At least two people dead as a second cyclone in two weeks bears down on COVID-ravaged India

A tornado ripped through dozens of homes and left two people dead as Cyclone Yaas powers across the Bay of Bengal.

High tide at a coastal area as Cyclone Yaas makes landfall in Digha, near the Bay of Bengal, south of Kolkata, India, 26 May 2021.

High tide at a coastal area as Cyclone Yaas makes landfall in Digha, near the Bay of Bengal, south of Kolkata, India, 26 May 2021. Source: EPA

At least two people have died on Wednesday as howling winds and huge waves slammed eastern India in the COVID-stricken country's second cyclone in as many weeks.

Cyclone Yaas bore down on the east coast on Wednesday (local time), forcing the evacuation of more than 1.5 million people in the states of West Bengal and Odisha. 

Last week, Cyclone Tauktae claimed at least 155 lives, including dozens of oil rig workers as it lashed western India, the fiercest to hit the area in several decades.
National Disaster Response Force members urged villagers to evacuate the area before Cyclone Yaas made landfall, in Kolkata  India, 25 May 2021.
National Disaster Response Force members urged villagers to evacuate the area before Cyclone Yaas made landfall, in Kolkata India, 25 May 2021. Source: AAP
West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee said that the seaside town of Digha has been "swamped" by waves the height of a double-decker bus.

She said that two people had been killed, including one dragged into the sea by the waves in Digha and another crushed when his house collapsed.

Nearly 20,000 houses were damaged and more than a dozen river islands were flooded with a number of embankments breached, she said.
The storm packed lashing rain and winds gusting up to 155 kilometres an hour, the equivalent to a category-two hurricane.

"I have never seen such a storm ever in my life," said Purnendu Jana, a Digha resident. "The water may cross the main road for the first time." 

"Many of us are here, all of us are really scared,' local hotel owner Shiuli Das said.

'Terrible blow'

Almost 5,000 disaster workers were deployed with tree and wire cutters, emergency communications, inflatable boats and medical aid, the National Disaster Response Force said. 

Officials fear the emergency will further complicate efforts to halt a surge in coronavirus cases that has now killed 310,000 people.

Masks were distributed in emergency shelters, but West Bengal state minister Bankim Chandra Hazra told AFP that maintaining social distancing would be "a big challenge".

"This cyclone spells double trouble for millions of people in India as there is no respite from COVID-19," said Udaya Regmi from the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.
 A commuter wades through flooded streets as Cyclone Yaas makes landfall in Digha, near the Bay of Bengal, south of Kolkata, India, 26 May 2021.
A commuter wades through flooded streets as Cyclone Yaas makes landfall in Digha, near the Bay of Bengal, south of Kolkata, India, 26 May 2021. Source: EPA
Some vaccination centres in threatened districts, as well as Kolkata, suspended operations and a special effort had been launched to ensure the supply of oxygen and medicines to hospitals, officials said.

Officials in neighbouring Bangladesh, a regular target of cyclones, said they expected the low-lying delta nation to be spared this time.

Some of the deadliest storms in history have formed in the Bay of Bengal, including one in 1970 that killed half a million people in what is modern-day Bangladesh.

Odisha's worst-ever cyclone, in 1999, killed 10,000 people. Last year Cyclone Amphan, the worst since then, caused widespread devastation but timely evacuations meant fatalities were fewer than 150.


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3 min read
Published 26 May 2021 12:43pm
Updated 22 February 2022 6:23pm
Source: AFP, SBS


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