Miami Herald

Cyclone Freddy kills hundreds as it wrecks Malawi and Mozambique

- BY VITUS-GREGORY GONDWE AND WANJOHI KABUKURU Associated Press

BLANTYRE, MALAWI

The devastatin­g Tropical Cyclone Freddy, which has ripped through southern Africa in a rare second landfall, has killed at least 219 people in Malawi and Mozambique since Saturday night. The death toll is expected to rise.

Heavy rains that triggered floods and mudslides have killed 199 people in Malawi, authoritie­s said Tuesday. President Lazarus Chakwera declared a “state of disaster” in the country’s south and the now-ravaged commercial capital, Blantyre. Some 19,000 people in the south have been displaced, according to

Malawi’s disaster-management directorat­e.

“Power and communicat­ions are down in many affected areas, hindering aid operations,” said Stephane Dujarric, the U.N. Secretary General’s spokespers­on at a press briefing Tuesday. The most affected regions remain inaccessib­le, meaning the full extent of the damage is so far unknown.

Reports from Mozambique’s disaster institute on Tuesday confirmed that 20 people have died in the country and 1,900 homes have been destroyed in the coastal Zambezia province. Tens of thousands of people are still holed up in storm shelters and accommodat­ion centers.

Freddy will continue to thump central Mozambique and southern Malawi with extreme rainfall before it exits back to the sea late Wednesday afternoon, the U.N.’s meteorolog­ical center on the island of Réunion projected.

The nations were already battling a cholera outbreak when Freddy struck.

In November last year, nations agreed to compensate countries affected by extreme weather exacerbate­d by human-caused climate change. Cyclones are wetter, more frequent and more intense as the planet heats up, scientists say.

“Mozambique and Malawi are among the countries least responsibl­e for climate change, yet they are facing the full force of storms that are intensifyi­ng due to global warming driven mostly by carbon emissions from the world’s richest nations,” Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Tigere Chagutah said.

Cyclone Freddy has been causing destructio­n in southern Africa since late February. It also pummeled the island states of Madagascar and Réunion last month as it traversed across the Indian Ocean.

The cyclone has intensifie­d a record seven times and has the highest-ever recorded accumulate­d cyclone energy, or ACE, which is a measuremen­t of how much energy a cyclone has released over time. Freddy recorded more energy over its lifetime than an entire typical U.S. hurricane season.

Freddy first developed near Australia in early February and is set to be the longest-ever recorded tropical cyclone. The U.N.’s weather agency has convened an expert panel to determine whether it has broken the record set by Hurricane John in 1994 of 31 days.

 ?? THOKO CHIKONDI AP ?? A road connecting Blantyre and Lilongwe was damaged by heavy rains caused by Tropical Cyclone Freddy in Blantyre, Malawi, on Tuesday.
THOKO CHIKONDI AP A road connecting Blantyre and Lilongwe was damaged by heavy rains caused by Tropical Cyclone Freddy in Blantyre, Malawi, on Tuesday.

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