Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

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chaanakya
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Re: Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

Post by chaanakya »

Kumbhakarans from PMO and MMS wakes up one month after Phailin Strikes Odisha and AP Coast . That too it is announcement . God only knows when money will be given by them. Major areas affected was in Odisha , yet both states were given same amount just because they don't want to be seen as partial to Congi Govt which is tottering on its last leg and anyway the state is going to polls later and congis would need all that money. This is a big scam in the making.

This is interim relief which comes after one month making mockery of the concept.

Cyclone Phailin: PM announces interim relief of Rs 1000cr each for Andhra, Odisha

PTI | Nov 9, 2013, 05.42 PM IST
NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Saturday announced interim assistance of Rs 1,000 crore each for Andhra Pradesh and Odisha for relief and rehabilitation in the wake of destruction caused by cyclone Phailin.

The total quantum of assistance to the two states will be finalised after consideration of the on-the-spot assessment report of the Inter-Ministerial Central Team, an official statement said here.

In addition, Singh has sanctioned an ex-gratia of Rs 2 lakh each to the next of kin of the deceased and Rs 50,000 each to the seriously injured persons from the Prime Minister's National Relief Fund.

Earlier on Saturday, a delegation led by Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy had called on the Prime Minister and presented a memorandum regarding the losses suffered owing to the impact of cyclone Phailin and the subsequent heavy rains and floods in the state.

On October 12, Phailin, a very severe cyclonic storm, said to be the second strongest after the disastrous super-cyclone of 1999, struck the Odisha coast, bringing in its wake torrential rains and wind speeds of over 200 kmph in the state and in the neighbouring north coastal Andhra Pradesh.
chaanakya
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Re: Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

Post by chaanakya »

Typhoon Haiyan kills at least 1,200 in Philippines

TACLOBAN, Philippines: One of the strongest typhoons ever to make landfall devastated the central Philippines, killing more than 1,000 people in one city alone and 200 in another province, the Red Cross estimated on Saturday, as reports of high casualties began to emerge.

A day after Typhoon Haiyan churned through the Philippine archipelago in a straight line from east to west, rescue teams struggled to reach far-flung regions, hampered by washed out roads, many choked with debris and fallen trees.

The death toll is expected to rise sharply from the fast-moving storm, whose circumference eclipsed the whole country and which late on Saturday was heading for Vietnam.

Among the hardest hit was coastal Tacloban in central Leyte province, where preliminary estimates suggest more than 1,000 people were killed, said Gwendolyn Pang, secretary general of the Philippine Red Cross, as water surges rushed through the city.

"An estimated more than 1,000 bodies were seen floating in Tacloban as reported by our Red Cross teams," she told Reuters. "In Samar, about 200 deaths. Validation is ongoing."

She expected a more exact number to emerge after a more precise counting of bodies on the ground in those regions.

Witnesses said bodies covered in plastic were lying on the streets. Television footage shows cars piled atop each other.

"The last time I saw something of this scale was in the aftermath of the Indian Ocean Tsunami," said Sebastian Rhodes Stampa, head of the UN Disaster Assessment Coordination Team sent to Tacloban, referring to the 2004 earthquake and tsunami.


"This is destruction on a massive scale. There are cars thrown like tumbleweed and the streets are strewn with debris."

The category 5 "super typhoon" weakened to a category 4 on Saturday, though forecasters said it could strengthen again over the South China Sea en route to Vietnam.


Authorities in 15 provinces in Vietnam have started to call back boats and prepare for possible landslides. Nearly 300,000 people were moved to safer areas in two provinces alone - Da Nang and Quang Nam - according to the government's website.

The Philippines has yet to restore communications with officials in Tacloban, a city of about 220,000. A government official estimated at least 100 were killed and more than 100 wounded, but conceded the toll would likely rise sharply.

The national disaster agency has yet to confirm the toll but broken power poles, trees, bent tin roofs and splintered houses littered the streets of the city about 580 km (360 miles) southeast of Manila.

"It was like a Tsunami"

The airport was nearly destroyed as raging seawaters swept through the city, shattering the glass of the airport tower, leveling the terminal and overturning nearby vehicles.

"Almost all houses were destroyed, many are totally damaged. Only a few are left standing," said Major Rey Balido, a spokesman for the national disaster agency.

