan in India and Bangladesh.

The two countries have lost at least 102 people in the cyclone, the most powerful in over a decade, mostly because of house collapses and electrocution.

“We extend sympathies and condolences to the families who have lost their loved ones and pray for speedy recovery of the affected regions,” Foreign Office spokesperson Aisha Farooqui said in a statement issued on Saturday.

More than 3 million people were evacuated before Amphan made landfall, preventing a large number of deaths.

A powerful cyclone that tore through India’s eastern state of West Bengal this week has caused a damage of 1 trillion rupees ($13 billion) to infrastructure and crops, state officials said.

The cyclone has affected more than 13 million people – some losing houses, crops and lands – and over 1.5 million houses have been damaged, two West Bengal government officials told Reuters.

Neighbouring Bangladesh, which also fell in Cyclone Amphan’s path on Wednesday, initially said it had suffered a loss of 11 billion taka ($130 million). But this could rise, government officials said.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/222785...ation-caused-cyclone-amphan-india-bangladesh/
 
Man what is 2020 even.... Worldwide pandemic, locusts, air crashes, devastating cyclones and we aren't even through half the year.
 
Three weeks after devastating Cyclone Amphan hit northeast India, the other side of the country is preparing for the arrival of another developing storm.

This one will not be anywhere near as strong, but it is likely to cause widespread disruption on India's west coast.

An intense area of low pressure is gathering in the Arabian Sea and is expected to bring heavy and thundery downpours across western India this week.

On Tuesday morning, the weather system was located on the eastern side of the Arabian Sea, about 280 kilometres (174 miles) to the west-southwest of Goa, and around 490km (304 miles) to the south-southwest of Mumbai.

It is making its way north at around 11km/h (6.8 miles per hour), strengthening as it does so. It is forecast to intensify into a cyclonic storm by the end of Tuesday and a severe cyclonic storm through Wednesday.

The centre of the storm is then expected to make landfall somewhere around north Maharashtra and south Gujarat coasts by Wednesday afternoon.

Mumbai, which has India's second-largest population (after New Delhi) with 20 million people, will be affected. The metropolitan area could see rainfall totals of about 150-180 millimetres (5-7 inches) over the next few days.

It is the start of the rainy season here, with a May average of 21mm (0.8 inches) compared with the June average of 504mm (19.8 inches). Such heavy rainfall in a short space of time is likely to cause flash flooding in places.

Damaging or severe gales are also expected before the system moves inland and dissipates over the northern plains by the weekend. There will also be large waves and storm surges which could lead to coastal flooding.

Elsewhere, the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) said the southwest monsoon made landfall in southern India's Kerala state on Monday (June 1, which is right on schedule).

The IMD added India is likely to receive 102 percent of its long-term average rainfall this year, raising expectations for higher farm output in Asia's third-biggest economy, which is reeling from the coronavirus pandemic.

Heavy downpours are now lashing the Kerala coast. In July, India is forecast to receive 103 percent of its long-term average rainfall and 97 percent in August.

The IMD defines average, or normal, rainfall as between 96 and 104 percent of a 50-year average of 880mm for the entire four-month season beginning in June.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...ne-approaches-west-coast-200602091559916.html
 
Mumbai braces for cyclone as coronavirus cases top 200,000

At least 100,000 people, including coronavirus patients, have been moved out of the path of Cyclone Nisarga, which is threatening India's west coast and the city of Mumbai.

The storm is expected to make landfall on Wednesday afternoon, just south of Mumbai, which has not been hit by a cyclone in 70 years.

The Health Ministry said the number of coronavirus cases in the country has exceeded 200,000 with a rise of 8,909 cases in a single day.

"We are very far away from the peak," said Dr Nivedita Gupta of the Indian Council of Medical Research.
 
Mumbai braces for cyclone as coronavirus cases top 200,000

At least 100,000 people, including coronavirus patients, have been moved out of the path of Cyclone Nisarga, which is threatening India's west coast and the city of Mumbai.

The storm is expected to make landfall on Wednesday afternoon, just south of Mumbai, which has not been hit by a cyclone in 70 years.

The Health Ministry said the number of coronavirus cases in the country has exceeded 200,000 with a rise of 8,909 cases in a single day.

"We are very far away from the peak," said Dr Nivedita Gupta of the Indian Council of Medical Research.

Scary times these all over, 2020 has been a nightmare :(
 
Cyclone Nisarga makes landfall as it heads to Mumbai

A cyclone racing in from the Arabian Sea has struck India's west coast after intensifying on its approach to the densely populated city of Mumbai.

Cyclone Nisarga began making landfall about 100km (60 miles) south of Mumbai. Tens of thousands of people along the coast have been moved to higher ground.

It's the first major cyclone in decades to threaten the financial capital.

With 20 million people, Mumbai is India's most populous city and has been badly hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

The cyclone began making landfall at about 13:00 local time (07:00GMT), packing winds of more than 100km/h.

It hit the coast around Alibaug, a favourite weekend destination for many, and often touted as "the Hamptons" of Mumbai, the capital of Maharashtra state. Gujarat to the north is also in Nisarga's path.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-52900967
 
Heavy rains across Kerala as Cyclone Tauktae intensifies

Kerala: A red alert, warning extremely heavy rainfall of more than 20 cm, has been issued in the northern districts of the state including Malappuram, Kozhikode, Kannur, Wayanad and Kasaragod.

With the deep depression developed over the Lakshadweep in the Arabian Sea intensifying into cyclonic storm Tauktae, Kerala continues to witness heavy rain on Saturday morning. A red alert, warning extremely heavy rainfall of more than 20 cm, has been issued in the northern districts of the state including Malappuram, Kozhikode, Kannur, Wayanad and Kasaragod. An orange alert has been sounded in Kollam, Pathanamthitta, Alappuzha, Idukki, Kottayam, Ernakulam and Thrissur while Thiruvananthapuram and Palakkad have been placed under yellow alert.

