Cyclone Remal killed 16 people & hit millions in India & Bangladesh

Cyclone Remal killed 16 people

Cyclone Remal killed 16 people & hit millions in India & Bangladesh

Violent Cyclone Remal killed at least 16 people and evacuated millions in India and Bangladesh with its heavy winds and stormy rains. Millions have become displaced as the cyclone neared landfall on May 26, 2024, at the border between Bangladesh and India.

It continues to travel inland across eastern India and creates havoc by uprooting trees and converting roads into rivers in India and Bangladesh. Millions of people in both countries are in trouble due to electricity fallout and lack of clean water access.

Deadliest Cyclone Remal has destroyed thousands of homes since its startup. This is the first of many storms that have shattered the low-lying coasts of South Asia’s neighbor this year. This is because climate change is raising sea surface temperatures.

According to the India Meteorological Department, Assam and Meghalaya will face heavy rainfall today and tomorrow. The rainfall range falls between 115.5 to 204.4 mm.

Click here to read the updates on Cyclone Michaung batters India’s southern Andhra Pradesh state

Cyclone Remal with a wind speed of up to 135 km/h, hit the area around Mongla, the southern port of Bangladesh, and the nearby Sagar Islands in West Bengal, India. It hit around 9 p.m. and got slightly weaker today.

However, Cyclone Remal killed 16 people in India, including 6 people in West Bengal, Telangana of India. A 12-year-old girl and her father are also among the dead ones in the state of Telangana, Vadla Gautam.

They took refuge in a poultry shed (under construction), which collapsed as Cyclone Remal hit it. However, four of them died due to electrocution in West Bengal State.

Mijanur Rahman is chief of disaster management in Bangladesh. According to Mijanuar, at least 10 people died. He said most people do not want to leave their homes and animals to go to cyclone shelters. They wait until the last minute, which is usually too late.

Mijanur told the media that two Bangladeshis died as they moved to cyclone shelters. The dead Bagladheshis are from the Barishal, Satkhira, Patuakhali, Bhola, and Chattogram areas of Bangladesh.

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