Red alert issued as cyclone bears down on India
12 Oct AFP
India issued a red alert as a massive cyclone bore down on the east
coast Saturday, forcing the evacuation of hundreds of thousands of
people, officials said.
Cyclone Phailin was packing gusts as high as 240 kilometres per hour
(150 miles per hour) and had the potential to be the strongest storm to
hit the area in 14 years, bringing a three-metre (10-foot) surge in sea
levels.
High winds and heavy rain were already lashing the state of Orissa
and neighbouring Andhra Pradesh, where trees were bent double several
hours before Phailin was due to make landfall.
The cyclone is set to hit the same coastal area dotted with flimsy
huts and shanties as a storm in 1999 that killed more than 8,000 people.
The Indian Meteorological Department issued a so called “red message”
warning of the “very severe” cyclone's impending arrival.
The US Navy's Joint Typhoon Centre said gusts could reach as high as
315 kilometres an hour, while London-based Tropical Storm Risk put
Phailin in its most severe “super cyclone” category.The armed forces
have been mobilised to help with relief efforts and the Indian Red Cross
Society has put disaster response teams on standby in Orissa, Andhra
Pradesh and Andaman Nicobar.
The Orissa government said it was setting a “zero casualty target” in
the state of close to 40 million people and was seeking “100 percent”
evacuation of people in the worst-affected areas.
Special relief commissioner for Orissa, Pradipta Mohapatra, told AFP
that 250,000 people had already been moved out of harm's way.
Satellite photos showed an intimidating cloud mass barrelling across
the Bay of Bengal with forecasters saying the danger zone was about 150
kilometres (90 miles) wide.
In Orissa's capital, panic buying saw many shops run low on food.
The 1999 cyclone had higher wind speeds and a larger storm surge --
six metres -- than being currently predicted by the Indian weather
office. Some foreign forecasters have suggested that India's weather
office is underestimating the power of Phailin, however, which means
“sapphire” in Thai.
A government report on the 1999 disaster put the death toll at 8,243
and said 445,000 livestock perished.Authorities have said they are
better prepared this time around. Cyclones are a common occurrence in
the Bay of Bengal at the end of the steamy monsoon season, when sea
temperatures are at their warmest.
A cyclone that struck Bangladesh in 1970 killed hundreds of thousands
of people. |