Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

India, Pakistan brace for rare August cyclone

India's weather office said a deep depression had formed over land

India, Pakistan brace for rare August cyclone
A view shows anchored fishing boats, after fishermen were advised not to venture into the sea due to expected cyclonic storm over the Arabian Sea, at Karachi's Fish Harbour, in Karachi, Pakistan August 29, 2024. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro

COASTAL towns and cities in India and Pakistan braced for a rare August cyclone on Friday (30), as heavy rains and winds forced authorities to close schools and evacuate thousands.

India's weather office said a deep depression had formed over land and was likely to intensify into a cyclonic storm by Friday evening, moving north-westwards over the Arabian Sea in the next two days.


Schools in Pakistan's largest city of Karachi and parts of Kutch district in India's Gujarat were shut, officials said, as heavy rain lashed both places.

A cyclonic storm during August is a rare occurrence with this one being the first in decades, data from India's weather office showed.

"Cyclone formation generally takes place over sea and then it moves over to land. This type of system is unusual because it formed over land and is now moving towards the sea," Ashok Kumar Das, head of the Indian Meteorological Department in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, told Reuters.

Three more people died in Gujarat overnight from rain-related incidents, taking the toll to 31 this week, and authorities evacuated more than 8,700 people from ten districts in the state over the last 24 hours, officials said.

"There is severe water logging in several places in Kutch district due to heavy rains over the last couple of days. We evacuated people from coastal areas and shifted them to schools and other facilities," district collector of the Kutch district, Amit Arora, said.

Both Das and Arora said the effect of the cyclonic storm was likely to lessen in Gujarat as the storm moves from land to sea.

"Wind speeds have fallen to 40-50 kmph," Arora said.

In neighbouring Pakistan, authorities warned of urban flooding and flash floods in rural areas due to the heavy rain, and urged citizens to stay indoors.

Both countries warned fishermen against venturing out into the sea.

Parts of Karachi received 147 mm (5.79 inches) of rain overnight, the local weather office said. The city's mayor, Murtaza Wahab, in a post on X, urged residents to avoid "unnecessary movement".

(Reuters)

More For You

Sathnam Sanghera

Sanghera said the 10 journeys in the book take readers across continents and centuries, revealing both the ambition and the brutality of empire.

Children’s book unpacks lessons of a ‘morally complex’ empire

AN ASIAN writer has explained how his new book makes Britain’s imperial past “accessible, engaging and thought-pro­voking” for a younger audience.

Award-winning author and journalist Sathnam Sanghera’s new book, Journeys of Empire, explores empire through 10 journeys he described as being “extraor­dinary”. Sanghera said his book, published last month by Puffin UK, is “a way of help­ing children understand how Britain’s biggest story still shapes the world today.”

Keep ReadingShow less