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Today's Paper | December 23, 2024

Published 14 Oct, 2013 01:55pm

The worst didn’t happen

In our part of the world, we are used to disasters – natural and otherwise. We tend to take them in our stride as an accepted part of the news cycle.

So, when the government acts to minimise casualties, puts in place a mechanism to evacuate people based on accurate met predictions, it’s a sign that disaster management is a task the State can perform.

For once, it’s a time not to shy away from giving credit where it’s due.

For a large part of Saturday, I watched television and monitored my Twitter feed about the havoc that Cyclone Phailin was expected to wreak on people living in Odisha and Andhra Pradesh as it gathered force over the Bay of Bengal.

Television coverage, much of it repetitive in such circumstances, showed people being evacuated from their homes and being moved to temporary shelters. In some cases, force was used to shift unwilling people, reports said.

As predicted by the Indian met department, Phailin struck the Odisha and Andhra coasts on Saturday evening, making landfall between 9 and 10 pm IST.

Turning on the television on Sunday morning, it was evident that the worst had not happened. Yes, there was destruction, trees were uprooted and buildings ravaged, but the death toll was placed at three.

The casualties were nowhere in the scale of the 10,000 killed when a massive cyclone hit Odisha on October 29, 1999.