Cyclone Montha Makes Landfall: Kakinada Braces for 110 km/h Winds Amid Red Alert

Severe cyclonic storm Montha has begun making landfall near Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh. The India Meteorological Department warns the process will continue for 3-4 hours with winds reaching 90-110 km per hour. Authorities have evacuated over 75,000 people to relief camps and suspended all vehicle movement in seven districts. The highest danger signal has been hoisted at Kakinada Port as coastal areas face threats of storm surges and flash floods.

Key Points: Cyclone Montha Landfall Begins Near Kakinada With 110 km/h Winds

  • Landfall process to continue for 3-4 hours with 90-110 km/h maximum winds
  • 75,802 people evacuated to 1,204 relief camps across affected districts
  • Vehicle movement suspended in seven districts until Wednesday morning
  • Great danger signal 10 hoisted at Kakinada Port, highest cyclone warning
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Cyclone Montha starts landfall near Kakinada, process to continue for 3-4 hours: IMD

Severe cyclonic storm Montha begins landfall near Kakinada with 90-110 km/h winds, triggering massive evacuations and red alerts across coastal Andhra Pradesh districts.

"Latest observations indicate that the landfall process has commenced and will continue for the next 3-4 hours - India Meteorological Department"

Amaravati, Oct 28

Severe cyclonic storm Montha in the Bay of Bengal has started making landfall near Andhra Pradesh's Kakinada, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said on Tuesday night.

Latest observations indicate that the landfall process has commenced and will continue for the next 3-4 hours, the IMD said in a bulletin.

The maximum wind speed at the time of landfall is likely to be 90-110 km per hour.

Under the impact of Montha, heavy to extremely heavy rainfall is expected in coastal Andhra Pradesh, Rayalaseema, Telangana, south Chhattisgarh, and Odisha.

The IMD has appealed to people to stay indoors to stay safe and follow official updates.

The impact of the cyclone is likely to be severe in Kakinada, Krishna, Eluru, East Godavari, West Godavari, Dr B.R. Ambedkar Konaseema, and Chinturu and Rampachodavaram divisions of Alluri Sitarama Raju district in Andhra Pradesh.

The state government has ordered the suspension of all vehicle movement in these seven districts from 8.30 p.m. on Tuesday to 6 a.m. on Wednesday.

District Collectors and Superintendents of Police have been instructed to halt traffic on all types of roads, including national highways passing through these districts. However, an exemption has been granted only for emergency medical services.

The government has advised all residents in these districts to stay indoors, not to venture outside, and to remain vigilant.

The cyclone is likely to affect 403 mandals in 22 districts across the state. The officials have set up 488 control rooms in mandals to deal with the emergency situation.

The government has set up a total of 1,204 relief camps, and 75,802 people have been evacuated to these camps.

The IMD has issued a red alert for the coastal districts, which also face the threat of flash floods.

Storm surge of about one metre above the astronomical tide is also expected along the coast, which may inundate low-lying areas.

Srikakulam, Vizianagaram, Visakhapatnam, Anakapalle, Nellore, Konaseema, and Kakinada districts have been receiving heavy rains with strong winds.

High tidal waves have damaged the Uppada-Kakinada beach road. Authorities closed the road for traffic.

Fishermen have been advised not to venture into the sea for five days. All activities on the coast have been suspended. Authorities have closed the beaches for tourists.

Great danger signal number 10 was hoisted at Kakinada Port. The great danger signal is the highest danger signal issued to port in times of severe cyclones.

Great danger signal number nine was hoisted at Visakhapatnam, Gangavaram, Kalingapatnam and Bheemunipatnam ports.

Great danger signal eight was hoisted at Machilipatnam, Nizampatnam, Krishnapatnam and Vadarevu ports.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
My cousin in Kakinada just messaged - winds are terrifying! 😨 Thank God they evacuated to a relief camp yesterday. IMD warnings came just in time. Hope the infrastructure holds up.
M
Michael C
The evacuation numbers are impressive but I hope the relief camps have proper facilities. During previous cyclones, many camps faced water and sanitation issues. Authorities should ensure basic amenities.
S
Suresh O
Great coordination by Andhra government! Traffic suspension and emergency-only movement is the right call. Hope fishermen heeded the warnings - sea conditions must be dangerous with 110 kmph winds.
A
Ananya R
The storm surge warning is concerning. Low-lying areas near Kakinada and Vizag need special attention. Hope the NDRF teams are on standby for rescue operations. Stay indoors everyone! 🌀
K
Karthik V
Good to see IMD's accurate tracking and timely updates. The danger signal system at ports is working effectively. Hope power infrastructure is secured - last cyclone caused week-long outages in many areas.

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