The Indian authorities were rushing food rations, clothes and cooking
utensils to villagers in the east of the country on Thursday after a
storm killed at least 48 people and left thousands more homeless,
government officials said.
With wind speeds of up to 70 km per hour (43 mph) and heavy rains,
the storm struck Bihar state late on Tuesday, uprooting trees and
electricity poles, ripping through farmland and destroying over 25,000
mud-and-thatch homes.
State officials said 12 of Bihar’s 38 districts had been affected, including Purnia, Madhepura and Saharsa.
“Now we are rushing relief, food items and utensils to the affected
families,” Anirudh Kumar, a state disaster management official, told the
Thomson Reuters Foundation.
As well as ripping apart homes and destroying possessions, the storm
also flattened banana plantations and maize and wheat fields, causing
many villagers to lose their livelihoods, he said.
Officials said they were still assessing the scale of the
devastation, a process hindered by snapped telecommunication lines and
villages cut off by uprooted trees blocking roads.
“The damage is huge although we cannot provide the exact figure
because we are still assessing the extent of damage,” said Sudhir Kumar,
a senior official in Purnia.
Bihar’s governor Keshari Nath Tripathi has asked the state government
to provide 400,000 rupees ($6,300) in compensation to each of the
victims’ families.
Weather officials said because the storm developed quickly, there was
not enough time to issue an early warning and evacuate villagers to
shelters.
India is one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world, and
many of its 1.2 billion people live in areas vulnerable to natural
hazards such as floods, cyclones, droughts and earthquakes.
In 2008, major flooding in Bihar triggered by heavy monsoons left
more than 500 people dead and disrupted the lives of two million others.
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