At least 23 people were killed and more than 100,000 people hit, as a cyclone spawned by a deep depression in the Bay of Bengal pounded large parts of West Bengal and coastal Orissa today, leaving a trail of devastation and crippling normal life in the two states.
However, the good news from the Met department is that cyclone Aila has started gradually weakening.
In neighbouring Bangladesh, which is in the path of the cyclone, thousands of people were shifted to makeshift emergency shelters along the southwestern coastlines which were lashed by tidal surges, damaging nearly a dozen of flood control structures like dams, marooning thousands of others.
The highest number of deaths, 14, in West Bengal was reported from South 24 Parganas district, followed by five in Kolkata and one each in Bankura and Howrah districts. “The cyclone, now lying stationery 50 km west of Kolkata, hit West Bengal coast at 1:30 pm near Sagar Island. It is moving in a northerly direction and will weaken gradually, Regional Meteorological Centre Director G C Debnath, told tonight. “Rains, however, will continue throughout tomorrow,” he added.
A severe storm with a windspeed of 110 kmph, accompanied by heavy rainfall, preceded the cyclone ripping through Kolkata, North and South 24 Parganas, Howrah, Hooghly, Burdwan and East Midnapore districts at 110 kmph. Unofficial reports, however, put the toll at 26 and the number of affected at over 200,000.