/ 29 April 2006

Major weather warning sounded for Bangladesh

Hundreds of fishermen along Bangladesh’s southern coast returned to shore on Saturday as a cyclone packing winds of up to 160kph churned its way across the Bay of Bengal, officials said.

The cyclone was moving in a north and north-easterly direction, but the Bangladesh Meteorological Department said on Saturday that it was unclear if it would reach the coast.

Cyclone Mala, which in Bengali language means ”a garland of flowers”, was centred about 650km south-southwest of the seaport of Chittagong and 550km south-southwest of the coastal district of Cox’s Bazar, the department said.

Hundreds of fishing boats returned to shore on Saturday after authorities issued a warning signal, said Mujibur Rahman, a spokesperson for the Cox’s Bazar Fishing-Boat Owners’ Association.

Warning flags have been raised along the coast, and about 34 000 Bangladesh Red Crescent Society volunteers have been put on standby to help move people to safer places if needed, said the society’s spokesperson in Chittagong, Golam Rabbani.

It was not clear if or when Cyclone Mala would hit Bangladesh’s coast, but a duty weather official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with official policy, said if it reached the coast, it would happen later on Saturday.

”We do not overrule any possibility unless it goes away,” he said.

Bangladesh, a delta nation of 140-million people, is hit by cyclones almost every year. A 1991 storm killed 138 000 people.

Cyclones — known as typhoons in much of east Asia and hurricanes in the Western hemisphere — are large-scale rotating storms that generate high winds and form at sea before moving inland. — Sapa-AP