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Cyclone strikes Bangladesh, killing at least 200 people

 
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 327138
United Kingdom
11/16/2007 03:47 AM
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Cyclone strikes Bangladesh, killing at least 200 people
At least 200 people were feared dead after a powerful cyclone with winds of 155mph struck the southern Bangladesh coast, forcing tens of thousands to flee their homes.

Most of the deaths during the storm that hit the low-lying delta region yesterday occurred when trees fell on flimsy bamboo and tin-built houses. Police warned the death toll and the number of casualties would rise.

The fatalities included an elderly man who drowned when a small boat carrying 17 people capsized.

Sixteen-foot waves washed away hundreds of thatched homes, destroying crops and killing livestock. Television news reports said more than 100 fishing boats in the Bay of Bengal had failed to return home overnight. Many small boats were without radio equipment and may not have heard the storm warnings.

Electricity poles were uprooted, disrupting communication and power supplies. Evacuees sheltered in schools. “We have been virtually blacked out all over the country,” said a disaster management official in southern Mongla, one of the worst affected areas.

Bangladesh’s meterological department described cyclone Sidr as similar in strength to the devastating 1991 storm that triggered a tidal wave killing 138,000 people.

But it said the latest storm had weakened overnight and was progressing through the northeastern state of Sylhet. Sidr is expected to fizzle out over the north-eastern Indian state of Assam tomorrow. “It has lost its intensity,” a weather forecaster said.

Officials in one of the world’s poorest nations, with a population of 140 million, were spared more serious human casualties because of an early warning system and network of cyclone shelters introduced after the 1991 disaster.

Bangladesh has the worst record of cyclone storm surges in the world. As cyclones sweep up the Bay of Bengal, the funnel shape of the coastline squeezes storm surges over a very low coastline. The warm seas in the Bay of Bengal are also a notorious breeding ground for cyclones, particularly at this time of year, when clusters of thunderstorms can turn into a ferocious, rotating storm.

As storm surges overwhelm the coastline they tear through a labyrinth of waterways in the enormous river deltas. The region is densely populated, with many people living on chars – islands of sand and silt that gradually shift with the surrounding waters. Much of the land is barely a metre above sea level and one third of Bangladesh lies less than six metres above.

These vulnerable people are also among the poorest in the country. Although great efforts have been made to give good storm warnings and build cyclone shelters on higher land, this is still inadequate for the estimated five million people in the high-risk areas.

However, the situation has improved since the catastrophic storm surge of November 12, 1970, when at least half a million people died in what was the worst natural disaster of the 20th century. About 8,000 sq km (3,090 sq miles) of land was devastated, with almost all buildings and crops obliterated. The chaotic rescue operation helped to fuel the independence movement in what was then East Pakistan.

Defences again proved inadequate when another cyclone struck on April 29, 1991, with winds reaching 140mph during a high tide, producing a storm surge as much as seven metres high. More than 130,000 people were killed.

Cyclone disasters have always plagued Bangladesh. In 1876 one million people were believed killed in a storm and another million died from an outbreak of cholera afterwards.

But the problem is growing worse as rising sea levels, caused by global warming, increase the threat of storm surges and flooding. The delta region is also subsiding, partly because groundwater is being abstracted for agriculture.
[link to www.timesonline.co.uk]
Anonymous Coward (OP)
User ID: 327138
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11/16/2007 03:58 AM
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Re: Cyclone strikes Bangladesh, killing at least 200 people
Bangladesh cyclone kills 250; towns under water

"The death count is rising fast as we get more information from the affected districts,"
[link to www.alertnet.org]





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