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Cyclone Amphan slams into Bangladesh, India as millions flee

  • May 20, 2020

At least 2.6 million people fled to shelters in Bangladesh and western India Wednesday as Cyclone Ampham made landfall. The “super cyclone” has been described as the fiercest cyclone ever in the Bay of Bengal.

The Bangladeshi Red Crescent, the local division of the Red Cross, reported the first death, as a volunteer drowned while moving villagers to safety, according to AFP news agency.

Heavy rain began to lash the area hours and several cities, including Kolkata, were flooded. Bangladesh’s disaster management officials had worked on a war footing to evacuate about two million people from coastal areas along the bay.

A graphic showing the path and projected path of the cyclone. 20.05.2020 EN

As the storm approached, evacuation efforts gave way to attempts to keep people safe in shelters.

Waves of over five meters spotted near the coast of India. The storm pushed seawater some 25 kilometers (15 miles) inland.

Hundreds of Rohingya refugees living on a flood-prone island were also moved to storm shelters. Bhasan Char island, which has been described as “uninhabitable,” by the UN,is a large sandbank that appeared from the ocean less than 20 years ago. Rights groups have urged Bangladesh to bring the refugees to the mainland, but authorities say the storm shelters are safe.

The world’s largest refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar on the mainland is expected to miss the worst of the storm, though the danger level has been raised from six to nine.

Read more: Cyclone Amphan: Millions evacuated in India, Bangladesh, as storm approaches

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    Social distancing impossible during Cyclone Amphan

    Residents along Bangladesh’s coast are being moved to safety as one of the strongest cyclones in years strikes the region. Millions of people had to be evacuated from low-lying regions along the Bay of Bengal on May 19. But plans are complicated by the coronavirus precautions. Maintaining social distancing is nearly impossible.

  • Philippinen Typhoon Vongfong (AFP/A. Beronio)

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  • Typhoon Haiyan on a satellite photo

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    Three names – one phenomenon

    Hurricane, typhoon, and cyclone are actually three names for the same phenomenon. Along the North American coast they are called hurricanes, in East and Southeast Asia they are called typhoons, and near India and Australia they are called cyclones. But despite the different names, they develop in the same way.

  • Cross-section graphic of a tropical storm

    Cyclones, typhoons, hurricanes – the power of devastation

    A cyclone is created

    Tropical storms develop over oceans when the water temperature is at least 26 degrees Celsius (79 degrees Fahrenheit). As the warm water evaporates and condenses, the air around it heats up and drags cooler air upwards, creating powerful winds.

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  • Powerful river tides in China caused by typhoon Nanmadol(Photo: Li Zhong / ChinaFotoPress / MAXP)

    Cyclones, typhoons, hurricanes – the power of devastation

    A storm hits land

    When a tropical storm hits a coastline, it becomes weaker due to the lack of warm water. In Australia, “Marcia” was soon downgraded to a category one storm, while “Lam” weakened after striking near Brisbane. Masses of water from the sea often cause the worst damage – as seen here in China after Typhoon Nanmadol in August 2011.

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    Chaos ensues

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  • A tornado

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    Trail of destruction

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    Author: Brigitte Osterath / ew


Social distancing measures hamper evacuation

Evacuation and shelter efforts in eastern India and on the Bangadeshi coast were hampered by social distancing measures put in place to slow the spread of the coronavirus. Many people refused to go to shelters or leave their livestock, as they were afraid of contracting COVID-19.

“We have literally had to force people out of their homes, make them wear masks and put them in government buildings,” a senior police official for the Indian state of West Bengal told Reuters news agency.

The effects of the cyclone are expected to be felt first in two Indian states and then cross the border to Bangladesh around midday local time.

Winds are expected to reach 185 km/h (115 mph). The area has seen large cyclones and storms in the past: in 1970, Cyclone Bhola killed half a million people, and storms in 1999 and 2007 claimed thousands of lives.

ed/msh (Reuters, AFP, AP)

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Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/cyclone-amphan-slams-into-bangladesh-india-as-millions-flee/a-53504211?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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