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Sunday, June 6, 2010

Rains lash Sindh as Phet hits costal belt

KARACHI: Heavy rains and winds lashed Karachi and other coastal areas of Sindh on Sunday as the outer circle of Cyclone Phet began hitting the provincial coastline.

"Outer circle of Phet has begun making landfall at coastal areas of Badin and Thatta and now heading towards Thatta's coastal town of Bhanbhor," DCO Thatta .

Media teams, rescuers and police personnel left behind Thatta’s coastal town of Keti Bandar have been asked to immediately evacuate the town. Keti Bandar, house of more than 5,000 population, has already been evacuated in the wake of Phet’s possible landfall at town’s coast.

Tens of thousands of people have already been removed from vulnerable coastal villages in the southern province of Sindh, of which Karachi is the capital, but thousands more are refusing to abandon their homes.

"Cyclone Phet is expected to landfall near Karachi sometime Sunday evening packed with maximum winds of 100 kilometres (60 miles) per hour," chief meteorologist Mohammad Riaz had told a private channel

Hospitals have been put on alert and medicines and tinned foodstuffs stockpiled, as meteorologists warned the cyclone may uproot power and communication lines along the coast.

Riaz said the cyclone could generate ocean waves of up to four metres (over 13 feet) at Karachi’s coast while height of the waves would be up to five metres at Thatta coastal belt where the center of the cyclone is likely to make landfall.

He said a new wave of torrential rains may hit Karachi and lower Sindh in next 36 hours.
President Asif Ali Zardari has ordered MPAs in Sindh to speed up relief work in areas expected to be battered by Phet's torrential rains, according to an official statement.

Cyclone Phet initially made landfall on Oman's coastline, where 15 people died, including a Bangladeshi and a Pakistani, and Riaz said it could move further eastwards to India from Pakistan.

Authorities have already evacuated 60,000 people from along the 1,000-kilometre coastline, including 23,000 on outlying islands, but thousands more are refusing to abandon their homes.

"Thousands of people are still living in the city's coastal suburbs and are not ready to leave their homes," said Roshan Shaikh, a senior official with the provincial disaster management authority.

"Initially we decided to shift them forcibly, but we could not as it might create unrest. However we are ready to save them in the minimum possible time," Shaikh told newsmen.

The provincial head of the disaster management authority, Sualeh Farooqi, said Karachi's infrastructure was weak and that there might be many problems when the cyclone hits.

Thousands of large advertising billboards along the city streets have been taken down for fear that the winds could blow them over.

Hundreds of relief camps have been established in the affected areas but people have complained about the lack of facilities, news channels are reporting.

Nadeem Ahmed, the head of the National Disaster Management Agency (NDMA), said all the agencies and armed forces had been put on alert.

"We are ready with our maximum abilities and resources to tackle any emergencies," he said.

Riaz said the authorities had recorded 128 millimetres of rain in the first spell of a cyclone-related downpour late Saturday and that more was expected.

"Heavy rains may cause flash flooding in Karachi and other parts of Sindh and the southwestern Balochistan province," he said.

Local administration officials said that hospitals have been put on alert. Medicines and equipment have been stockpiled while tinned food rations and clothes are also being arranged.

The government has established relief camps in school buildings and set up health units and control rooms ready to operate if necessary, an official said.

A Baluchistan provincial government official, Ataullah Mengal, said cyclone-related rains had injured 18 people in the coastal areas but no deaths had been reported.

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