The cyclonic storm,
Phailin, crossed the Odisha coast near Gopalpur, 12 km from Berhampur city, on
Saturday night after causing widespread devastation in the and
neighbouring Andhra Pradesh. Experts had even compared Phailin with hurricane
Katrina, which devastated the U.S. in 2005. The India Meteorological Department
said the cyclone made its landfall with a wind speed of 200 km per hour. L.S.
Rathore, IMD Director-General (meteorology), reiterated that it was not a super
cyclone and the intensity was found to be of level 6. The eye of the cyclone
was estimated to be 15 km in spread. Coastal town Berhampur, which bore the
brunt of the storm, experienced heavy rains for a brief while, from 9 p.m. at
the time of the landfall. Two persons died in Ganjam district, crushed under
tress that fell in the impact of high speed winds.
Coastal areas of Andhra Pradesh,
barring Srikakulam and north coastal districts, escaped cyclone fury. Heavy
rains lashed Srikakulam district, uprooting electric poles and trees and
plunging large areas into darkness. Twelve towns in the coastal districts of
Odisha plunged into darkness as power had been switched off since morning. They
were Ganjam, Gajapati, Khurda, Nayagarh, Puri, Cuttack, Kendrapara, Jagatsingh,
Jajpur, Bhadrak, Balasore and Mayurbhanj. Officials in Odisha said the extent
of damage is much less than feared. Much to their relief, rains subsided and
wind speeds reduced to 100-120 kmph at 9.30 p.m. However, the speed picked up
to 200 kmph around 10 p.m. There was no information on damage to property and
lives and it can only be assessed by Sunday afternoon, according to Amitabh
Thakur, DIG of Police, Berhampur. Relief teams from the Army, the Navy and the
Air Force are on standby. All shops, hotels, ATMs and other public facilities
remained shut as there was no power in the district. The communication network
was hit. Several trees and electric poles were damaged.
Earlier, heavy rain, with wind speeds
reaching 120-150 kmph, triggered devastation. Fallen trees, uprooted electric
poles and broken walls could be seen at various places in Berhampur. Walls of
the City Women’s College and the SBI main branch were broken. Durga mandaps put
up as part of Dasara festivities collapsed near the Old Bus Stand and
Khollikote College. The Rushikulya and the Bahuda rivers were in spate as the
government directed officials to undertake relief and rescue operations on a
war-footing. An estimated 1.40 lakh people had been evacuated from low-lying
areas to cyclone shelters and relief camps. Fishermen and locals had been
forcibly shifted to the relief camps. Hundreds of fishermen from Gopalpur,
Baxipalli, Venkatapur, Haripur, Bandar and other hamlets were provided
accommodation at cyclone shelters and relief camps. As per IMD data, rainfall
received in Bhubaneswar from 8.30 a.m. to 8.30 p.m. was 130 mm, while Gopalpur
received 78 mm and Puri 81 mm.
Source: The Hindu
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