Cyclone Bulbul lashed Bangladesh overnight, killing eight people and leaving relatives in a desperate search for 36 missing fishermen, though prompt evacuations saved many lives and the worst was over, officials said yesterday.
Some 30 people were injured and around 6,000 homes were partially or fully damaged, 
authorities said.
Five of the eight victims were killed by falling trees, including a 52-year old woman who had spent the night in a shelter. She returned home yesterday and was killed when a tree crashed on her house. Another victim, a 60-year old fisherman, had refused to evacuate.
Two fishing boats have not yet returned and relatives have been unable to contact the men on board, said Anwar Uddin, a local public representative in the southern Bhola district.
No major damage was immediately reported in camps in southeast Bangladesh where hundreds of thousands of refugees from neighbouring 
Myanmar are living.
Some 2mn people from all of Bangladesh’s 13 coastal districts huddled in about 5,558 shelters on Saturday night. Outside, wind speeds rose to between 100 and 120km per hour (62-75mph) and some low-lying coastal areas were flooded.
Wind speeds have now come down to between 70 and 80kph (43-50mph), authorities said.
“It may take couple of days to get a normal situation,” Enamur Rahman, junior minister for disaster management and relief, said.
About 1,200 predominantly domestic tourists were stuck at the Saint Martin island in the Cox’s Bazar district, Rahman said.
“All of them will be rescued,” he said.
The cyclone season in the Bay of Bengal can last from April to December. In 1999, a super-cyclone battered the coast of India’s Odisha state for 30 hours, killing 10,000 people.
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