Hundreds
of thousands evacuated as Cyclone Helen hits India
Hundreds
of thousands were evacuated as a severe cyclone slammed into
southeastern India Friday, packing strong winds and torrential rains
and killing at least two people, according to officials.
22
November, 2013
"Cyclone
Helen has made landfall," an official with the National Disaster
Management Authority (NDMA) told AFP, as rains lashed Andhra Pradesh,
disrupting life and snapping communication lines.
Two
people were killed by falling trees in the storm that comes a month
after a cyclone left at least 18 people dead and a trail of
destruction along coastal Andhra Pradesh and in the eastern state of
Orissa.
Disaster
authorities expect "high rainfall during the next 24 hours"
in three coastal districts of cyclone-prone Andhra Pradesh, said the
disaster management official.
The
cyclone was expected to be downgraded into a "deep depression"
later Friday, the official said.
State
authorities have evacuated hundreds of thousands of people out of the
storm's path and rushed emergency services into areas reeling from
the high winds and heavy rains.
"Hundreds
of thousands have been moved. We were expecting the evacuation of
400,000 people," the NDMA official said.
Rains,
accompanied by winds packing speeds of up to 70 kilometres (43 miles)
an hour, lashed parts of the mainly farming state, she said.
"Sea
conditions will be very rough off Andhra Pradesh coast during the
next 12 hours."
The
Indian weather office said there could be "extensive damage to
thatched roofs and huts".
Some
20 rescue teams have been deployed in the flood zone to provide help,
the official said.
Helen,
which is labelled "severe", is considerably weaker than the
"very severe" cyclone Phailin which pounded the east coast
further to the north in October.
The
most powerful storms which strike India at this time of year are
classed as "super-cyclones", followed by "very severe"
and "severe".
Phailin,
which had winds of over 200 kilometres an hour, tore across parts of
Andhra Pradesh, ripping out trees, flipping trucks, snapping power
lines and flooding farmland.
In
1999, over 8,000 people were killed when a cyclone hit the state of
Orissa, which took years to recover
Cyclone
Alessia near Australia - Update 1 (Nov 23, 2013)
Australia's
first tropical cyclone has formed off the Indian Ocean coast, and is
likely to affect Western Australia and the Northern Territory. The
storm is of a moderate intensity, and is likely to remain so as it
makes landfall in the next 12-24 hours. From here, Alessia could
emerge over the Gulf of Carpentaria where it may redevelop and stall.
The threat of heavy rain and possibly flooding should be anticipated
at all points in between.
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