About 310 persons from 100 families in Vadakara village of Kozhikode district, living in low-lying areas and coastal regions were shifted to safety while seven persons from Thoppa in Kasaba village were shifted to temporary camps. As many as 17 families from Kappalangadi and two families from Vakkadavu and six families of Kadalundikkadavu were also shifted to relief camps and relatives’ houses in view of the rough sea experienced here.

With the non-stop downpour, the sea has turned rough in Kasaragod. Though no untoward incident has been reported yet, a few families near Cherangai coast were asked to move to relatives’ place after their houses were inundated. No relief camps have been opened as of now because of the Covid-19 protocols in place in the state. There is a fear that relief camps might result in more spread of the virus.

Several parts of Kerala have been experiencing heavy rains for the past few days. The coastal regions are under the threat of rough sea. Many families have been displaced and many houses partially or fully damaged.

Meanwhile, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) has issued an alert for the coastal regions of Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Maharashtra as Cyclone Taukate is expected to make a landfall between May 17 and 18.

National Disaster Response Force has deployed 53 teams to tackle possible after-effects of cyclone Tauktae. Out of the 53 teams, 24 have been pre-deployed or stationed on the ground while the rest are on standby.

At the same time, Prime Minister Narendra Modi will hold a meeting with senior officials today to review the preparations against the cyclone.

https://indianexpress.com/article/india/kerala/arabian-sea-cyclone-tauktae-kerala-impact-7315945/
 
PM Modi to hold meeting with top officials, NDMA and NDRF representatives to review preparedness for Cyclone Tauktae

The IMD announced that a deep depression intensified into cyclonic storm Tauktae and was centred over Lakshadweep island and adjoining southeast & east-central Arabian Sea till Saturday morning.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday will hold a meeting with top government officials and representatives from the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) and the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) to review preparations against the approaching Cyclone Tauktae.

The India Meteorological Department (IMD) earlier on Saturday said that the cyclonic storm Tauktae has formed over the east-central and adjoining south-east Arabian sea and issued an yellow cyclone alert for the Gujarat and Diu coasts. "Deep Depression intensified into a Cyclonic Storm “Tauktae” (pronounced as Tau’Te) over Lakshadweep area and adjoining southeast & eastcentral Arabian Sea: Cyclone watch for south Gujarat & Diu coasts," the IMD has tweeted.

IMD also forecasted that the cyclone would reach near Gujarat coast on the morning of May 18. “Deep Depression over Lakshadweep area and adjoining southeast & eastcentral Arabian Sea about 55 km north-northwest of Amini http://Divi.To intensify into a Cyclonic Storm during next 12 hrs. To move north-northwestwards and reach near Gujarat coast by 18th May morning,” the weather body said in a subsequent tweet.

Response agencies such as the NDRF and the NDMA have been preparing to tackle the situation. The NDRF has said that 53 team have been committed to handle cyclone Tauktae of which 24 teams have been pre deployed and 29 teams have been kept on standby. The deployments have been made across five states namely, Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat and Maharashtra.

The Central Water Commission (CWC) on Saturday issued an ‘Orange’ alert to the states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu, warning of a severe flood situation. The CWC bulletin said that three rivers -- Manimala and Achankovil in Kerala’s Pathanamthitta district and Kodaiyar in Kanyakumari, Tamil Nadu -- continued to flow in ‘Severe Situation’ as of 8am on the day.

Meanwhile, state governments are also making preparations to handle the situation. Kerala’s chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan has said that nine NDRF teams have been deployed in the state as a measure of precaution. “According to the IMD, the low-pressure area in the south-eastern Arabian Sea has intensified into a severe depression. Even though Kerala is not in the predicted path of the cyclone, heavy rains, strong winds and strong sea gusts are expected in the State till May 16,” news agency ANI quoted Vijayan as saying in a press briefing.

Earlier on Saturday, Maharashtra chief minister Uddhav Thackeray also tweeted that “In a prep meeting regarding Cyclone Tauktae, CM Uddhav Balasaheb Thackeray instructed the District Administration, Divisional Commissioners & District Collectors to be vigilant & well equipped in coastal areas, especially of Palghar, Raigad, Ratnagiri & Sindhudurg.”

The IMD in its bulletin on Saturday morning also suggested total suspension of fishing operations over east central and adjoining south east Arabian sea and along the coasts of Kerala, Karnataka, Goa and Maharashtra.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/pm-modi-to-hold-meeting-with-top-officials-ndma-and-ndrf-representatives-to-review-preparedness-for-cyclone-tauktae-101621056166532.html
 
Cyclone Tauktae likely to cause thunderstorms, gusty winds in Karachi

The Meteorological Department on Saturday issued an alert about the Cyclone Tauktae, saying that it will cause raindust/thunderstorms and gusty winds in Karachi.

The Depression over Southeast Arabian has intensified into a Cyclonic Storm “TAUKTAE” and lay centered at a distance of about 1,460km south-southeast of Karachi," read the Met Department's alert.

The weather department said that the maximum speed of the winds sustained around the cyclone have been recorded at 70-90km/hr, adding that they are expected to reach 100kh/hr.

The system is likely to intensify further into a Severe Cyclonic Storm (SCS) during next 12-18 hours," read the alert, adding that it can move in the north-northwest direction and reach the Indian city of Gujarat by the morning of May 18.

According to present environmental conditions and under the influence of this system, widespread raindust/thunderstorm with few heavy to very heavy falls and gusty winds of 70-90 Kmph are likely to occur in Thatta, Badin, Thar, Mirpurkhas, Umerkot & Sanghar districts from 17 May to 20 May 2021," read the notification.

As per the weather department, Karachi, Hyderabad, Jamshoro, Shaheed Benazirabad, Sukkur, Larkana, Shikarpur, Jacobabad and Dadu are expected to receive raindust/thunderstorm with few heavy falls and gusty winds of 40-60 km/h from May 18-20.

