Bangladesh prepares for severe cyclone ‘Bulbul’

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DHAKA, Nov 9, 2019 (BSS) – Authorities today ordered a massive evacuation
campaign as the met office overnight issued its highest warning signal saying
a “very severe cyclonic storm” is now expected by midnight tonight.

Disaster ministry officials said thousands of people already moved to safe
shelters as the evacuation campaign was underway particularly in nine
southwestern coastal districts which were likely to swallow the maximum brunt
of the cyclone codenamed “Bulbul”.

“By now 4 lakh people were evacuated and we plan to shift 18 lakh people to
cyclone shelters by the evening in 14 vulnerable districts,” disaster
management ministry senior secretary Md Shah Kamal told newsmen.

His comments came hours after the met office elevated its warning signal
number to the highest level of the cyclone scale.

The met office said the moon phase coincided with the “very severe
cyclonic storm” and feared the storm surges of 5-7 feet height above normal
astronomical tide to inundate low lying areas of the coastlines.

“The maritime ports of Mongla and Payra have been advised to keep hoisted
great danger signal no. ten (in a scale of 10),” the met office bulletin
read.

It said 10 southwestern coastal districts and their offshore islands and
shoals would come under the purview of the “great danger signal number 10”.

The met office also elevated the warning signal for southeastern
Chattogram asking the port authorities there to hoist “great danger signal
no. nine with experts saying in terms of intensity it was identical to signal
no. 10”.

The bulletin said the five southeastern districts would come under the
purview of the great danger signal no. 9 as the cyclone was likely to keep
marks of its rage on their coastlines and adjacent offshore islands.

The latest met office bulletin issued this afternoon said the cyclone
approached further towards Bangladesh coasts and was staying 240 kms
southwest of Mongla Port and 275 km away from Payra Port.

Its position was 445 kms west and southwest of both Chattogram and Cox’s
Bazar, the bulletin said.

The previous bulletin issued earlier this morning said it was 280
kilometers southwest of Mongla Port and 315 km southwest of Payra Port while
it was visibly moving in a north/northeasterly direction.

“We are expecting the cyclone to hit the Khulna and (India’s) West Bengal
region adjacent to the Sundarbans anytime from the evening to midnight,” a
met office spokesperson said.

He said the maximum wind speed within 74 kms of the storm was measured to
be 120 kph (kilometers per hour) to 140 kph in the afternoon.

Met office’s deputy director Ayesha Khatun, however, said the intensity or
strength of the Bulbul would be lesser than that of the Sidr or Aila, which
had ravaged the coastlines in 2007 and 2008.

Residents of the coastal areas reached in Dhaka by phone said inflated sea
levels under the influence of the cyclone have inundated low lying areas of
the coastlines amid continued drizzles.

The disaster management secretary said army troops and members of the
coast guards were called out to supplement the cyclone preparedness
initiatives, alongside Red Crescent volunteers and government agencies
including police.

The evacuation drive was underway in 14 districts — Bhola, Barguna,
Patuakhali, Barishal, Pirojpur, Jhalakathi, Bagherhat, Khulna, Satkhira,
Chattogram, Noakhali, Feni, Laxmipur and Chandpur and their offshore islands
and chars.

“In most vulnerable areas including chars (small island), we are trying to
help people move out along with their valuables and cattle as well,” he said.

Kamal said the evacuees were being provided dry food while “we have enough
stock of relief materials for them,” while nearly 1,600 medical teams were
kept ready to treat the cyclone victims.

The ISPR, meanwhile, said the navy prepared two war ships equipped with
medical facilities and relief materials to launch rescue drives once the
cyclone hit the coastline alongside five other contingents of theirs in aid
of the victims.

State minister for disaster management and relief Dr Md Enamur Rahman,
however, said the army troops as well were prepared with their full strength
as part of the government’s preparedness.

“We have adequate stock of food . . . the local administration, army
troops and volunteers are ready to face the cyclone impact,” he said.

Bangladesh authorities earlier, ordered a temporary ban on movements of
ferries and boats in internal river routes alongside all fishing boats and
trawlers over northern part of the Bay of Bengal, where the storm originated
initially in the form of low pressure.

State Minister for Disaster Management and Relief Enamur Rahman told a
news briefing in Dhaka that “adequate measures” were taken to tackle the
storm expecting it to cause little damage to human lives.

He, however, feared the standing crops to be largely affected by the tidal
surges and wind.

Rahman said some 56,000 volunteers were ready to provide help,
particularly to evacuate people to safe shelters before the cyclone made the
landfall while the local administrations were equipped with packs of dry food
for the temporarily displaced people.

The government, meanwhile, cancelled the leave of the officials and
employees in the coastal districts alongside the students’ school final
exams.