13 die as Cyclone Shaheen makes landfall in Oman

Published October 5, 2021
OMAN Air Force personnel flying over an area on Monday to assess the damage from Cyclone Shaheen.—AP
OMAN Air Force personnel flying over an area on Monday to assess the damage from Cyclone Shaheen.—AP

DUBAI: The death toll from Cyclone Shaheen rose to 13 on Monday while several fishermen from Iran remained missing as the storm moved further inland into Oman and weakened.

Authorities in Oman said they found the body of a man who disappeared when floodwaters swept him away from his vehicle. On Sunday as the storm made landfall, they said a child similarly drowned and two foreigners from Asia died in a landslide.

The country’s National Committee for Emergency Management announced on Monday afternoon seven additional deaths from the storm, without elaborating.

In Iran, the state-run IRNA news agency said rescuers found the bodies of two of five fishermen who went missing off Pasabandar, a fishing village near the Islamic Republic’s border with Pakistan. Earlier on Sunday, Iranian deputy parliament speaker Ali Nikzad said he feared as many as six fishermen had been killed because of the cyclone.

Iran’s Sistan and Baluchestan province also saw 122 people go to the hospital on Sunday after a dust storm spun up by the cyclone caused them to suffer from eye, heart and lung problems, said Abbasali Arjmandi, the governor of the city of Zabol. Eighteen needed to be hospitalised for further care, he said.

India’s Meteorological Department, the top forecasters for cyclones that sweep across the Indian Ocean, said winds from Shaheen now gust up to 90 kph and would continue to weaken. It predicted the storm would weaken into a tropical depression in the coming hours.

Shaheen made landfall with winds reaching up to 150 kph.

Omani state television broadcast images of flooded roadways and valleys as the storm churned deeper into the sultanate, its outer edges reaching the neighboring United Arab Emirates. The Emirates, home to Abu Dhabi and Dubai, had issued warnings to residents that the storm was coming. Winds had picked up in the country from Sunday, sweeping across the grounds of Dubai’s newly opened Expo 2020.

Published in Dawn, October 5th, 2021

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