"Sea conditions will be rough to very rough and fishermen are advised not to venture in the sea during 16-20 May 2021," read the alert.

None of Pakistan's coastal areas are under any threat from a developing tropical cyclone, the Met Department had said in a statement on Friday.

"Yesterday’s low-pressure area over Southeast Arabian Sea has rapidly intensified into a depression (intense low-pressure area) and lay centered around latitude," the statement had said.

"PMD’s Tropical Cyclone Warning Centre, Karachi is closely monitoring the system and will keep updating accordingly," the Met Department had said.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/350260-cyclone-tauktae-likely-to-cause-thunderstorms-gusty-winds-in-karachi
 
KARACHI: Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah on Saturday declared an emergency in all districts of the province that lie on the coastal belt, as cyclone Tauktae gathers steam.

The chief minister was presiding over a meeting today at the CM House where he declared an emergency in all districts located along the coastal belt.

The decision was taken as a precaution so that any untoward situation can be avoided.

“A control room should be established at the chief secretary's office to keep close coordination with all the districts, in respect of their requirements and giving them necessary instruction on behalf of the government,” he said.

During the meeting, the Director of the Pakistan Meteorological Department, Sardar Sarfraz, said there was a generic term for a non-frontal anti-clockwise rotating weather system, with surface winds ranging from 34 to 47 knots.

The PMD official briefed the chief minister that such weather systems usually caused three types of impacts, including torrential rains, thunderstorms, high intensity winds and storm surges. The main source of energy for tropical cyclones is the warm water in tropical regions, he said, adding that to initiate a tropical cyclone, the sea-surface temperature generally rose to 26 degrees.

The Sindh chief minister was told that cyclones in Pakistan and South Asia caused different kinds of disturbances. "Gusty winds and damage in detaching fruit from the tree is caused when a depression develops a pressure of 996 hPa/mb with a wind speed of 22 to 27 knots," read the press release from the meeting.

"When deep depression with a pressure of 986-995 hPa/mb develops with a wind speed of 28 to 33 knots negligible damages are caused to houses, fruit trees, some crops and caravans. When the cyclonic storm has a pressure of 971-970 hPa/mb along with a wind speed of 34-47 knots it causes minor damages to houses and significant damage to signboards, trees and small crafts," added the press release.

The chief minister was told that severe cyclone storms emerge when a pressure of 930 to 955 hPa/mb merges with a speed of 64-89 knots and they cause significant structural damage, causing even caravans to blow away.

Further in this category, two other subdivisions are present, namely the Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm and the Super Cyclonic Storm which cause extensive damage to houses, power and communication lines.

Cyclones and their routes

The chief minister was told that there are two possible routes that the cyclone can travel. If the cyclone crosses Indian Gujarat, then its outer peripheral effect would be on Thatta, Badin, Mirpurkhas, Tharparkar, Umerkot and Sanghar districts.

Explaining the repercussions of the cyclone, the PMD official said Thatta, Badin and Mirpurkhas would receive heavy rainfall of 70 to 90 mm each, Umerkot 80 to 100 while Tharparkar would receive very heavy rainfall of 230 to 250 mm.

He briefed the chief minister on the other route of the cyclone, adding that in case it crosses the north west and crosses the west of Karachi then its outer peripheral effect would be on Karachi, Hub, Lasbela, Hyderabad and Jamshoro districts.

In that scenario, Karachi may receive 60 to 80 mm rainfall, Hyderabad 30 to 50 mm, Jamshoro 150-170 mm, Dadu 180 to 200 mm, Bela and Sukkur 80 to 100 each and Jacobabad 60 to 80 mm.

DG PDMA Salman Shah told the meeting that the depression over the southeast Arabian Sea has intensified into a cyclonic storm, which has been dubbed as "TAUKTAE" and lay at a distance of about 1,460 km South-Southeast of Karachi.

Shah informed the meeting that the maximum sustained winds around the system centre are 90-110 km/hr gusting at 120 km/hr. The system is likely to intensify further into a Severe Cyclonic Storm (SCS) during the next 12-18 hours and move in the north-northwest direction and reach the Indian city of Gujarat by the morning of May 18.

Under the influence of this system, widespread heavy to very heavy dust/thunderstorm-rains with gusty winds of 80-100 km/hr are likely to occur in Thatta, Badin, Thar, Mirpurkhas, Umerkot and Sanghar districts from 17 May to 20 May 2021. Dust/thunderstorm-rains with few heavy falls and gusty winds of 50-70km/hr are also likely in Karachi, Hyderabad, Jamshoro, Shaheed Benzirabad, Sukkur, Larkana, Shikarpur, Jacobabad and Dadu during 18-20 May 2021.

Rough to "very rough" sea conditions
The meeting was further informed that the sea conditions would be "rough to very rough" during this time, adding that fishermen have been advised not to venture in the sea during May 16-20.

CM Murad takes important decisions
Keeping in view the presentation given to him by the Met office and PDMA, the chief minister directed the administration in Karachi to start clearing all the choking points of nullas. He directed Commissioner Karachi Naveed Shaikh and Administrator KMC Laiq Ahmed to start removing all billboards and neo-signs.

The chief minister asked builders to take precautionary measures for the security of their under-construction buildings, directing the PDSMA to provide dewatering machines and generators to the district administration in the city and in the other districts where required.

The chief minister issued directives to fishermen, telling them not to go in the deep sea for fishing from Sunday onwards. CM Murad directed the chief secretary to set up a Control Room in his office and post a **-19 offer as its head to receive requirements from the districts and issue necessary instructions to the administration on behalf of the government.

The chief minister directed the Tharparkar district administration to take extraordinary measures because it was expected to receive very heavy rains. All the district administrations should make alternate accommodation arrangements, in case shifting of the people becomes necessary. The chief minister directed the chief secretary to seek the requirement of funds from the district administration and ensure timely releases. The district administration was also directed to set up control rooms in their districts.

