Cyclone Nisarga lashes areas near Mumbai

A cyclone is lashing areas on India’s west coast after making landfall near the densely populated city of Mumbai.

The eye of Cyclone Nisarga narrowly missed the megacity as it slammed into Maharashtra state. There are warnings it may trigger big storm surges.

Officials moved tens of thousands of people along the coast to higher ground as the storm approached.

India’s most populous city has 20 million residents and has also been badly hit by the coronavirus pandemic.

Mobile phone footage of the storm in Raigad, about 50km (30 miles) south of Mumbai, showed huge waves crashing into the shore, with trees being whipped into a frenzy by the strong winds. Images showed the storm ripped tin roofs off buildings.

However, in Mumbai, things were a little calmer.

“Winds have been stronger than what we’ve seen before, but the rain is a lot less than a bad monsoon day,” said the BBC’s Yogita Limaye in the city.

‘Do not leave your house’

Packing winds of more than 100km/h, Cyclone Nisarga intensified on its approach from the hot waters of the Arabian Sea.

It began making landfall at about 13:00 local time (07:30GMT) around Alibaug in Maharashtra’s Raigad district. The area is a favorite weekend destination for many and often touted as “the Hamptons” of the financial capital.

Gujarat state is also in Nisarga’s path as it proceeds north-east. It will dump huge amounts of rainfall across a swathe of India before it reaches the Himalayas in Nepal.

Earlier, BBC Marathi’s Janhavee Moole described how all beaches in Mumbai were closed to the public and a police patrol van was making announcements, asking people to stay indoors.

“Do not leave your house for your own safety and well-being,” Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray had tweeted.

On Wednesday, the Indian Meteorological Department said the cyclone had intensified into a “severe cyclonic storm”.

With more than 40,000 confirmed virus cases and almost 1,400 deaths, Mumbai is the city worst-affected by a coronavirus in India.

The tens of thousands of people evacuated before the cyclone included 150 patients from a recently-built Covid-19 field hospital.

The local government said people living in flimsy homes near the shore were being moved. The coast guard said it had taken 109 fishermen in 18 boats to safety.

The government urged people to secure their homes, prepare an emergency kit, and keep documents and valuables in waterproof containers.

Unlike India’s eastern coast, cyclones are unusual on the country’s western shore. Nisarga comes barely two weeks after Cyclone Amphan struck, devastating parts of Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) on the east coast.

More than 100 people were killed in the Indian states of West Bengal and Orissa, as well as neighboring Bangladesh.

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