Fiji Sun

Cat 5 Cyclone Harold Batters Vanuatu, Reports of Destructio­n Emerge As Assessment­s Begin

- Damage to a roof in Luganville.

Reports of extensive damage emerged from parts of Vanuatu struck by Cyclone Harold on Monday, but communicat­ion with much of the battered region proved difficult.

Winds in excess of 230km/h tore across the country’s northern and central islands, and heavy rain damaged many roads and food gardens.

The cyclone, still a category five, slowly moved away from the country towards Fiji yesterday, providing an opportunit­y for assessment flights to begin.

Initial assessment­s confirm damage

Phone communicat­ion was down to many affected islands - Maewo, Pentecost, Ambae, rural Santo, and others – which sustained the cyclone’s full force overnight. On Santo, where Harold first made landfall on Monday, damage is understood to be extensive.

Already, pictures sent from the region have told a grim tale; a large ship shunted ashore by ferocious waves; palm trees splintered and stripped of colour; rivers spilling over banks and into villages, forcing residents to flee in the backs of utes; roofing iron being thrown across towns.

In Santo’s main town, Luganville, a local MP, Matai Seremaiah, said initial reports suggested about 50 to 70 per cent of buildings in the town were damaged, with hundreds sheltering in evacuation centres.

“Power is down, there are problems with water, and I think there are dire needs now for shelter systems,” Mr Sermaiah told RNZ Pacific from Port Vila, the capital, which was largely unaffected.

“It’s bad. It’s really bad.” Luganville has been cut off from the wider Santo area by flooding, landslides and debris. Some reports from the southwest corner of Santo, where the cyclone made first landfall, indicated severe damage, but communicat­ion was yet to be made with much of the island. Mr Seremaiah said he had managed to speak briefly with someone in the Big Bay area on satellite phone.

They reported a grim tale.

“All the shops are damaged, they can’t move at the moment because all the rivers are overflowin­g, the crops are really damaged,” he said. “We also haven’t got any reports from the outer islands which the cyclone went over last night.”

Government’s next steps

Mr Seremaiah said assessment

flights would hopefully be able to start later yesterday as the cyclone moved away, but it was likely significan­t assistance would be needed. A spokespers­on for Vanuatu’s caretaker Prime Minister, Charlot Salwai, said the council of ministers met yesterday to decide the government’s next steps, and a decision would be made on whether to ask for internatio­nal help.

That would involve relaxing the country’s border restrictio­ns, with the country effectivel­y sealed off under a state of emergency to prevent the spread of COVID-19 to Vanuatu.

 ?? Cyclone Harold ?? hit the Solomons before moving to Vanuatu.
Cyclone Harold hit the Solomons before moving to Vanuatu.
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