Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Tropical Cyclone Phailin

New Delhi, India (CNN) -- Hours after it snapped power lines, overturned cars and ripped away bamboo homes, the most powerful cyclone to hit India in years weakened Sunday, but not before it left at least 14 dead.
 
Morning light revealed damage from Tropical Cyclone Phailin after it pounded the eastern coast, the strongest storm in India in 14 years.
 
Debris littered wet streets. Buildings had gaping holes where roofs and windows had been.
 
In Odisha state, where the cyclone landed, at least 13 people were killed after trees fell and walls collapsed when the storm hit, Police Chief Prakash Mishra said. Another death was confirmed in Andhra Pradesh state, India's disaster management authority said.
 
Many had feared the death toll would be higher. Massive evacuation efforts helped limit the number of casualties, officials said.
 
"It is a huge, huge relief," Naveen Patnaik, Odisha's chief minister, told CNN sister network CNN-IBN. "Damage has been minimal."
 
But in the hardest hit areas, the storm's impact was clear, with flooded highways, fallen trees and downed power lines.

 

 

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