Filling most of the Bay of Bengal, Cyclone Phailin was about 90 km
(124 miles) off the coast by late afternoon and was expected to strike
the coast by nightfall with winds of between 210 kph (130 mph) and 220
kph (137 mph).
The storm was expected to affect 12 million people,
most of them in the densely populated states of Odisha and Andhra
Pradesh, weather and disaster management officials said.
Even
before landfall, coconut trees in villages along the coast were bent and
broken in the gusting wind. Electrical poles were brought down and
roads were littered with debris.
In the first reported deaths, two people were killed by falling trees while a third when the walls of her mud house collapsed.
Terrified
children clung to their mothers as they sought shelter. Most towns
along the coast were deserted but there were still some people trying to
flee.
Some people took refuge in temples, others crammed into three-wheel auto-rickshaws and headed inland.
"This
is one of the largest evacuations undertaken in India," said Shashidhar
Reddy, Vice Chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority, who
estimated that more than 440,000 people had fled from their homes.
The size of the storm made extensive damage to property more
likely, he told reporters in New Delhi. "Our priority is to minimise
loss of life."
Phailin is expected to bring a 3.4-m (11-foot) surge in sea levels when it hits the coast between 1230 GMT and 1430 GMT.
Extensive Damage
The
weather department warned of extensive damage to mud houses, major
disruption of power and communication lines, and the flooding of rail
tracks and roads. Flying debris is another threat.
"In a storm of
this magnitude there is the potential for widespread damage to crops and
livestock in the low-lying coastal areas and houses completely wiped
away," said Kunal Shah, the head of the aid group World Vision's
emergency response team in India.
"While we are praying this storm loses intensity, we're also preparing."
London-based
Tropical Storm Risk classed the storm in Category 5 - the strongest
such rating. The US Navy's weather service said wind at sea was gusting
at 314 kph.
Many of the people along the coast are subsistence fishermen and farmers, who live in mud-and-brick or thatched huts.
In 1999, a typhoon battered the same region, killing 10,000 people.
India's
disaster preparations have improved significantly since then and aid
workers praised precautions for Phailin such as early warnings, stocking
of rations in shelters and evacuations.
"A lot has been learnt
since 1999 and my guess is that while there could be extensive damage to
property and crops, the death toll will be much less," said G
Padmanabhan, emergency analyst at the UN Development Programme.
But despite all the warnings, some people refused to leave their homes.
"I
have a small child, so I thought, how will I leave?" asked Achamma, 25,
as she clutched on to her boy in Donkuru, a fishing village in Andhra
Pradesh, as waves crashed on to a nearby beach.
Police said a
rescue had been launched for 18 fishermen stranded at sea off Paradip, a
major port in Odisha, after their trawler ran out of fuel.
Paradip
halted cargo operations on Friday. All vessels were ordered to leave
the port, which handles coal, crude oil and iron ore. An oil tanker
holding about 2 million barrels of oil, worth $220 million, was also
moved, an oil company source said.
But the storm was not expected
to hit India's largest gas field, the D6 natural gas block in the
Cauvery Basin further down the east coast, field operator Reliance
Industries said.
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