The chief minister also issued directives to the irrigation minister to declare an emergency in his department and to monitor embankments of the canals and distributaries

The Sindh chief minister directed the Minister of Local Government Nasir Shah and Minister Rehabilitation, Faraz Dero, to stay in Karachi and personally monitor the arrangements.

GEO
 
As Gujarat braces for Cyclone Tauktae, 1.5 lakh people evacuated from coastal areas

“Evacuation has been ordered for citizens residing in kutcha houses too from interior areas and along river banks. Till now, 1.5 lakh persons have been evacuated,” the CM stated.

Gujarat has evacuated 1.5 lakh persons from 17 districts along its coastal belt in view of the extremely severe cyclonic storm “Tauktae,” likely to reach the state in the evening hours of May 17 and cross between Porbandar and Mahuva (Bhavnagar district) between 8 pm to11.30 pm. The cyclonic storm will sustain a maximum wind speed 155-165 kmph gusting to 185 kmph.

Chief Minister Vijay Rupani during a press conference Monday stated that maximum people have been evacuated from along the coastal belt Saurashtra and Kutch.

Cyclone Tauktae |liveFollow for latest updates, warnings
Also, to take care of uninterrupted oxygen supply 35 green corridors have been created.

“Evacuation has been ordered for citizens residing in kutcha houses too from interior areas and along river banks. Till now, 1.5 lakh persons have been evacuated,” the CM stated.

The evacuation operations are on in 655 villages of 17 districts to be affected by the cyclone.These districts are Porbandar, Amreli, Junagadh, Gir Somnath, Botad, Bhavnagar, Devbhoomi Dwarka, Kutch, Jamnagar, Rajkot, Mori, Valsad, Surat, Vadodara, Bharuch, Navsari, Anand and Ahmedabad.

As per the India Meteorological Department (IMD’s) bulletin, the extremely severe cyclonic storm “Tauktae” over eastcentral Arabian Sea moved north-northwestwards and lay centred at 0830 hours IST of today, over eastcentral Arabian Sea near latitude 18.8°N and longitude 71.5°E, about 150 km west of Mumbai, 220 km south-southeast of Diu, 260 km southeast of Veraval (Gujarat).

Rupani said that power breakup arrangements including mandatory gen set along with diesel stock have been arranged in all over 1400 Covid hospitals across the state. “We have made alternate arrangement at all hospitals in case of power supply is affected. As many as 661 teams of electricity department teams who are working around the clock have been deployed. Also, power backups arranged at 1428 places. 174 ICU on wheels have been put on stand-by, 607 vehicles of 108 ambulance service on stand-by as a part of special care arrangements for Covid patients,” the CM stated adding that 444 teams of health department too have been deployed across the state.

So far, 750 cases of power breakup have been reported from the state, of which 400 have been resolved.

Further, 240 teams of forest department and 242 teams of road and buildings (R&B) department have been deployed to take immediate action to clear roads blocked due to felling of trees.

National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) 41 teams and 10 State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) teams deployed in most affected districts. Additionally, 319 teams of revenue department have been deployed to take immediate action.

Arrangements of 456 de-watering pumps have been put on stand-by position to pump out water from low lying areas in case of heavy rainfall. Also, 2126 hoardings removed from urban areas and 643 from rural areas along with 668 temporary structures from across the state.

Till Monday morning, 84 talukas of 21 districts have witnessed moderate rainfall. Out of these, 6 talukas have recorded 1 inch rainfall.

While control rooms are operational 24×7, social service organisations and other agencies have been roped in for assisting the state government teams.

https://indianexpress.com/article/india/as-gujarat-braces-for-cyclone-tauktae-1-5-lakh-people-evacuated-from-coastal-areas-7318457/
 
Cyclone Tauktae intensifies; 6 dead; Gujarat braces for impact

Cyclone Tauktae: According to the Cyclone Warning Division of the IMD, by May 18 the wind speed is expected to increase to 150-160 km per hour, gusting up to 175 km per hour.
PTI |

Gale-force winds, heavy rainfall and high tidal waves swept the coastal belt of Kerala, Karnataka and Goa as Cyclone Tauktae hurtled northwards towards Gujarat on Sunday, leaving six people dead, damaging hundreds of houses, uprooting electricity poles and trees and forcing evacuation in low-lying areas.

According to the India Meteorological Department (IMD), Tauktae which has taken the form of a "very severe cyclonic storm" is likely to intensify further during the next 24 hours and reach the Gujarat coast on Monday evening.

Strong winds with speed reaching up to 90 km/per were lashing the western coastal region. According to the Cyclone Warning Division of the IMD, by May 18 the wind speed is expected to increase to 150-160 km per hour, gusting up to 175 km per hour.

An estimated 1.5 lakh people are being shifted from low-lying coastal areas in Gujarat while 54 teams of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) have been deployed in the state.

Maharashtra too was bracing for the storm as the Met department predicted heavy to very heavy rains at isolated places in north Konkan, Mumbai, Thane and Palghar and extremely heavy rainfall in Raigad on Monday.

The water level in many dams across Kerala showed a rising trend after heavy rains in the catchment areas, prompting authorities to sound an alert.

Four deaths were reported from Karnataka’s Uttara Kannada, Udupi, Chikkamagaluru and Shivamogga districts and two in Goa in cyclone-related incidents.

Gusty winds and heavy rains started lashing several parts of Goa since Saturday night disrupting power supply in a large part of the state.

Chief Minister Pramod Sawant said the major impact of the cyclonic winds was felt in Bardez taluka in North Goa district and Mormugao in South Goa.

He said there was power disruption for some time at the Goa Medical College and Hospital (GMCH), where Covid-19 patients are undergoing treatment, but it did not affect the functioning.

