Islamabad, June 11: Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) on Sunday urged people to stay away from shorelines as Cyclone Biparjoy, which is heading towards the coastal areas of Pakistan and India, lay at a distance of about 760 kilometres south of Karachi, Dawn reported. Dawn is a Pakistani English-language newspaper.

As per the state-run Radio Pakistan, the NDMA also called on people to follow local authorities' guidance in any emergency situation. The Karachi commissioner has over the last few days banned entry to the beaches in Karachi, as well as fishing, sailing, swimming, and bathing at seas within the territorial limit of Karachi owing to the threat from today till the end of the storm. Mumbai Rains Forecast: High Chances of Rainfall As Cyclone Biparjoy Intensifies.

It came as the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) in its daily forecast located the cyclone near latitude 18.1°N and longitude 67.5°E, and said the system is "likely to keep tracking further in the north-northeast direction during next 24 hours", according to Dawn. Cyclone Biparjoy: Very Severe Cyclonic Storm Likely to Make Landfall in Gujarat, High Waves Seen at Tithal Beach in Valsad (Watch Video).

The PMD added that the cyclone will then recurve north-eastward on June 14 and cross between Keti Bandar (southeast Sindh) and the Indian Gujrat coast. The forecast noted that "dust-raising/gusty winds are expected in central/southern districts of the country" on Sunday and Monday afternoon.

The NDMA quoted the Pacific Disaster Centre stating that around 1.38 million people from both Pakistan and India were exposed to the cyclone, of which 305,755 were among the vulnerable population. It added the cyclone had sustained winds of 185km per hour with gusts as high as 232km/h.

The PDC's website further said the system is "forecast to remain on a generally northward trajectory through 72 hours, after which the bulk of the guidance indicates an eastward turn, while a few rebels still shift westward".

According to Zoom Earth's live radar, a slight change in the system's forecasted track is noticeable. The new projected route shows the cyclone heading towards the Indian coastline, compared to yesterday's prediction of heading towards Pakistan's coastal cities, as per Dawn. Although, large parts of the Sindh coast remain in the cyclone's "cone of uncertainty".

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