Evacuations begin as cyclone barrels toward India, Bangladesh

Migrant workers with their families stand in queues as they wait to board buses to their home state of eastern Bihar, during an extended lockdown to slow the spreading of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Ghaziabad in the outskirts of New Delhi, India, May 18, 2020. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi REFILE - CLARIFYING INFORMATION

India and Bangladesh began evacuating hundreds of thousands of people today as a cyclone bore down on their coasts, officials said, while experts warned of coronavirus dangers in the cramped conditions.

Indian forecasters said Cyclone Amphan would reach winds of up to 230 km/h at sea before hitting the coast Wednesday.

Bangladesh officials warned it could become the worst storm to hit the region since Cyclone Sidr in November 2007 which killed more than 3,000 people.

The Indian Meteorological Department said winds could reach 155 to 165 km/h when Amphan makes landfall—making it a category six storm on India’s seven-level scale for tropical storms.

The cyclone would bring “heavy rain and high-velocity winds” to coastal districts in West Bengal and Odisha states, G. K. Das of the Regional Meteorological Centre in India’s eastern city of Kolkata said.

At least 450,000 people in Bangladesh’s coastal province of Barisal were being evacuated, an official said.

Bangladesh disaster department chief Mohammad Mohsin said some 4,000 storm shelters were being prepared.

The shelters, mostly built since Sidr’s destructive rampage, are said to have saved thousands of lives since 2007.

But as social distancing to prevent the spread of the virus would be virtually impossible, thousands of schools and colleges were also being converted into makeshift shelters, he added.

In India, more than 200,000 people in low-lying areas will be moved from their homes in West Bengal by tomorrow, state minister Mv anturam Phakira said.

An official at the cyclone control room of India’s eastern Odisha state said shelters would be prepared for up to 1.1 million people, though the area is expected to escape the brunt of the storm and less than 10 percent of capacity would likely be used.

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