"Hundreds of houses suffered major damage due to the cyclonic winds. Some highways were blocked at several points after trees got uprooted. However, the roads were cleared by the disaster management teams," Sawant said.

The power supply was disrupted as electric poles were uprooted due to the high-speed winds, state Power Minister Nilesh Cabral told PTI.

"Many high tension 33 KV feeders are down due to the falling of trees. Even the 220 KV lines bringing power to Goa from neighbouring Maharashtra have been damaged," he said.

The electricity department deployed its full force for the restoration work, but it was getting hampered due to the strong winds, he said.

In Karnataka, over 70 villages in seven districts including Dakshina Kannada, Kodagu and Hassan have been affected by the cyclone, the Karnataka State Disaster Management Authority officials said.

The highest rainfall of 385 mm was recorded at Nada Station in Kundapura taluk of Udupi district, which was the worst affected, and 15 stations recorded more than 200 mm of rainfall in the district.

Officials said nearly a dozen relief camps are functioning in the state. There has been damage to 112 houses, 139 electricity poles and other infrastructure in coastal areas.

Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa has asked in-charge Ministers of coastal districts and Deputy Commissioners there to visit the affected areas and carry out rescue and relief works.

The IMD has issued orange alerts --a warning indicating heavy to very heavy rain-- on Sunday in three Kerala districts-Ernakulam, Idukki and Malappuram.

Many houses were damaged in coastal areas across the state as seawater seeped in following high waves. According to the state government, at least nine districts have been severely affected by sea incursion.

The Thrissur district administration said spillway shutters of the Peringalkuthu dam will be opened if the water level crosses the permitted limit of 419.41 metres. In a statement, the administration has urged the people living on the banks of Chalakudy river to be cautious.

Shutters of Malankara dam in Idukki district will be opened on Sunday, as the water level has increased, the district authorities said.

Families living in coastal areas and low-lying areas of the state have been shifted to relief camps.

Indian Navy deployed its diving and quick reaction teams in the coastal village of Chellanam in Ernakulam district, which was heavily hit by tidal waves. The teams, braving harsh weather conditions, undertook rescue and rehabilitation of people who were trapped in houses.

High tidal waves have also lashed Kaipamangalam, Chavakkad and Kodungallur in Thrissur, Pallithura in Thiruvananthapuram, Thrikkannapuzha in Alappuzha and Beypore and Koyilandy in Kozhikode districts.

The cyclone, which is the first this year, has added to the woes of the states which are already grappling with the devastating third wave of Covid.

IMD Director General M Mohapatra said the cyclone has seen a rapid intensification.

The gradual intensification stages are cyclonic storm, severe cyclonic storm, very severe cyclonic storm, extremely severe storm and super cyclonic storm.

The National Crisis Management Committee (NCMC) headed by Cabinet Secretary Rajiv Gauba met on Sunday in the national capital, where the top bureaucrat of the country directed agencies to ensure "uninterrupted" functioning of the Covid hospitals in the states affected by Cyclone Tauktae and secure "zero loss" of lives.

Home Minister Amit Shah reviewed the preparedness for Cyclone Tauktae in Gujarat, Maharashtra and the Union territories of Daman and Diu and Dadra and Nagar Havel and "specifically" stressed that all health facilities, including those for Covid-19 treatment, falling in the affected areas should be secured along with the patients.

Shah also advised them to ensure adequate stocks of all essential medicines and supplies in the hospitals, keeping in view a likely disruption in the movement of vehicles, a statement issued by the Union home ministry said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi had on Saturday reviewed the preparedness of states, central ministries and agencies concerned to deal with the situation arising out of Cyclone Tauktae.

Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray said an alert has been sounded in coastal districts of the state and the administration is prepared to ensure uninterrupted electricity and oxygen supply in Covid-19 hospitals.

The IMD said Tauktae would cross Gujarat’s coast between Porbandar and Mahuva in Bhavnagar district by early Tuesday morning and tidal waves are likely to inundate several coastal districts during the landfall.

"The very severe cyclonic storm Tauktae over the east-central Arabian Sea moved nearly northwards with a speed of about 11 kmph during the past six hours," it said.

"It is very likely to intensify during the next 24 hours. It is very likely to move north-northwestwards and reach the Gujarat coast in the evening hours of May 17 and cross the state coast between Porbandar and Mahuva in Bhavnagar district around May 18 early morning," the IMD said.

With the cyclone intensifying, the wind speed along and off Gujarat coasts in Porbandar, Junagadh, Gir Somnath and Amreli districts will reach 150-160 kmph gusting to 175 kmph by Tuesday morning.

It will reach a speed of 120-150 kmph gusting to 165 kmph over Devbhoomi Dwarka, Jamnagar, Bhavnagar districts during the same period, the IMD said.

"Gale winds with speed reaching 70-80 kmph gusting to 90 kmph are likely to prevail along and off Valsad, Navsari, Surat, Bharuch, southern parts of Ahmedabad, and Anand districts, as well as Dadra, Nagar Haveli, Daman (Union Territories) from May 17 midnight till Tuesday morning," it said.

The sea conditions will become "very rough to high" along and off the south Gujarat coast from Monday morning, and "very high to phenomenal" from Monday midnight.

A tidal wave of about 3 metres, 1-2.5 metres above the astronomical tide, is likely to inundate several coastal areas of the state during the time of the landfall, it said.

Heavy to very heavy rainfall in isolated places was likely over Saurashtra and Kutch and Diu on Monday, and extremely heavy rainfall at isolated places on Tuesday, according to IMD.

The Indian Coast Guard said on Sunday evening hat all fishing boats have reached their harbours in Maharashtra and Gujarat.

