Daily Dispatch

Tonga braces itself for superstorm hit

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TONGA declared a state of emergency yesterday as the Pacific island kingdom braces for a direct hit by a powerful cyclone that is threatenin­g to become a Category Five superstorm.

Severe Tropical Cyclone Gita has already created havoc in neighbouri­ng Samoa and is gathering pace as it approaches Tonga.

Acting Prime Minister Semisi Sika issued a nationwide alert, saying he was “satisfied that an emergency is happening or is about to happen”.

The Fiji Meteorolog­ical Service predicted Gita will become a Category Five storm – the top of the scale – before reaching Tonga last night.

It is already packing gusts of 275km/h as it sits off the east coast of the country’s most populous island Tongatapu.

Tonga’s Fua’amotu Weather Forecastin­g Centre warned residents could expect “very destructiv­e hurricane force winds”.

Gita slammed into Samoa overnight Friday, forcing the evacuation of some 200 people and causing widespread flooding, leaving many without power.

Chief forecaster at New Zealand’s Weather Watch service Philip Duncan said that current modelling showed Gita was lining up a direct hit on Tongatapu.

“That’s a very serious situation, the capital [Nuku’alofa] is there, there’s more than 75 000 people,” he said. “It’s pretty rare to see the perfect circle, the centre of that storm, going right over the top of such a small island.”

Duncan said the cyclone could cause major damage even if it remained offshore.

“If it moves just a little bit north or south it may not make technical landfall but it’s severe weather, winds up to 230km/h, waves over 10m at sea and a storm surge over a metre on top of that,” he said.

Truckloads of troops were out helping people batten down as Nuku’alofa prepared for the cyclone and evacuation centres were opened across the kingdom.

Tonga Meteorolog­ical Service director Ofa Fa’anunu said Gita would be one of the strongest cyclones to ever hit the kingdom.

“We are looking at major structural damage,” he warned, pointing out that the low-lying capital was particular­ly vulnerable to storm surges.

Cyclones are common in the Pacific at this time of year, with top-ofthe-scale Category Five systems proving highly destructiv­e when they make landfall.

Cyclone Winston killed 44 people in Fiji in 2016, and Cyclone Pam claimed 11 lives and damaged 65 000 homes in Vanuatu in 2015.

Another Category Five storm, Cyclone Ian, hit Tonga’s sparsely populated Ha’apai islands in 2014, causing extensive damage and leaving thousands homeless.

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