Relief work begins in cyclone-hit Sundarbans, toll 27
May 26th, 2009 - 3:54 pm ICT by IANSKolkata, May 26 (IANS) Soldiers of the Indian Army and other relief workers Tuesday managed to reach the worst-hit areas of West Bengal’s Sundarbans delta where more than 400,000 people were marooned due to cyclone Aila Monday. The death toll in the cyclone has reached 27, police said.
“The relief operations started this (Tuesday) morning to reach assistance to over four lakh people in the mangrove-forested region. Due to choppy river and stormy weather condition, no relief work could begin yesterday (Monday),” state Sundarbans Affairs Minister Kanti Ganguly said.
“We were just helpless before the wrath of nature,” he added.
Meanwhile, Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee Tuesday rushed to the cyclone-affected islands of the Sundarbans. He held meetings with senior district administration officials and the police at Nimpith village to chalk out plans to provide assistance to thousands of people in the mangrove forests of the delta.
“Don’t drink contaminated water. I request all of you to only take water from the deep tubewells. I have held meetings with district officials and ensured that you will all get compensation for the damage that took place because of yesterday’s cyclone,” Bhattacharjee told villagers at a relief camp near Jamtala in South 24 Parganas district.
According to defence sources, two columns of army, each comprising 100 soldiers, were sent to the Sundarbans for carrying out relief operations. Food packets were also air-dropped in cyclone-hit areas of South 24 Parganas district.
Trinamool Congress chief and Railways Minister Mamata Banerjee also cancelled her trip to the national capital and asked her party members to stay in the state.
Meanwhile, according to police sources, more than eight landslides took place in different parts of Darjeeling hills, with road connectivity between Siliguri town and Kalimpong virtually cut off because of the landslides.
The district administration and police are carrying out rescue operations since Tuesday morning, police said.
Train services were badly hit in both Eastern Railways (ER) and South Eastern Railways (SER) zones. A number of long-distance and local trains were cancelled due to the effects of the cyclone.
Telephone and mobile networks, ATMs, broadband services and cable television networks were hit across Kolkata and its adjoining districts.
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- West Bengal seeks fund for Sundarbans - Feb 18, 2011
- Buddhadeb visits cyclone relief camps - May 26, 2009
- 24 killed, 110,000 affected as Cyclone Aila pounds coastal West Bengal (Third Lead) - May 26, 2009
- Relief workers fear epidemic in Sundarbans after Cyclone Aila - Jun 01, 2009
- Buddhadeb visits West Bengal cyclone relief camps - Jun 02, 2009
- 18 killed, 100,000 affected as Aila batters coastal West Bengal (Second Lead) - May 25, 2009
- Bengal to acquire land for building river embankments - Jun 04, 2011
- Not possible to repair all embankments hit by Aila: Bengal minister - Jun 06, 2009
- Central team surveys cyclone-hit Sundarbans - Jun 09, 2009
- Cyclone Aila toll rises to 87 in West Bengal - May 27, 2009
- 'Cyclone Laila' affects normal life in Andhra Pradesh - May 21, 2010
- No steps taken to maintain Sundarbans embankments: Jatua - Jun 07, 2009
- Aila must be declared national disaster: Left Front - Jun 09, 2009
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