In the eye of the storm
In
the eye of the storm
It was a pleasant
day on the 26th of April, 2019, the Meteorological Office officers had
been having a pleasant conversation and enjoying their first cup of tea, when
one of the officers saw something on his computer that had reeling with shock
and disbelief. He double-checked the data; however, as everyone knows, data
does not lie, and so he broke the news to his colleagues.
The news in
question was the gradual genesis of an extremely severe super-cyclone, which,
in its infancy, was christened ‘Phoni’ (which means ‘snake’).
The moment they had
caught wind of the cyclone, they began to send out periodical warnings to the
respective State Governments, and also the Central Government, while also
simultaneously tracking and mapping the formation and possible/approximate
trajectory of the cyclone.
They began by
6-hour warnings on the 27th, shortened it to 3-hour warnings by the 29th
of April, and then every 3 hours, from the 01st of May onwards, as
the cyclone came even closer to the country.
Initially, they had
tracked it heading towards Tamil Nadu, then decided it would make landfall at
Andhra Pradesh, but finally realized that it would make landfall at Orissa,
specifically the holy tourist-pilgrim city of Puri, a task which can attributed
to the calm guidance and experience of the Assistant Director-General of the
Indian Meteorological Department, Mr Mohapatra, a veteran in tracking cyclones.
The cyclone reached
a calamitous speed of 275kmph, when it made landfall at Puri at around 9 am,
with winds gusting up to 300 kmph; speeds which left the Ganjam, Kendrapada, Jajpur,
Cuttack, Bhubaneshwar, Jagatsinghpur, etc looking like war-zones, that is,
broken, smashed windows everywhere, broken buildings, trees, disconnected and
mangled power lines.
During the cyclone,
the people of Odisha went through what can only be described as hell. They were
cut off from the rest of the outside world due to the fallen power lines, they
barely had anything other than their essentials, and they had to witness the
destruction of some of their beloved properties, that is, homes etc.
Beyond that, almost
300 flights and close to as many flights had been cancelled, with the
Bhubaneshwar airport resembling a suicide bombing site, save the blood and gore.
Their main relief,
was, however, that, they had managed to escape what was potentially death or
much worse.
However, despite
the damage to property, there was almost a minimal loss to human life (so, far
46 people have declared dead) due to the brilliant foresight and planning of
Odisha’s Chief Minister Naveen Pattnaik.
Prior to the
cyclone, he had evacuated over 1.2 million people, or 12 lakh people away from
the coastal and other low-lying areas, and sent them packing to specially built
evacuation shelters, which came in very handy as several families could be accommodated
in the shelters.
Also, his
government arranged for special trains to ferry the people away from Puri to
their homes, or near their homes. Along with that, a total of over 3 million
messages had been sent to people’s mobile numbers, which helped in the speedy
measures.
The cyclone, after
it had had its fill of Odisha, then made its way to Bengal, entering Bengal at
4 am midnight, severely affecting places like Digha, Mandarmani, etc.
In Bengal, too,
notably, Didi (as Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee) is lovingly known, deployed
similar anti-cyclone measures, that is, evacuations, relief packages, telling
people to not venture out into the streets unless absolutely necessary.
By the time the
cyclone reached Kolkata, however, it had weakened considerably, and so did not
cause any major damage, save transforming some lanes in North Kolkata into
petal-ridden lanes, and the deaths of a few young boys who had been outside
during the cyclone despite their family’s warnings, and thus, paid the price
for their disobedience, something which left their families in shock.
The cyclone then
sunk its fangs into Bangaldesh, having weakened into a depression, leaving over
34 people dead there, despite its weakned state.
However, despite
that, it caused no more significant damage to Bangaldesh and thus, ended its
10-day journey from the Bay of Bengal.
As I am talking about
this, all efforts are on to restore at least some semblance of normalancy in
Odisha.
My prayers are with
them. Amen.

What should I say. You are amazing ❣️😍
ReplyDeleteExcellent writeup Baba, keep it up
ReplyDeleteGood stuff.. .
ReplyDeleteVery much detailed info!! Nice!
ReplyDeleteGood desription. Excellent expressions. Lovely wordings
ReplyDelete