Six hours of cyclone Amphan claims 70 lives in Bengal Kolkata airport flooded and many structure were in knee-deep water
Six hours of Cyclone Amphan’s wrecking winds left Kolkata airport flooded and lots of structures within damaged. Seventy-two people died in Bengal as winds at 120 km/hour and heavy rain left a trail of devastation. Visuals from the Kolkata airport showed a flooded tarmac, runways and hangars. In one area, the roof appeared to have caved in. An aircraft was seen in knee-deep water.
Two hangars are damaged beyond repair, but they were unused, consistent with officials.
All operations at the airport had been shut till 5 am today.
Only cargo and evacuation flights are operating for now, with passenger flights suspended since Annunciation. When the country went into lockdown to fight coronavirus. Amphan slammed into Bengal around 2.30 pm on Wednesday, uprooting trees, damaging power lines and destroying many buildings in Kolkata and other parts of the state.
“Sarbanash hoye galo (It may be a catastrophe),” said Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, who remained in her office during the storm. Ms Banerjee said the impact of Amphan was worse than the coronavirus pandemic. She claimed the cyclone could have caused damage worth Rs 1 lakh crore.
“Area after area has been devastated. Communications are disrupted,” said Ms Banerjee , adding that although 5 lakh people had been evacuated, state authorities had not entirely anticipated the ferocity of the storm.
The cyclone passed mainly over North and South 24 Parganas, Midnapore, Hooghly, and Kolkata.
Cyclone Amphan is that the fiercest to make over the Bay of Bengal, since, records began, and therefore, the first super cyclone since 1999, when Odisha was hit by an excellent cyclone that left nearly 10,000 dead.