The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Govt to investigat­e further into Cyclone Idai

- Elita chikwati Senior Reporter

GOVERNMENT says it will study further the nature of Cyclone Idai to determine what transpired when it hit Chimaniman­i and Chipinge areas as there are reports of tremors being felt prior to it making landfall.

Government also seeks to get a clear explanatio­n for the huge boulders that destroyed infrastruc­ture and human life.

This came out when President Mnangagwa addressed a Methodist Church in Zimbabwe congregati­on at a mourning ceremony in Mabelreign, Harare yesterday.

The President said some people experience­d tremors before the cyclone and also some of the boulders stones that were washed away by the rains seem to have come from under the water.

“We need to investigat­e what really transpired when the cyclone hit these hard-hit areas. Some people reported feeling tremors before the storm.

““There is an area in Rusitu, Manicaland were there was a business centre, police station, lodges, banana plantation and agricultur­e extension officers.

“The policemen, business people and extension officers were all swept away,” he said.

Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Minister July Moyo said it was important to study the nature of the cyclone.

“We are also beginning to study the nature of that cyclone and need to see if there are other related effects that may not necessaril­y be the cyclone itself and that area we now need to look at it to get an understand­ing of what transpired.

“You cannot explain the stones, the boulders that have come in the rivers.

“They do not seem to have come from the mountains but they are there and they are the ones which destroyed the villages.

“Our own civil servants, public servants were een taken away. That is the nature of what we are faced with,” he said.

By Friday 154 people had died, 162 injured, 136 still marooned and 4 884 completely displaced while 187 are missing.

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