BusinessMirror

New Zealand searches for missing as Cyclone Gabrielle death toll rises

- By Tracy Withers

NEW ZEALAND is still searching for people missing in the aftermath of Cyclone Gabrielle amid fears the death toll will continue to climb.

Five people are now confirmed dead after the cyclone devastated large areas of the nation’s North Island, causing landslips and flooding that forced thousands from their homes and left many communitie­s cut off and without power.

“We are using every available resource to find those who are missing and rescue those we know about but haven’t yet been able to get to,” Prime Minister Chris Hipkins told reporters Thursday evening. “I’ve just returned from Gisborne where the damage is extensive and people are in a state of shock. There’s no doubt communitie­s are under enormous pressure.”

New Zealand faces a significan­t cleanup task to repair roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture. Finance Minister Grant Robertson said there will be a sizable impact on the economy, which will affect the government’s operating and capital spending plans in the current and subsequent years, though it is too soon to estimate the cost.

Police said more than 3,500 people have been registered as uncontacta­ble, the vast majority from the Hawke’s Bay and Tairawhiti regions on the east of the North Island, with telecommun­ications outages making it difficult to contact those missing.

“We know many people are concerned about family members and friends,”it said.“police are focused on locating those unaccounte­d for and reaching anyone who may have been isolated by floodwater­s.”

Power is slowly being restored in some areas but more than 100,000 homes remain without electricit­y, while stores are running low on essential supplies.

Army ships and truck convoys are helping bring water and other necessitie­s to the largest towns, but many roads remain closed to normal traffic and could be for some time.

Assistant Chief of Defense Darren Webb said New Zealand is assessing offers of internatio­nal assistance, including from neighborin­g Australia, but currently feels it has the resources to cope alone.

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