"With the cyclone likely to affect power supply, hospitals treating Covid-19 patients have been asked to ensure power back-up. Arrangements have also been made to ensure uninterrupted generation of medical oxygen in the eight manufacturing units and buffer stock has also been created," Chief Minister Vijay Rupani told reporters after attending a cyclone review meeting in Gandhingar.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/cyclone-tauktae-intensifies-6-dead-gujarat-braces-for-impact-101621181807736.html
 
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Pakistan Meteorological Department said late Monday Cyclone Tauktae is 650km south-southeast of Karachi, but it still does not pose any threat to the country's coastline.

In the morning, PMD had said the cyclone was 800 km south-southeast of Karachi.

In the latest alert, the PMD said the cyclone was 580 km south of Thatta. "Maximum sustained winds around the system centre are 180-200 Kmph gusting 220 Kmph."

The system is likely to move further northward for some time, then recurve towards the Northeast and cross Indian Gujarat by midnight today, it said.

The Cyclonic Storm “Tauktae” has tracked Northward at a speed of 15 Kmph during the last 12 hours and now lay centred at 2000PST, 17 May 2021 near latitude 20.4N and longitude 71.2E, the PMD said.

Very hot and dry weather with gusty winds are likely to continue in Karachi, Hyderabad, Shaheed-Banzirabad, Badin, Mirpurkhas, Tando Allahyar, and Thatta districts till tomorrow evening.

Gusty winds may affect the fruit orchards in the above-mentioned districts.

"Sea conditions will remain rough to very rough and fishermen of Sindh are advised to suspend their activities till May 19, 2021."

Meanwhile, authorities evacuated more than 200,000 people from their homes in India's Gujarat state and shut ports and major airports as the most powerful cyclone in more than two decades made landfall in the state.

The rain intensified and several incidents of power outages were reported in the state. Electricity pylons and trees were uprooted and buildings were damaged in coastal areas of Gujarat, state authorities said.

With the worst of the storm expected to last for several hours after it slammed into the state's coast, it piles more pressure on Indian authorities already struggling with a huge caseload of COVID-19 infections.

"This cyclone is a terrible double blow for millions of people in India whose families have been struck down by record COVID-19 infections and deaths. Many families are barely staying afloat," said Udaya Regmi, South Asia head of delegation, International Federation of Red Cross.

The cyclone has already killed at least 16 people and left a trail of destruction as it brushed past the coastal states of Kerala, Karnataka, Goa and Maharashtra, the authorities said.

"The landfall process has started, and it is expected to last for four hours. The intensity of the Cyclone Tauktae will go down once it is over,” Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani said in a social media address on late Monday evening.

GEO
 
Cyclone Tauktae 650 km away from Karachi, but poses no threat: PMD

Pakistan Meteorological Department said late Monday Cyclone Tauktae is 650km south-southeast of Karachi, but it still does not pose any threat to the country's coastline.

In the morning, PMD had said the cyclone was 800 km south-southeast of Karachi.

In the latest alert, the PMD said the cyclone was 580 km south of Thatta. "Maximum sustained winds around the system centre are 180-200 Kmph gusting 220 Kmph."

The system is likely to move further northward for some time, then recurve towards the Northeast and cross Indian Gujarat by midnight today, it said.

The Cyclonic Storm “Tauktae” has tracked Northward at a speed of 15 Kmph during the last 12 hours and now lay centred at 2000PST, 17 May 2021 near latitude 20.4N and longitude 71.2E, the PMD said.

Very hot and dry weather with gusty winds are likely to continue in Karachi, Hyderabad, Shaheed-Banzirabad, Badin, Mirpurkhas, Tando Allahyar, and Thatta districts till tomorrow evening.

Gusty winds may affect the fruit orchards in the above-mentioned districts.

"Sea conditions will remain rough to very rough and fishermen of Sindh are advised to suspend their activities till May 19, 2021."

Meanwhile, authorities evacuated more than 200,000 people from their homes in India's Gujarat state and shut ports and major airports as the most powerful cyclone in more than two decades made landfall in the state.

The rain intensified and several incidents of power outages were reported in the state. Electricity pylons and trees were uprooted and buildings were damaged in coastal areas of Gujarat, state authorities said.

With the worst of the storm expected to last for several hours after it slammed into the state's coast, it piles more pressure on Indian authorities already struggling with a huge caseload of COVID-19 infections.

"This cyclone is a terrible double blow for millions of people in India whose families have been struck down by record COVID-19 infections and deaths. Many families are barely staying afloat," said Udaya Regmi, South Asia head of delegation, International Federation of Red Cross.

The cyclone has already killed at least 16 people and left a trail of destruction as it brushed past the coastal states of Kerala, Karnataka, Goa and Maharashtra, the authorities said.

"The landfall process has started, and it is expected to last for four hours. The intensity of the Cyclone Tauktae will go down once it is over,” Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani said in a social media address on late Monday evening.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/350556-cyclone-tauktae-650-away-from-karachi-but-poses-no-threat-pmd
 
UBL building in Karachi today

<div style="width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 100%;"><iframe src="https://streamable.com/e/yomgh4" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="100%" allowfullscreen style="width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Karachi?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Karachi</a> in the midst of a severe dust storm due to <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/CycloneTauktae?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#CycloneTauktae</a>. <a href="https://t.co/7TR1DhZbey">pic.twitter.com/7TR1DhZbey</a></p>— Wajahat Kazmi &#55356;&#56821;&#55356;&#56816; (@KazmiWajahat) <a href="https://twitter.com/KazmiWajahat/status/1394622664506023936?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 18, 2021</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
PM Narendra Modi to visit Gujarat, Diu to review situation after cyclone Tauktae


Prime Minister Narendra Modi will visit Gujarat and Diu on Wednesday to personally review the situation there and the damage wrought by cyclone Tauktae, government sources said. He will leave Delhi at around 9:30 AM and land at Bhavnagar from where he will proceed for an aerial survey of Una, Diu, Jafarabad and Mahuva, they said.

Modi will also hold a review meeting at Ahmedabad.

