NEW DELHI More than 80 people were killed by the powerful cyclone that slammed into India and Bangladesh on Wednesday, wiping out thousands of homes and drenching low-lying areas in torrential rain, officials said on Thursday.

Many of the dead were crushed by falling trees, electrocuted by downed wires or buried inside collapsing buildings as Cyclone Amphan pummeled the region, leaving a wide swath of devastation and grief.

The worst damage was reported in the Indian state of West Bengal, which includes the metropolis of Kolkata and many small, coastal villages where people live in shacks made from mud and sticks.

The storm ripped through there, and though many villagers had evacuated beforehand, as the Indian authorities had urged, some had resisting packing into shelters because they feared the coronavirus.

The authorities said it was too early to know the full damage or the final death toll. Many areas were still inaccessible because of a dangerous maze of split-open trees and live electricity wires sprawled across the roads.

But West Bengals chief minister, Mamata Banerjee, one of Indias most powerful women, said she had never seen such a disaster before.

At one end there is this small Covid virus that is terrifying people, she said in a video conference. This was another virus from the sky.

On Tuesday and Wednesday, as the storm barreled up the Bay of Bengal, emergency crews plied beach roads, shouting to people through megaphones to leave their homes and go to evacuation shelters. Around three million people in India and Bangladesh heeded the calls and moved to safety.

But Indian police officers said some villagers resisted, fearful of being stuck in a closed space with thousands of others at a time when India is struggling to contain the coronavirus.

Just this week, the country reported its 100,000th infection; many health experts believe the real numbers are far higher, but hidden because of Indias relatively low rates of testing.

On Thursday, as the day wore on, more stories of death flowed in.

Khanat Begum, a mother in a village in southern Bangladesh, was cooking when a blast of wind uprooted her neighbors tree, crashing it through the roof of her home. Her 13-year-old daughter was also inside the house. They both died.

Like many homes in Chandpur village, Ms. Begams house has been obliterated. The roads leading to the village were still blocked on Thursday.

Our village has been reduced to rubble, said Israar Kamal, a resident of Chandpur.

The cyclone weakened further as it moved into northeastern India on Thursday, with a wind speed of 37 miles per hour. The skies over many of the cyclone-damaged areas were clear.

Many villagers who had fled to cyclone shelters were still inside them; others were beginning to trickle back to their villages, only to find their homes smashed to the ground, scatterings of sticks and clumps of mud.

Among the reported deaths, the authorities said 10 people had died in Bangladesh and at least 73 in India.

One of the hardest-hit places was the metropolis of Kolkata, a former capital during colonial times and one of Indias biggest cities, with around 15 million people in the greater urban area. The authorities said the cyclone had killed at least 15 people there. On Thursday, its streets were littered with trees, and parked cars bumped into one another as workers struggled to clear the roads.

The cyclones eye had passed nearby, bringing with it 100-mile-an-hour winds and nearly nine inches of rain.

Ms. Banerjee, the West Bengal minister, said that the region was in a warlike situation, and that the loss of lives could surpass the toll of Covid-19 there so far.

Videos on social media showed uprooted trees blocking roads and water cascading down the stairs of apartment buildings. The runway of Kolkatas international airport, typically one of Indias busiest, was completely underwater and looked like a long pond.

I was very scared when water started coming into my flat, said Anushree Hamirwasia, 22, a student in Kolkata.

Sankar Halder, who runs a nonprofit organization in West Bengal, said many people in his area did not take the cyclone seriously.

Villagers had become complacent, he said, having lived through cyclones before, and this time their biggest fear was coronavirus and crowding into a place where they might get infected.

Even the local news was focused more on coronavirus than the cyclone, Mr. Halder said. When the government finally started evacuating people and people realized the intensity of the storm, it was too late.

The majority of the dead, he said, could have escaped but died inside their homes.

Mohammed Salah Uddin, 42, said he and 10 others returned to his village in southern Bangladesh on Thursday after crisscrossing knocked-down trees and electrical poles littering the roads. He said that the shelter he had fled to was very crowded inside, and that people had not maintained a safe distance from one another, despite the threat of the coronavirus.

It looked scary, Mr. Uddin said. It is better to live in a destroyed home than catch the diseases.

Photographs from other shelters in Bangladesh showed huge crowds of people, few of them wearing masks.

Another area that got walloped was the Sundarbans, the worlds largest mangrove forest and a wildlife refuge, home to endangered species including Bengal tigers.

The cyclone whipped right through the Sundarbans, which stretches across the border of India and Bangladesh along the Bay of Bengal.

Villagers in that area told Belinda Wright, the executive director of the Wildlife Protection Society of India, that there wasnt a tree standing.

But the villagers also relayed that no one had been injured in the storm.

They dont like leaving their homes, Ms. Wright said, but most did because they knew how terribly dangerous cyclones can be, she added.

Rescue operations intensified on Thursday across the entire belt of devastation. Jawhar Sircar, a retired government administrator who lives in Kolkata, said that in his part of the city, the situation was calm. Electricity was back on, though essential supplies like vegetables and fruits were still not available because street vendors were unable to move on the roads.

The mood in Kolkata is like it is all over now, he said.

Hari Kumar contributed reporting.

See the article here:
Cyclone Amphans Death Toll Rises to 80 in India and Bangladesh - The New York Times

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