At least 36
people have died in India and Bangladesh after Tropical Cyclone Remal
lashed the area with torrential rain and heavy winds, according to local
officials.
At least seven
were killed in cyclone-related incidents in the eastern Indian state of West
Bengal as of Monday evening, 20 May, Javed Khan, the state’s minister for
disaster management, told CNN Tuesday.
Previously,
seven deaths were reported in the southern Indian state of Telangana, 12 in the
northeast Indian state of Mizoram, and 10 in Bangladesh.
The Indian
Meteorological Department on Tuesday said Remal weakened into a depression over
east Bangladesh after losing some force earlier on Monday. It caused wide-scale
damage in both countries, toppling trees, turning roads into rivers and leaving
millions without electricity.
More than 1
million people in India and Bangladesh were evacuated Sunday as the cyclone
made landfall near the border of between the two countries.
Authorities
said that volunteers and army staff were mobilized to assist with clean-up
efforts, and distribute food and water to displaced families.
Remal made
landfall roughly
80 kilometers (50 miles) southeast of the Indian city of Kolkata, packing gusts of up
to 135 kilometers per hour (84 miles per hour), and is moving northwards across
Bangladesh and its adjoining West Bengal coasts, the Indian Meteorological
Department said.
The storm
weakened after it hit the coast with wind speeds of up to 115 kilometers per
hour (71 mph). Remal is expected to dump more than 89 millimeters (3.5 inches)
of rain and bring wind-driven storm surges of 2.5 to 3.7 meters to the coasts
of the Bay of Bengal, according to CNN Weather.