Local television network ABS-CBN showed images of looting in one of the city's biggest malls, with residents carting away everything from appliances to suitcases and grocery items.

Airport manager Efren Nagrama, 47, said water levels rose up to four meters (13 ft) in the airport.

"It was like a tsunami. We escaped through the windows and I held on to a pole for about an hour as rain, seawater and wind swept through the airport. Some of my staff survived by clinging to trees. I prayed hard all throughout until the water subsided."

Across the country, about a million people took shelter in 37 provinces after President Benigno Aquino appealed to those in the typhoon's path to leave vulnerable areas.

"For casualties, we think it will be substantially more," Aquino told reporters.

Officials started evacuating residents from low-lying areas, coastlines and hilly villages as early as three days before the typhoon struck on Friday, officials said. But not all headed the call to evacuate.

"I saw those big waves and immediately told my neighbors to flee," said Floremil Mazo, a villager in southeastern Davao Oriental province.

Meteorologists said the impact may not be as strong as feared because the storm was moving so quickly, reducing the risk of flooding and landslides from torrential rain, the biggest causes of typhoon casualties in the Philippines.

Ferry services and airports in the central Philippines remained closed, hampering aid deliveries to Tacloban, although the military said three C-130 transport planes managed to land at its airport on Saturday.

At least two people were killed on the tourist destination island of Cebu, three in Iloilo province and another three in Coron town in southwestern Palawan province, radio reports said.

"I never thought the winds would be that strong that they could destroy my house," LynLyn Golfan of Cebu said in a television interview while sifting through the debris.

By Saturday afternoon, the typhoon was hovering 765 km west of San Jose in southwestern Occidental Mindoro province, packing winds of a maximum 185 kph, with gusts of up to 220 kph.

The storm lashed the islands of Leyte and Samar with 275-kph wind gusts and 5-6 meter (15-19 ft) waves on Friday before scouring the northern tip of Cebu province. It weakened slightly as it moved west-northwest near the tourist island of Boracay, later hitting Mindoro island.

Haiyan was the second category 5 typhoon to hit the Philippines this year after Typhoon Usagi in September. An average of 20 typhoons strike every year, and Haiyan was the 24th so far this year.


Last year, Typhoon Bopha flattened three towns in southern Mindanao, killing 1,100 people and causing damage of more than $1 billion.
fanne
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Re: Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

Post by fanne »

US Media is full of comparison between Sandy and Haiyan. With lots of destruction in Philipines and less in US, probably it makes them feel better/superior. I failed to see similar comparison with the Indian one, probably only because we were lucky (or better/superior). It makes you feel sick watching this, instead of really helping (which btw these show does by spreading awareness). Aham lives only more subtle this time.
chaanakya
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Re: Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

Post by chaanakya »

Could you post some of those news items comparing it in that manner.
fanne
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Re: Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

Post by fanne »

Wtch CNN or NJ News 12 (in in NJ)
Bade
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Re: Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

Post by Bade »

Sandy was a cat-3 versus this one which was cat-5 at landfall in the Philippines.
chaanakya
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Re: Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

Post by chaanakya »

Then there is no comparison at all.

However, the unpreparedness seems to be the cause of more number of deaths despite all high technologies and efficiency touted by them. In comparison Phailin (CAT-5 later weakened to CAT 4 215 KMPH) which was just a tad lower than Haiyan ( CAT-5, 220 KMPH )caused very few deaths thanks to preparedness . Though we should not sit complacent by this achievement.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/2 ... 64333.html
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, relying on data from the American Red Cross, counted 117. The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration tally, which used local government figures and media accounts, was 159 caused directly or indirectly by the storm.

The Associated Press in September surveyed state, and in some cases, local governments along the storm's path and got a different figure — 182 in the United States. A February report from the National Hurricane Center counted another 72 deaths in the Caribbean and one in Canada.

Any of the numbers would rank the storm as one of the 25 or so deadliest cyclones ever to hit the United States, but far behind earlier storms that killed hundreds or thousands.
Wiki says Sandy was CAT 2 /3 with max Wind speed of 185 KMPH storm/hurricane. It hit US of A with Wind speed of 130 KMPH only. The most of the fatalities ( about 73 of 148 ) were in US of A that too after making intensive preparations. In fact , after Katrina they should have made necessary changes to prevent even these deaths.

