--A rollercoaster ride on October
13
BRAHMAPUR: Having experienced a
ferocious cyclonic storm Phailin on October 12 last at Brahmapur, I along with
a few fellow reporters undertook a motorcycle journey on the October 13 morning
to see how the monstrous storm had wrecked havoc and left a trail of
devastation in the coastal Ganjam and its neighbouring districts.
As the Indian Meteorological
Department (IMD) had predicted that the cyclonic storm would badly affect the
villages and towns between Balugaon and Brahmapur, we decided to start our
journey from Brahmapur to Balugaon to get a firsthand report on the ravages of
Phailin. Though the wind speed had deceased considerably, we were still haunted
by fear of the wind turning frightful again.
We visited various places of the
city and captured photos of heaps of rubbles, uprooted trees and electric poles
and snapped wires across the city. From the First Gate of Brahmapur to the Gopalpur
junction, the city wore a fearful look. Most of the old and new trees had
toppled, while water was running over road from Roland Institute to Gopalpur
junction as Bahana Nala had overflowed. The main road connecting NH-5 was
disconnected. We looked for the shortcuts but they too had been blocked as
uprooted trees kept lying over them. So, we took up a bypass road via
Lanjipalli over bridge to reach NH-5 so that we could move to Balugaon.
When we crossed Lanjipalli, we
got to know the death of a child at Bijipur in wall collapse and another
similar case at Gosani Nuagaon in the city. Storm didn’t show any mercy to the
telephone towers and electric poles and transformers. The telecommunication and
electricity supply was badly hit. We visited Ayodhya Nagar, Gajapati Nagar,
Lochapada and Aska Road and
saw the areas in ruins. The Brahmapur railway station was also destroyed. The
kutcha and asbestos houses were badly affected in the storm near the station.
We managed to cross streets of
the city with much difficulty as they had been filled with damaged branches and
leaves and broken electric poles rounded with wires. We touched the NH-5 and
set off for Balugaon. On the way, a truck driver told that a few lorries had
turned turtle near Konishi after being hit by the cyclonic storm. The wind was
still blowing at a high speed enough to shake our motorcycle, in which we were
traveling. But it hardly had the strength to shake our determination to move
ahead and see the large scale devastations and wreckages.
The low-lying areas with paddy
crops to the right side of the NH had been fully submerged. During our journey,
we passed many petrol pumps beside the NH which too had faced the ire of the
cyclone. With their shades damaged, most of them had shut down. We hardly saw
any people or any vehicle on the road. A dead silence had reigned supreme
everywhere. We crossed Jagannathpur junction and then Mandiapalli which
connects Gopalpur beach via Berhampur
University. Two reporters who
camped at the university campus joined us at the junction. What they told about
the devastation the university had gone through was shocking. The university
was famous for its greenery having thousands of trees, but the storm had
stripped it of its pride possession and rendered it barren. It hurt us when we
knew that the dreaded storm had not spared the deer park,
classrooms and hostels inside the campus of the university.
We took a glance of a high school
near the NH at Chamakhandi which was filled with broken trees. Then we saw a
few village roads connecting the NH filled with uprooted trees. Most fruit
bearing trees had been badly damaged. We reached the district headquarters town
of Chatrapur. The Collectorate and
residence of the Collector had been affected. The storm had not spared a single
building with asbestos roof. Educational institutions had been damaged. We
visited the people in the relief centre at Onslow
High School. While talking with the
poor people of the cyclone hit area, we were told how the victims had undergone
a harrowing experience of the previous night.
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Lorries toppled near A1 dhaba, a few km from Chhatrapur |
Our team resumed journey and
passed the Tampara Lake
after Chatrapur. The gigantic mango, coconut, jackfruit and eucalyptus plants
along NH were kissing the ground. We came across a damaged roadside hotel A1
dhaba near the lake where three lorries had overturned. Then we crossed the
over flowing Rushikulya and reached Purunabandha-Binchhanapalli cyclone shelter
after Ganjam town. The fishermen were about to leave the shelter as wind had
been pretty slow. Taking some dry foods given by the administration, the
fishermen were leaving the cyclone shelter for their homes, but they looked to
be stressed with anxiety, apprehension and fear about the safety of their
houses and the belongings, especially the fishnets and boats.
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Trucks met a mishap at Sai Dhaba on NH-5 near Rambha |
An electric sub-station at Humma
had been damaged. After crossing the Palur junction, we reached severely
affected coastal villages such as Podagada, Jhatipadar, Barapalli under Ganjam
block. We stopped at Sai dhaba where two lorries had met a mishap. We reached
Gopinathpur coming under ward-6 of Rambha NAC. Out of total 14 families living
in the village, 12 kutcha houses were badly damaged. Coconut trees, bamboo and
eucalyptus trees had toppled over houses. Two persons were injured due to the
sudden fall of the trees, said a homeless villager Rama Nath.
![]() |
An old lady is sitting in front of her damaged house at Gopinathpur |
We then moved towards a few
severely affected villages like Jharedi, Kantapada, Sipakuda and Madhurchua
near the Chilika lake. We got to know that a few fishing villages near Sabulia
were also affected when water of the lake gushed into their villages.
We were astounded after seeing a
huge loss of fruit bearing trees in the grooves. Before reaching Badaghati, we
saw a village road to Pana Nuagoan filled with uprooted old trees and a damaged
auto-rickshaw near a huge tree. On the day of cyclone, driver T Parameswar was
killed after a huge tree fell down on him while crossing the road.
We wanted to move to Khallikote,
but a local advised us not to go there as the road was not clear. We continued
our journey and reached at Keshpur at 9am.
The Chilika water had entered into the paddy fields and inundated many villages
of Pathara panchayat.
When we reached Balugaon, we
found people slowly coming out of their houses. Everywhere, we saw heaps of debris
and fallen and broken trees.
People everywhere were demanding
relief like dry food as the people had lost their homes and belonging in the
gale. Starving children were staring at us helplessly. As relief had not been
supplied to them in time, angry locals near Balugaon were preparing to hold a
road blockade on the NH-5.
Published on October 19, 2013
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