At least seven people were killed in Gujarat as the cyclone battered parts of the state and lef ..

https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...fter-cyclone-tauktae/articleshow/82743941.cms
 
Cyclone Tauktae triggers heavy rains across Rajasthan, Delhi after ravaging Gujarat | WATCH

After causing heavy rains and severe damage in Gujarat, Cyclone Tauktae on Wednesday morning weakened into a ‘depression’ and lay centred over southern Rajasthan and the adjoining region of Gujarat.

Due to the cyclone’s interaction with the western disturbance, it triggered heavy rains in Rajasthan, Haryana and Delhi among other states on Wednesday.

In its morning bulletin, the Indian Meteorological Department had said, "The remnant of the system is very likely to move further north-eastwards across Rajasthan to west Uttar Pradesh during the next two days.”
The IMD predicted that the cyclone would cause rainfall in Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Haryana, Chandigarh, Delhi, west Uttar Pradesh and west Rajasthan over the course of the day.

RAJASTHAN
The cyclone triggered heavy rains in the southern districts of Rajasthan but is expected to weaken in the next 12 hours, according to officials.

The cyclonic storm entered southern Rajasthan late on Tuesday night causing heavy rains in the region and it was centred 60 km southwest of Udaipur on Wednesday morning, a spokesperson of the regional meteorological department said.

Veja of Dungarpur recorded 232 mm of rainfall, Kanwa received 144 mm rainfall, Deval 142 mm, Dungarpur tehsil 139 mm and 133 mm rainfall was recorded in Dhambola.

In Jaipur, light rain was accompanied by gusty winds on Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. The state capital recorded more than 38.5 mm rainfall during this period. There was a significant drop in the maximum temperature.
Light to moderate intermittent rains are still expected in Ajmer, Jaipur and some districts of Bharatpur division in the next 24 hours.

DELHI
Rainfall and localized storms have brought the temperature down in the national capital with the maximum temperature settling at 30.8 degrees Celsius, nine degrees below the season's average.
The IMD had issued an orange alert for Wednesday for the Delhi NCR region with a forecast of rains and squally winds of 50-60 km per hour. It has further predicted thunderstorms with rain for Thursday.

According to the IMD, light to moderate rainfall will continue to occur in Delhi-NCR till around 8 pm.

HARYANA
As the cyclone triggered rainfall in north Indian states, Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar directed all the district collectors to keep a close watch any crisis situation arising from heavy rainfall in the state.
The Haryana government has instructed officials to keep disaster management resources at their disposal in a state of high readiness to tackle any adverse consequences.

GUJARAT
The extremely severe cyclone completed its landfall around 1.30 am on Tuesday in Gujarat. The state has seen very heavy rainfall since then and the Saurashtra region of the state was the worst affected.

As many as 45 people have been killed due to Cyclone Tauktae across 12 districts of Gujarat, as per officials.Fifteen deaths were reported from Amreli district in Saurashtra region. Eight people each were killed in Bhavnagar and Gir Somnath coastal districts. Five were killed in Ahmedabad, two in Kheda, and one each in Anand, Vadodara, Surat, Valsad, Rajkot, Navsari and Panchmahal districts.
While 24 deaths were due to wall collapses during the cyclone, six died after trees fell on them, five each because of house collapses and electrocution, four due to roof collapse and one died due to a tower collapse, according to an official.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wedneday undertook an aerial survey of the cyclone-affected areas in Gujarat.
 
Rescuers hunt 49 missing as cyclone pummels Indian coast

Naval vessels and aircraft scoured the waters off India’s west coast late on Wednesday after the most powerful cyclone in more than two decades battered the region, sinking an oilfield accommodation barge and killing 26 aboard, authorities said.

Cyclone Tauktae unleashed waves of up to 25 feet (7.6 metres) offshore before it hit the states of Maharashtra and Gujarat over the past two days, leaving a trail of destruction that killed 62 others, authorities said.

Naval ships and aircraft have been deployed to search for the49 still missing from the barge tragedy.

"Search and rescue (SAR) operations off Mumbai and Gujarat entered their third day today. Indian Naval ships and aircraft are presently undertaking SAR of the missing crew members of accommodation barge P-305, which sank on May 17, 35 miles off Mumbai," the navy spokesperson said in a statement.

The barge, with 261 people on board, sank after the storm smashed into the Bombay High oilfield near Mumbai, where India's biggest offshore oil rigs are located. read more

The navy said 186 people had been rescued from the barge contracted to state-run energy explorer Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC.NS).

"No one would have had survived if not for the help that came ... We are thankful they saved our lives," one survivor told Reuters TV partner ANI.

"I had never thought of witnessing a situation like this. I was thinking about my family more than my life. I got injured while jumping off the barge," another worker rescued from the barge told ANI.

The barge was deployed by Afcons Infrastructure Limited, a construction and engineering company based in Mumbai.

"We will extend our fullest support including financial assistance to the bereaved families in this hour of their need," Afcons said in a statement.

STRANDED

Several other ONGC vessels were stranded in the storm and the government has set up a committee to enquire into the sequence of events.

"The stranding, drifting and subsequent events have led to loss of several lives," the government said in a statement.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi made an aerial survey of the damage in his home state of Gujarat, the state government said.

The federal government declared financial aid worth 10 billion rupees ($137 million) for immediate relief activities for Gujarat.

Relatives of those killed in the cyclone would also get financial assistance from the government.

Cyclone Tauktae has weakened since making landfall in Gujarat on Monday with gusts of up to 210 kph (130 mph) and is expected to lose strength overnight, weather officials said.

It ripped out power pylons, damaged about 16,500 homes and blocked more than 600 roads, piling pressure on authorities battling a massive spike in COVID-19 infections and deaths. read more

"Restoration work is extremely challenging due to rain and strong winds, but we are focusing on the efforts on a war footing," Gujarat chief minister Vijay Rupani said.

Surveys to ascertain the farm losses and other damages would begin in full form tomorrow, he added.

