Tropical Cyclone Sidr Bears Down On Bangladesh

Tropical Cyclone Sidr

Tropical Cyclone Sidr, a powerful Category 4 storm with maximum sustained winds of 150 mph, is expected to make landfall late Thursday (Friday morning Bangladesh time) somewhere between Kolkata and the western coastline of Bangladesh. Millions of people along the coastline of Bangladesh and India are in the path of this massive storm.  The storm is expected to weaken somewhat before making landfall. Bloomberg reports:

Tropical Cyclone Sidr’s winds strengthened to 241 kilometers (150 miles) per hour as it moved across the Bay of Bengal toward Kolkata in India and the west coast of Bangladesh, the U.S. Navy’s typhoon center said.

The eye of Sidr, a Category 4 storm, was 667 kilometers south of Kolkata at 11:30 p.m. local time yesterday, according to the latest advisory on the navy’s Joint Typhoon Warning Center Web site. The storm is moving north at 17 kilometers an hour.

Bangladesh authorities ordered thousands of people to evacuate coastal areas around Chittagong, Mongla and Cox’s Bazaar and raised the highest alert, Associated Press reported. In India, authorities issued warnings to residents in Kolkata and nearby coastal areas, the Hindu Times said.

Sidr’s winds were gusting to 296 kilometers per hour and waves in the vicinity of the storm’s eye were 12 meters (40 feet) high, according to the advisory. The cyclone is expected to maintain strength today before weakening as it approaches Kolkata, formerly known as Calcutta, and Bangladesh late tomorrow.

Bangladesh has a tragic history of devastating cyclones. In 1970, the deadliest storm ever recorded, the Bhola Cyclone, struck Bangladesh and claimed up to 500,000 lives. Emergency preparedness has improved dramatically in independent Bangladesh since the Bhola Cyclone. I hope the evacuations and early warning systems will prevent a large loss of life from this storm as it comes ashore. I hope also that the forcasts predicting some weakening of this storm bear out and blunt the power of this cyclone.

My thoughts and prayers are with my friends and family and the entire people of Bangladesh as they once again confront nature’s wrath.

Update (11/15/2007 5:00PM):

Sidr made landfall along the western coastline of Bangladesh a few hours ago. It accelerated and did not lose any of its strength as it made landfall. It struck with maximum sustained winds of 150MPH as a very strong category 4 storm. The storm came ashore during high tide with potentially catastropic consequences. Damage is expected from the storm surge, wind and resultant flooding:

A powerful cyclone slammed into Bangladesh on Thursday night, tearing down flimsy houses, toppling trees and power poles, and forcing hundreds of thousands to flee their homes in the low-lying nation. 

Tropical Cyclone Sidr swept in from the Bay of Bengal packing winds of 149 mph (240 kilometers per hour), buffeting southwestern coastal areas within a 155-mile radius of its eye with heavy rain and storm surges predicted to reach 20 feet high.

Sidr’s eye crossed the Khulna-Barisal coast near the Sundarbans mangrove forests around 9:30 p.m. (11:30 a.m. ET), the Bangladesh Meteorological Department said. It was centered over the Baleshwar River in Barguna district.

In the coastal districts of Bagerhat, Barisal and Bhola, residents said the storm flattened thousands of flimsy straw and mud huts, and uprooted trees and electric poles.

"We sitting out the storm by candlelight," resident Bishnu Prashad said by phone from Bagerhat.

At least 620,000 people had moved into official shelters and 3.2 million people were expected to be evacuated in all, said Ali Imam Majumder, a senior government official in Dhaka.

No casualties were immediately reported, but rescue teams were on standby, forest official Mozharul Islam said in Khulna.

Communications with remote forest areas and offshore islands were temporarily cut off.

The extent of the damage and loss of life will not be known at least until daybreak in Bangladesh. It will probably take several days beyond that to take stock of the devastation. I will update this post as news becomes available from Bangladesh.

Update (11/16/2007 2:56 am): Early reports state that at least 242 people have been killed by Sidr. Communications and electricity are down across Bangladesh. The real scale of the devastation is not yet known. MSNBC reports:

A cyclone that slammed into Bangladesh’s coast with 140 mph winds killed at least 242 people, leveled homes and forced the evacuation of 650,000 villagers before heading inland and losing power Friday, officials said.

Tropical Cyclone Sidr roared across the country’s southwestern coast late Thursday with driving rain and high waves. The storm left about 242 villagers dead from falling debris, said Nahid Sultana, an official at a cyclone control room in Dhaka.

By early Friday, the cyclone had weakened into a tropical storm and was moving across the country to the northeast, with overcast skies and wind speed falling to 37 mph, the department said.

 

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5 Responses to Tropical Cyclone Sidr Bears Down On Bangladesh

  1. Ali Montgomery says:

    How far is this storm from Kerala? I have family members there and am concerned. Thank you for any info.

    Ali

  2. mariachi mam says:

    My thoughts and prayers are with the people of Bangladesh. Mash if you have additional info, there is a diary at DKos on the rec list today about Sidr, and people are wondering about donations, etc.

  3. arnab says:

    My prayers are with all the people who are being threatened by this cyclone

  4. Mash says:

    Ali, the storm is on the opposite coast and so will not impact Kerala.

    Mariachi mam, thanks for showing me the diary. I was really glad to see it on the Rec list at DKos. I’ll follow up with a diary tonight after I get some calls into Bangladesh.

    arnab, thank you. I am hoping the evacuations were successful. We wont know until morning in Bangladesh and the next few days how bad the impact is. Unfortunately, the storm did not weaken before making landfall and came ashore with 150mph maximum sustained winds.

  5. Tropical cyclone is a terrible thing 🙁 I wish you not to have business with this nature event.

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