The Phnom Penh Post

Super cyclone Harold devastates Vanuatu’s second-largest town

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A DEADLY cyclone destroyed much of Vanuatu’s secondlarg­est town but early warnings appeared to have prevented mass casualties in the Pacific nation, with some residents sheltered in caves to stay safe, aid workers said on Tuesday.

Tropical Cyclone Harold, which claimed 27 lives when it swept through the Solomon Islands last week, lashed Vanuatu’s northern provinces overnight as a scale-topping category five superstorm.

The town of Luganville, population 16,500, took a direct hit as winds of 235km/h brought down buildings and caused flash flooding.

World Vision’s Vanuatu director Kendra Gates Derousseau said the charity’s local manager told her the damage was comparable to the last Category 5 monster to hit the country, Cyclone Pam in 2015.

The Port Vila-based aid worker said: “I managed to speak to her on a satellite phone and she estimated about 50 per cent of dwellings have been significan­tly damaged, the World Vision office has lost its roof.

“She mentioned that she has heard no reports of casualties or any significan­t injuries at this time.”

Communicat­ions remain down across much of the country and Gates Derousseau said the scale of the disaster would remain unclear until remote island communitie­s, such as southern Pentecost, had been contacted.

“They were directly in the eye [of the cyclone] and they have very few concrete buildings, they shelter in traditiona­l thatch dwellings or caves,” she said.

Red Cross Vanuatu secretary-general, Jacqueline de Gaillande, said the communicat­ions issues meant that the most recent updates she received were social media posts from the charity’s local staffers on Monday evening.

“They showed a lot of damage but we have no numbers of casualties yet,” she said.

A massive internatio­nal aid effort was launched after Cyclone Pam in 2015 flattened Port Vila, killed 11 people and wiped out almost two-thirds of the country’s economic capacity.

Gates Derousseau said a similar operation was unlikely in Harold’s wake because Vanuatu was determined to remain one of the world’s few places with no confirmed Covid-19 cases.

She said allowing an influx of internatio­nal aid workers risked inadverten­tly importing the virus, so Vanuatu’s internatio­nal borders would remain closed to new arrivals.

“It [the aid effort] has to be locally led, locally driven, working with humanitari­an partners who are currently in-country.

“There are already large stockpiles of supplies in place, which is a lesson we learned from Pam, so we can get to work fairly quickly.”

She said replacemen­t supplies could be brought in from overseas once the stockpiles ran out, but they would be disinfecte­d to ensure they were virus-free.

Vanuatu lacks the health infrastruc­ture to deal with even a mild coronaviru­s outbreak, with local media reporting last month that the nation of 300,000 has only two respirator­y ventilator­s.

Cyclone Harold has already caused widespread damage in the Solomon Islands, where an inter-island ferry ignored weather warnings and 27 people died after being washed off its decks.

Modelling early on Tuesday showed it continuing to track southeast, passing south of Fiji as a Category 4 on Wednesday and weakening to Category 2 as it brushes Tonga on Thursday.

However, the storm system has already proved unpredicta­ble, with forecaster­s initially expecting it to only reach category three before petering out.

Fiji on Tuesday pre-emptively issued cyclone alerts for its southern islands, warning of high seas and damaging gale-force winds.

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