The Borneo Post

UN steps up call for help in Mozambique

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BEIRA, Mozambique: The UN is stepping up calls for help in Mozambique as aid agencies struggle to assist tens of thousands of people battered by one of southern Africa’s most powerful cyclones.

A week after Tropical Cyclone Idai lashed Mozambique with winds of nearly 200 kilometres per hour, survivors are struggling in desperate conditions – some still trapped on roof tops and those saved needing food and facing the risk of outbreaks of disease such as cholera.

The World Food Programme late Friday night declared the flood crisis a level three emergency, putting it on a par with crises in Yemen, Syria and South Sudan.

“The designatio­n will accelerate the massive operationa­l scale-up now underway to assist victims of last week’s Category 4 cyclone and subsequent large-scale flooding that claimed countless lives and displaced at least 600,000 people,” said WFP spokesman Herve Verhoosel.

The confirmed death toll in Mozambique and neighbouri­ng Zimbabwe topped 550 on Friday, with 293 killed in Mozambique, and 259 in Zimbabwe, according to the UN Migration agency IOM.

Around 1.7 million people have been affected and hundreds are still missing.

“Now that the world is beginning to grasp the scale of devastatio­n and despair in the wake of Cyclone Idai, we as an internatio­nal community are at a crucial moment to act,” Verhoosel said.

Humanitari­an agencies are racing against the clock to help people, many of whom have not had a meal in days.

Poor sanitary conditions mean disease is now a real concern.

“Already, some cholera cases have been reported in (the port city of) Beira along with an increasing number of malaria infections among people trapped by the flooding,” the Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross said in a statement.

“We are running out of time, it is at a critical point here,” UN children’s agency chief Henrietta Fore told AFP after she flew into the devastated port city of Beira from New York.

Hygiene and safe drinking water are absolute priorities, she warned.

“There’s stagnant water, it’s not draining, decomposin­g bodies, lack of good hygiene and sanitation,” Fore said. “We are worried about cholera, about malaria because of the stagnant water.”

Aid group Doctors Without Borders said people were also at risk of respirator­y infections such as pneumonia.

Relief agencies said the gravity of the cyclone and scale of the flooding it unleashed was shocking.

Districts west of Beira resemble an inland lake, and thousands of people are still trapped on roof tops and in trees where they sought to escape the flood waters.

The town of Buzi across the estuary southwest of Beira “has reportedly disappeare­d, with the water as high as the palm trees,” the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said.

“This ... is a catastroph­e,” Prime Minister Carlos Antonio do Rosario told reporters in Beira. The government says there are still around 15,000 people needing to be saved.

Tens of thousands of people are already in shelters in central Mozambique.

In Beira, businessma­n Ibraimo Masquine counted his blessings. “I cant believe I’m here. I was scared for my life, (for) my family,” he said as he cleared debris from his factory.

“I tell you straight, these coming days are very difficult. I wait for epidemic, some (kind of) epidemic. People (are) going to die,” he said adding there is “no clean water to drink, no food”.

In Beira’s Samora Machel Secondary School, where President Filipe Nyusi was educated, more than 1,000 people have found shelter, with many sleeping on the floor of an indoor basketball court.

“Everything is difficult here. I’m fighting for my children to have something to eat,” said Celeste Dambo.

On Wednesday, crowds of people looted a warehouse, taking away sacks of rice marked “China Aid.”

Meantime the main morgue in Beira is crowded with bodies and burials are impossible because the city cemeteries are flooded, the ICRC said.

“The mortuary at the city’s main hospital is full and there are dozens of bodies that need to be removed and cared for in a dignified way,” it added.

The ICRC has set up a dedicated website where missing people can be registered. — AFP

 ??  ?? Rescues carry a dead body after Cyclone Adai at Ngangu suburb in Chimaniman­i, Zimbabwe.
Rescues carry a dead body after Cyclone Adai at Ngangu suburb in Chimaniman­i, Zimbabwe.
 ??  ?? Tents belonging to aid organisati­ons are seen after Cyclone Idai at Guara Guara village outside Beira, Mozambique. — Reuters photos
Tents belonging to aid organisati­ons are seen after Cyclone Idai at Guara Guara village outside Beira, Mozambique. — Reuters photos

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