One could very well say that we were plain lucky and they were unlucky.
pankajs
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Re: Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

Post by pankajs »

Month after the Storm: Post Phailin, Odisha looking at devastation on the scale of 1999

Image
It's been a month since Cyclone Phailin swept Orissa. A month in which the original euphoria over a state known to keel under disasters standing up resolutely to one has given way to the realisation of the long and slow process ahead in picking up the pieces. Just as the people were congratulating themselves for surviving the cyclone, they were hit by a wave of flooding that few had bargained for. It isn't the supercyclone, but the 2013 storm now looks to have left a larger area devastated in the state, putting people's lives back by at least 5-10 years. Almost to 1999, that is, for some.

Estimated losses: Rs 21,770 crore; more than Orissa's Plan outlay for 2013-14

<snip>

"The evacuation was the easier part. Providing relief was far more difficult. But it's the rehabilitation that is proving to be the most difficult. What we have done so far is provide basic succour," admits Ganjam District Collector Krishan Kumar.

Though a large proportion of the 37 lakh population of Ganjam district has received the food relief package of 50 kg rice and Rs 500, the cyclone and the flood have broken their backs.

Population affected: More than 2 crore (Half of the state's 4.2 crore people); Houses damaged: 9.4 lakh (Half of them severely.)

<snip>

Power situation: 1,756 feeders, 42,753 substations, 36,885 km of low-tension lines, 4,074 km of extra high-tension lines, 4.08 lakh electric poles and 93 extra-high tension towers down; Population affected: 3.39 million

<snip>

Crop area damaged: 12.4 lakh hectares (In 7.18 lakh hectares, more than 50 per cent damage); Horticulture: 63,000-odd hectares damaged
pankajs
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Re: Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

Post by pankajs »

Cyclone Phailin: Odisha loses 26 lakh trees, plans to plant 12 cr
Official sources said out of the 12 crore trees, around 6.5 crore would be planted through different state and Central schemes and 5.5 crore would be distributed to farmers for plantation in their own land.

To create awareness among the people about the large scale plantation, the government has coined the slogan ‘Each one plant one’.

<snip>

Avenue plantation would scaled up during 2014-15 along the side of PMGSY roads, canal embankments and railway lines, the sources said adding it has been decided to take up massive plantation in village forest lands, bald hills and school premises.

As per the plans, plantation will be taken up in 11,300 hectares under the state plan, 5,557 hectares under compensatory afforestation, 24100 hectares under MGNREGS, 2500 hectares under Odisha Bamboo Development Agency in forest area (National Bamboo Mission) in both forest and non-forest area and 8910 hectares under National Afforestation Programmes.
debadutta
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Re: Super Cyclone Phailin: East Coast India

Post by debadutta »

chaanakya wrote:Kumbhakarans from PMO and MMS wakes up one month after Phailin Strikes Odisha and AP Coast . That too it is announcement . God only knows when money will be given by them. Major areas affected was in Odisha , yet both states were given same amount just because they don't want to be seen as partial to Congi Govt which is tottering on its last leg and anyway the state is going to polls later and congis would need all that money. This is a big scam in the making.

This is interim relief which comes after one month making mockery of the concept.

Cyclone Phailin: PM announces interim relief of Rs 1000cr each for Andhra, Odisha

PTI | Nov 9, 2013, 05.42 PM IST
NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Saturday announced interim assistance of Rs 1,000 crore each for Andhra Pradesh and Odisha for relief and rehabilitation in the wake of destruction caused by cyclone Phailin.



The total quantum of assistance to the two states will be finalised after consideration of the on-the-spot assessment report of the Inter-Ministerial Central Team, an official statement said here.

In addition, Singh has sanctioned an ex-gratia of Rs 2 lakh each to the next of kin of the deceased and Rs 50,000 each to the seriously injured persons from the Prime Minister's National Relief Fund.

Earlier on Saturday, a delegation led by Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy had called on the Prime Minister and presented a memorandum regarding the losses suffered owing to the impact of cyclone Phailin and the subsequent heavy rains and floods in the state.

On October 12, Phailin, a very severe cyclonic storm, said to be the second strongest after the disastrous super-cyclone of 1999, struck the Odisha coast, bringing in its wake torrential rains and wind speeds of over 200 kmph in the state and in the neighbouring north coastal Andhra Pradesh.
Yes , they take a month and our PM , did not get time to visit the state. I hope Congress will pay the price in the 2014 elections.
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