28 May 2021 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Thousands of people were homeless Thursday after a cyclone battered Covid-ravaged India and neighbouring Bangladesh, killing nine people including four children.
Cyclones are a regular menace in the northern Indian Ocean but many scientists say they are becoming more frequent and severe as climate change warms sea temperatures.
Barely a week after Cyclone Tauktae claimed at least 155 lives in western India, Cyclone Yaas forced the evacuation of more than 1.5 million people in the eastern states of West Bengal and Odisha.
The storm hit on Wednesday with torrential rain and howling winds gusting up to 155 kilometres (96 miles) an hour, equivalent to a category two hurricane.
Waves the size of double-decker buses pounded the shore and swamped towns and villages along the coastline, exacerbated by a higher-than-normal tide because of a full moon.
Prabir Maity, a resident of a village close to the sea, told AFP: “I have lost my home, everything.” Two people died in West Bengal, two in Odisha and five in neighbouring Bangladesh, officials said.
In southern areas of Bangladesh, although not in Yaas’s direct path, the sea smashed through water defences and inundated thousands of homes, officials said.
West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee said more than 300,000 homes were destroyed.
“Thousands of people are still marooned. We have set up 14,000 cyclone centres to provide shelter to the homeless,” she said. The sea is still roaring,” Diprodas Chatterjee from the Hoteliers’ Association in the seaside town of Digha told AFP.
DIGHA AFP
May27, 2021
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