Cyclone Fengal death toll rises to 20 in S Asia

AFP, COLOMBO

The death toll from Cyclone Fengal’s fierce push through Sri Lanka and southern India reached 20 yesterday as downpours and flooding followed the storm’s wake after its winds calmed.

Fengal made landfall in India’s Tamil Nadu state on Saturday, bringing the highest 24-hour rainfall seen in 30 years to nearby Puducherry, before weakening to a normal low pressure weather system by yesterday morning.

More deaths were reported in Sri Lanka after Fengal skirted the island nation on Friday last week, bringing intense rains that triggered landslides.

A family is rescued after heavy rainfall in Puducherry, India, on Sunday following the landfall of Cyclone Fengal.

Photo: AFP

Sri Lanka’s disaster management agency said that 17 people had been killed, while nearly 470,000 others were taking shelter in temporary relief camps. India recorded three deaths from electrocution as a result of the storm, Tamil Nadu Minister for Revenue and Disaster Management K.K.S.S.R. Ramachandran told reporters late on Saturday.

He did not give further details on what caused the deaths, adding that damage from the cyclone was otherwise “minimal.”

India’s disaster agency were also attempting to rescue a family of seven in the state feared trapped by a landslide, local media reports said yesterday.

Roads were flooded and schools were shut in parts of southern India with weather officials yesterday warning that there remained a risk of flash flooding. Puducherry, a former French colony on India’s southern coast, received its highest 24-hour rainfall in 30 years after Fengal made landfall nearby, India’s weather department said.

Cyclones are a regular and deadly menace in the northern Indian Ocean, but scientists warn that storms are becoming more powerful as the world heats up due to climate change driven by burning fossil fuels.

Warmer ocean surfaces release more water vapor, which provides additional energy for storms, strengthening winds. A warming atmosphere also allows them to hold more water, boosting rainfall, but better forecasting and more effective evacuation planning have dramatically reduced death tolls.


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