Gujarat, among the states hardest hit by the second wave of the virus, will resume its vaccination effort from Thursday, after a three-day suspension because of the cyclone, a state health official, Jai Prakash Shivahare, told Reuters.

Wall collapses, electrocution incidents and falling trees were responsible for most of the state's 46 cyclone deaths.

“We are yet to establish contact with many villages, and it is very likely the number of dead will rise,” an official said, requesting anonymity.

https://www.reuters.com/world/india/indian-navy-searches-77-missing-barge-sunk-by-cyclone-2021-05-19/
 
Cyclone Yaas likely to intensify into very severe cyclonic storm: IMD

"It is very likely to cross West Bengal and the adjoining north Odisha and Bangladesh coasts around the evening of 26th May," the IMD said.

Last week, extremely severe cyclone Tauktae hit the Gujarat coast and left a trail of destruction all over the western coast. (File Photo/Representational)
Cyclone Yaas is likely to intensify into a ‘very severe cyclonic storm’ and cross the Odisha and the West Bengal coasts on May 26, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said on Saturday.

A low pressure area formed over the east-central Bay of Bengal and the adjoining north Andaman Sea on Saturday.

While a low pressure area is the first stage of formation of a cyclone, it is not necessary that all low pressure areas will intensify into cyclonic storms.

Low pressure area has formed over eastcentral BoB today morning. To intensify into a CS by 24th May. To intensify further into Very Severe Cyclonic Storm, move north-northwestwards and cross West Bengal and adjoining north Odisha & Bangladesh coasts around 26th evening. pic.twitter.com/DakiLqpw0f
— India Meteorological Department


“The low pressure area is very likely to concentrate into a depression over eastcentral Bay of Bengal by tomorrow, the 23rd May morning. It is very likely to move north-northwestwards, intensify into a Cyclonic Storm by 24th May and further into a very severe cyclonic storm during the subsequent 24 hours,” the IMD said.

It would continue to move north-northwestwards, intensify further and reach north Bay of Bengal near West Bengal and the adjoining north Odisha and Bangladesh coasts by the morning of May 26, it said.

“It is very likely to cross West Bengal and the adjoining north Odisha and Bangladesh coasts around the evening of 26th May,” the IMD added.

Last week, extremely severe cyclone Tauktae hit the Gujarat coast and left a trail of destruction all over the western coast.

As it weakened further, its impact was felt across the north Indian plains and even in the hill states of Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh.

The April-May and the October-December periods are also known to witness cyclones.

Last May saw the formation of two cyclones one in the Bay of Bengal (super cyclonic storm Amphan) and the other in the Arabian Sea (severe cyclonic storm Nisarga) that hit the Indian coasts.

https://indianexpress.com/article/india/cyclone-yaas-likely-to-intensify-into-very-severe-cyclonic-storm-imd-7325611/
 
Very severe cyclonic storm Yaas to cross Odisha-Bengal coasts on May 26 evening


Though oceanic and atmospheric conditions over Bay of Bengal are favourable for intensification of Yaas, experts hope it will not intensify to an extremely severe cyclone because it has formed close to the coast and has less time over the unusually warm ocean


The depression over eastcentral Bay of Bengal has intensified into cyclonic storm, Yaas, and is likely to intensify further into a very severe cyclonic storm (wind speed of 118 to 166 kmph) during the subsequent 24 hours, according to India Meteorological Department.

Yaas would continue to move north-northwestwards, intensify further and reach northwest Bay of Bengal near north Odisha and West Bengal coasts by Wednesday morning. It is very likely to cross north Odisha -West Bengal coasts between Paradip and Sagar islands by Wednesday evening as a very severe cyclonic storm.

Though oceanic and atmospheric conditions over Bay of Bengal are favourable for intensification of Yaas, experts hope it will not intensify to an extremely severe cyclone because it has formed close to the coast and has less time over the unusually warm ocean.

“The north Bay of Bengal where the cyclone is forming, is very warm, with the temperatures reaching up to 32 degrees Celsius (°C), 1-2°C above normal. The subsurface ocean heat content is also warm and conducive for the system to intensify into a cyclone. However, since the distance between the location of cyclogenesis and landfall is short, the cyclone won’t spend much time over the ocean. This will prevent it from intensifying to an extremely severe cyclone. In contrast, Cyclone Tauktae spent several days in the Arabian Sea, drawing the energy in the form of heat and moisture from the warm waters below. We won’t see this happening for cyclone Yaas,” said Matthew Roxy Koll, a climate scientist at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/very-severe-cyclonic-storm-yaas-to-cross-odisha-bengal-coasts-on-may-26-evening-101621829046240.html
 
LIVE updates: 22 killed in Mumbai landslides, Nawab Malik says BMC probe ordered

Landslide in Mumbai's Chembur: The National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) said four to five houses have been affected by the landslide and at least six to eight people are feared to be trapped in the rubble.

At least 22 people died and several others were injured in the Mahul and Vikhroli area of Mumbai after incessant overnight rains caused houses to crumble and collapse in a landslide, officials said.

The National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) said four to five houses have been affected by the landslide and at least six to eight people are feared to be trapped in the rubble.

While 10 bodies were retrieved by the BrihanMumbai Corporation (BMC) and fire brigade personnel before NDRF reached, one person was found dead later. The 17 people were brought dead to civic-run Rajawadi Hospital and two were discharged after being treated for their injuries, BMC's disaster management cell said.

The NDRF team, present at the spot is carrying out a search and rescue operation, officials said.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cities/mumbai-news/live-12-killed-in-mumbai-after-house-collapses-due-to-rain-says-ndrf-101626577258703.html
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">With the heavy monsoon rains I want to alert and caution our citizens to take special care. I have also directed all the relevant reponse agencies including NDMA to be on high alert with ready & rapid emergency response actions.</p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1420306443618689029?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 28, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
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