1970-12-04
Page: 10
DACCA, Pakistan, Dec. 1— Reliable reports indicate that East Pakistan's storm‐warning system, a limited one at best, was not put in motion properly when the devastating cyclone struck on Nov. 12.
The storm's path and intensity were known days in advance. Had proper warning been given over the local radio, tens of thousands might have been able to save themselves merely by lashing themselves to palm trees—which is how many were saved at the last minute though they had no warning.
For many, no warning would have helped. There was simply no high place to run to, no building with a second story to huddle in. And the women and children had no strength to hang onto trees through the long hours of the cyclone's night.
In some villages not a single child is left.
The storm also killed most of the livestock, which did the plowing as well as providing food. The rice crop is destroyed, although many villagers are desperately trying to rescue some of it from under the gray mud and wash it clean enough to eat in the badly polluted water.
Another crop will not be possible for almost a year. Until then the survivors will have to be fed as refugees, from relief stocks and foreign aid.
This year's harvest was only two weeks away when the cyclone struck, and the crop was going to be a bumper one.
This cyclone belt is vastly different from regions in the United States like Louisiana and Mississippi that lie in the path of the frequent Gulf of Mexico hurricanes. A hurricane last year, for example, swept inland with winds of 250 miles an hour, 100 miles an hour stronger than those in the storm here. About 200 people were killed and 1.000 injured. In the Pakistan disaster the official toll is over 175,000, and many more people may have been killed.