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Tropical Storm Amanda death toll rises to 26 in Central America by Staff Writers San Salvador (AFP) June 3, 2020
The death toll from Tropical Storm Amanda in Central America rose to 26 even as a new storm was forming in the Gulf of Mexico, reports said on Tuesday. El Salvador and neighboring Guatemala and Honduras were lashed by torrential rains and high winds after Amanda swept in from the Pacific on Sunday, causing floods and power cuts. The death toll in El Salvador, which bore the brunt of the storm, rose from 16 to 20, the environment ministry said on Tuesday. One of seven people reported missing there was however found alive, said Carolina Recinos, a senior official in San Salvador, who also said 2,000 homes were "completely destroyed." Nearly 8,000 people were evacuated from high-risk areas and transferred to shelters. With Tropical Storm Cristobal expected to bring further heavy rains to already waterlogged soil, the environment ministry has warned of "a high probability of many landslides and falling rocks." Four people died in Honduras after they were swept away by the current. The rains caused flooding and landslides in several regions of the country, officials said. Two people were also killed and two injured in Guatemala, where authorities reported 500 homes damaged.
Virus-hit Mumbai largely unscathed by Cyclone Nisarga The city and its surrounds are usually sheltered from cyclones -- the last deadly storm to hit the city was in 1948. Authorities had evacuated at least 100,000 people, including coronavirus patients, from flood-prone areas in the states of Maharashtra and Gujarat ahead of Nisarga's arrival. The cyclone ripped roofs off buildings in nearby coastal towns, but appeared to have left the sprawling, crowded port megacity of Mumbai largely unscathed. Local media reported at least three fatalities in Maharashtra. One man died after an electric pole fell on him, and a woman and man were killed in their houses after tin sheets over their roofs blew away, the Press Trust of India (PTI) said. The storm made landfall near the coastal town of Alibag, around 100 kilometres (60 miles) south of Mumbai, on Wednesday afternoon, meteorologists said. It crossed Maharashtra's coast, with its path veering to the east of Mumbai, and gradually weakened to a deep depression by Wednesday evening, they added. The cyclone brought heavy rainfall with winds of 100-110 kilometres per hour (60-68 miles per hour) and gusts of up to 120 kph. Mumbai experienced downpours throughout the afternoon, with strong winds toppling trees in some cases. City authorities said there were no reports of injuries or deaths, though the rains caused compound walls to collapse in some neighbourhoods. The beach town of Alibag fared worse, with the cyclone tearing roofs off homes and overturning mobile food stalls. A 45-year-old professor who evacuated from his house near the sea told AFP he could see corrugated roofing flying through the air as Nisarga's powerful winds struck. "The intensity is very strong and nothing like weather events we've seen before," said Milind Dhodre, who lives in Alibag with his wife and son. The coastal town is a favoured haunt of Bollywood stars and industrialists, who own holiday homes there. The port city of Pen also suffered damage, with one video showing a ripped off metal roof smashing into nearby buildings. - Virus and storm fears - In Mumbai, police announced fresh coronavirus restrictions on the city of 18 million people -- which was just beginning to emerge from a months-long lockdown -- banning gatherings of four people or more until Thursday afternoon. Mumbai is India's worst-hit city, home to a fifth of the country's more than 200,000 coronavirus cases. The storm evacuees included nearly 150 coronavirus patients from a recently built field hospital in Mumbai, underscoring the difficulties facing the city ahead of the monsoon season as it struggles to contain the pandemic. "Refrain from venturing out to coast-beaches, promenade, parks and other similar places along the coastline," the police tweeted early Wednesday. Warnings of storm surges up to two metres high (6.5 feet) remained in effect on Wednesday, with slum-dwellers in low-lying areas of Mumbai instructed to move to higher ground. Even as the city's residents breathed a sigh of relief, forecasters warned Nisarga could still carry a sting in its tail. The storm disrupted travel as well, with planes grounded during the afternoon and inter-state railway services delayed or diverted to ensure that trains would not travel through the city until the cyclone had passed. Nisarga comes on the heels of Cyclone Amphan, which killed more than 100 people as it ravaged eastern India and Bangladesh last month, flattening villages, destroying farms and leaving millions without electricity.
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