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Channel: ReliefWeb - Updates on Tropical Cyclone Phet - Jun 2010
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Pakistan: Pakistan evacuates 60,000 as cyclone Phet looms

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Source: Agence France-Presse
Country: Pakistan

KARACHI - A major cyclone was closing in on Pakistan's coastline, where the president ordered immediate precautionary measures and around 60,000 residents were being evacuated Thursday, officials said.

Tens of thousands were being evacuated from vulnerable coastal villages in the southern province of Sindh and another half a million could be affected in Baluchistan province if Cyclone Phet smashes into Pakistan.

President Asif Ali Zardari ordered the military and government to take "immediate precautionary measures" as the tropical cyclone approached.

"Cyclone Phet has almost reached the Oman coast and could recurve towards Pakistan's coastline of Baluchistan and Sindh in the next 24-36 hours," Naeem Shah, a meteorological department official, told AFP.

Hospitals have been put on alert, medicine and equipment stockpiled, while tinned rations and clothes are being arranged, authorities said.

Forecasters warned the cyclone could uproot power and communication lines along the coast but believed there would be less impact on Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city, its financial capital and crucial sea port.

The cyclone was packing winds of 150 kilometres (90 miles) an hour but was likely to lessen by the time it reaches Pakistan.

Authorities in Sindh, of which Karachi is the capital, said they have evacuated around 60,000 people from coastal villages, where poor infrastructure and communications make them vulnerable to storms.

"We have shifted them to hundreds of relief camps established in school buildings in the area," Munir Memon, a senior official in the provincial relief commission, told AFP.

"We have a better infrastructure and improved health facilities in Karachi which makes the city much safer from such catastrophes," Memon said.

Pakistan's meteorological department has predicted heavy rainfall and strong winds along the coast over the next three days.

Forecasters say seas will be stormy and Pakistan's Maritime Security Agency said it had ordered all boats to remain in harbours.

In Baluchistan, the head of the southwestern province's disaster management authority, said 500,000 people in coastal towns are under threat from the cyclone.

"The authority has taken all precautionary measures to deal with the situation and to evacuate people to areas at least 10 kilometres (six miles) away from the sea in case the cyclone hits," said Mohammad Hassan Baloch.


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