Rare cyclone in Africa kills 122 in Mozambique and Malawi after unleashing heavy rains: UD 400+

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Rare cyclone in Africa kills 122 in Mozambique and Malawi after unleashing heavy rains

March 15, 2019
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Cyclone Idai destroys parts of Mozambique. Pic credit: Club of Mozambique

Flooding from tropical cyclone Idai, the biggest to hit southern Africa in over a decade, has left 122 people dead in Mozambique and Malawi, with more than 140,000 people displaced, local media reports.

Described as the deadliest weather disaster of 2019, the tropical cyclone made landfall on Thursday evening just north of the port city of Beira in Mozambique.

The strongest winds around the eye were about 160km an hour, blowing from the south across the city, according to Aljazeera.

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Cyclone Idai destroys parts of Mozambique. Pic credit: Africa Feeds

The winds left the 530,000 residents of Beira cut off from the outside world on Friday after power cables were destroyed and communications severed, the Eyewitness News reported.

“There is no communication with Beira. Houses and trees were destroyed and pylons downed,” an official at the National Institute of Disaster Management told AFP.

“There was no tsunami-type storm but Beira and Chinde (400 kilometres, 250 miles northeast of Beira on the coast) were badly hit.”

Officials say a hospital and seven schools lost their roofs and four houses were destroyed, adding that efforts were being made to assess the extent of the damage.

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Idai cyclone destroys homes. Pic credit: Anouk Delafortrie/Twitter

Evacuations were ordered along coastal regions of the country as the cyclone approached.

“The government has decreed a red alert due to the continuing rains and the approach of the tropical cyclone Idai, expected to reach the country between Thursday to Friday,” the cabinet spokeswoman Ana Comoana earlier said.

Mozambique’s national carrier LAM said on late Wednesday that it was cancelling all flights to Beira and Quelimane, which is also on the coast, as well as to Chomoio, which is inland.

Many passengers were, however, not aware of the cancellations, leaving scores of them stranded at Maputo International Airport, reports Eyewitness News.

Prior to the cyclone’s most recent landfall, Al Jazeera reported that at least 66 people were killed in Mozambique, 45 in Malawi and four in South Africa following torrential rains that brought in its wake flash floods.

The floods in Mozambique have already destroyed 5,756 homes, affecting 15,467 households and 141,325 people, the report added. In neighbouring Malawi, the government declared a state of emergency after 56 people died and hundreds of thousands were displaced by flooding, the Evening Standard reported.

Now considered the deadliest weather disaster of 2019, Idai is expected to bring highly destructive winds, heavy rains in excess of two feet and a 20-foot storm surge, according to The Weather Channel.

As it moves inland on Friday, the weather system will weaken but may result in significant rainfall and widespread flooding over the Sofala and Manica provinces, the extreme eastern parts of Zimbabwe and southern parts of Malawi, the South African Weather Service said.

Mozambique experienced deadly floods amidst devastating hurricanes in the past, including 2000 and 2007, Reuters said. About 350 people died, and over 650,000 displaced when Cyclone Eline hit the country in February 2000.

South African charity, Gift of the Givers, had earlier warned of “substantial devastation with massive flooding both from river and sea” when Idai made landfall.

An article on The Conversation in November 2018 had also warned Southern African governments to brace themselves for more tropical cyclones in future.

“Coastal buildings, roads and bridges need to be built to withstand the high wind speeds, heavy rainfall and possible storm surges to prevent costly damage to infrastructure,” the article suggested.

It also called for improved forecasting systems so that cities and towns can effectively evacuate before a storm makes landfall to avoid any deaths.
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Rare cyclone in Africa kills 122 in Mozambique and Malawi after unleashing heavy rains - Face2Face Africa
 

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Death Toll Reaches 446 in Mozambique After Cyclone Idai
Published 24 March 2019
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“We asked Jesus to protect us, so that this does not happen again,” people pray in Mozambique as death toll rises to 446 due to Cyclone Idai.

Cyclone Idai claimed more lives. Mozambique’s death toll rose to 446 from 417, a government minister said Sunday. In Zimbabwe, United Nations agencies have given different tolls of 259 and 154, while in Malawi 56 people died in heavy rains ahead of Idai. The new death toll of all the three countries put the casualty number around 700.


Mozambique’s Land and Environment Minister Celso Correia said the cyclone had affected 531,000 people in his country, with 110,000 people in makeshift camps.

Helicopters and boats have been rescuing some people stranded for days on rooftops and trees.

"We're going to have to wait until the flood waters recede until we know the full expanse of the toll on the people of Mozambique," Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) co-ordinator Sebastian Rhodes Stampa said.

Some survivors have been digging through rubble with their bare hands to search for loved ones, while government and aid agencies have been flying in help.

Cyclone Idai hit Beira, on the Indian Ocean, with winds up to 170 kph (105 mph), before barreling inland to Zimbabwe and Malawi, flattening homes and claiming lives.

Worshippers gathered at battered churches in the Mozambican port of Beira on Sunday, praying for divine protection as the death toll crept up from a cyclone and floods around southern Africa.

“We asked Jesus to protect us, so that this does not happen again,” said congregant and survivor Maria Domingas, 60, who saw trees crashing into her house and water filling her bedroom.

Rhodes Stampa said, “Every day the water recedes we reach more people. Every day the roads open we have better access and we can deliver at more volume and that is the important thing here.”

Death Toll Reaches 446 in Mozambique After Cyclone Idai
 
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