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Ten Killed As Cyclone Amphan Batters Bangladesh

Bangladesh had shifted over 20 lakh people to storm shelters and deployed the military to deal with the powerful cyclone.

A portion of Kolkata Airport stands flooded in wake of cyclone Amphan. (Photo: ANI/Twitter)
A portion of Kolkata Airport stands flooded in wake of cyclone Amphan. (Photo: ANI/Twitter)

A powerful cyclone has battered Bangladesh, killing at least 10 people, devastating coastal villages, inundating many areas and damaging scores of houses, officials said on Thursday.

Cyclone 'Amphan', the strongest to hit the region in nearly two decades, made landfall on Wednesday evening. It was the most powerful storm since cyclone 'Sidr' killed nearly 3,500 people in 2007.

“From our initial report we can say 10 people were killed in the cyclone,” said Ayesha Akhtar, spokeswoman of the health ministry's control room. Akhtar said officials could confirm identities of six of the deceased so far, while a process was underway to assess the medical requirements and other details in the affected area.

Initial reports from the coastlines suggested most of the deaths were caused by accidents like trees falling on people and collapsing of walls. A Red Crescent volunteer drowned during an evacuation bid.

“The body of Cyclone Preparedness Programme leader Shah Alam was recovered nine hours after he went missing following the capsizing of a boat in a canal in Kalapara upazila,” Kalapara Upazila Nirbahi Officer Abu Hasnat said. A boat carrying CPP volunteers, including Alam, sank in the Hafez Pedar canal on Wednesday morning after being hit by the storm, the report said.

The cyclone made landfall at 2:30 p.m. on Wednesday, between Digha in West Bengal and and Hatiya island in Bangladesh, flattening fragile dwellings, uprooting trees and electric poles. The cyclone brought with it heavy downpour as predicted and most parts of Khulna region were severely battered by tidal surges and very heavy showers, reports said.

“The cyclone 'Amphan' started crossing the Bangladesh coast around 5 p.m. on Wednesday packing a wind speed of around 160 to 180 kph rising to 200 kph within 80 km of its centre,” meteorologist Abdul Mannan was quoted as saying by bdnews24.com. “The cyclone is likely to move further in a north-northeasterly direction and weaken gradually.”

Officials believe that the world's largest mangrove forest, shared both by India and Bangladesh, Sundarbans absorbed the major impact of the killer storm when many wild animals might have been killed alongside uprooting of trees.

Bangladesh had shifted over 20 lakh people to storm shelters and deployed the military to deal with the powerful cyclone.

Leading global storm tracker AccuWeather on Tuesday described Amphan as the first super cyclone in the Bay of Bengal since 1999.