The Herald (Zimbabwe)

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otoubthe eascstiest­dinmg tchyaclno2­n,e6vmicitll­iimons.people and could rank as one of the worst weather-related disasters recorded in the southern hemisphere, United Nations officials said yesterday.

Rescue crews are still struggling to reach victims five days after Cyclone Idai raced in at speeds of up to 170 kph (105 mph) from the Indian Ocean into Mozambique, then its inland neighbours Zimbabwe and Malawi.

Aid groups said many survivors were trapped in remote areas, surrounded by wrecked roads, flattened buildings and submerged villages.

“There’s a sense from people on the ground that the world still really hasn’t caught on to how severe this disaster is,” Matthew Cochrane, spokesman for Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies told a briefing in Geneva.

“The full horror, the full impact is only going to emerge over coming days.”

The official death count in Mozambique stands at 84, but its President Filipe Nyusi said on Monday that he had flown over some of the worst-hit zones, seen bodies floating in rivers and now estimated more than 1 000 people may have died there. The cyclone hit land near Mozambique’s port of Beira on Thursday last week and moved inland throughout the weekend, leaving heavy rains in its wake on Tuesday. Studies of satellite images suggested 1,7 million people were in the path of the cyclone in Mozambique and another 920 000 affected in Malawi, Herve Verhoosel, senior spokesman at the World Food Programme said.

Several rivers had broken their banks, or were about to, leaving a huge area covered by the waters, and only accessible by air and water, Lola Castro, regional director for Southern Africa told the briefing by phone from Johannesbu­rg.

Heavy rains preceded the cyclone, compoundin­g the problems, said Clare Nullis of the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on.

“If the worst fears are realised . . . then we can say that it is one of the worst weather-related disasters, tropical-cyclone-related disasters in the southern hemisphere.”

Droughts are classed as climate-related, not weather-related. In Beira, a low-lying coastal city of 500 000 people, Nullis said the water had nowhere to drain.

“This is not going to go away quickly,” she said.

Beira is also home to Mozambique’s second largest port, which serves as a gateway to landlocked countries in the region. Reuters. -cehasntnee­rlnledAfto­riwcaradff­s UN — WFP UN UN UN

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