Saturday Star

Global ‘milk of human kindness’ dried up

-

SHANNON EBRAHIM Group Foreign Editor

MOZAMBIQUE’S second most populous city of Beira is nothing but a wasteland.

Two weeks after cyclone Idai ripped through, Beira is still largely under water, and its population of more than half a million people are nowhere to be seen across the vast expanse of drenched land. It is only when you near Beira airport by helicopter can the makeshift camps be seen where those who survived are taking refuge. A total of 1.85 million people have been affected by the cyclone’s devastatio­n.

“People are now waiting for the water to subside in order to do a proper body count.

“It seems that 700 deceased is a very conservati­ve estimate at this point. The relief efforts have now entered stage two – which is to locate bodies,” South Africa’s Minister for Internatio­nal Relations Lindiwe Sisulu told Independen­t Media after surveying the destructio­n from a helicopter on Thursday.

Sisulu made her second trip to the country in the space of a week, and described President Felipe Nyusi as very lonely in his plight.

“If you look at the attention the world put on the mining disaster in Chile last year, the world watched play by play coverage of what happened. The lack of media focus on Mozambique – in the worst disaster I have seen in Africa outside a war situation – is shocking. It seems the milk of human kindness has dried up for this side of the world.”

It is unclear how much assistance African nations have offered Mozambique other than R3 million from Uganda, the involvemen­t of the Botswana Defence Force and the Tanzanian Health Ministry.

Sisulu announced in Beira the South African government is giving R70m, and mining tycoon Patrice Motsepe and his wife Precious handed over a cheque for R15m from the Motsepe Foundation.

After visiting Mozambique, Sisulu travelled to Zimbabwe and met members of the cabinet, announcing R60m in humanitari­an assistance from the South African government. Motsepe also gave R15m to Zimbabwe for relief efforts in devastated Manicaland.

While UN agencies such as the World Food Programme are working flat out in Mozambique as well as Doctors Without Borders, there was little evidence of Western aid agencies delivering assistance on the runway at Beira airport.

For a humanitari­an disaster of such magnitude, the fact that the airport was not a hive of activity by relief agencies was an ominous sign.

Sisulu hailed the emergency relief efforts of Gift of the Givers which had rescue and relief teams operating in Beira, and were often the first relief workers the stranded people in Beira saw. For days many had been trapped without food or medical assistance, and Gift of the Givers teams managed to transport many up river on dinghy boats, rescuing well over 2000 people.

“Air rescue was the only option in inaccessib­le areas, and we had to hire three helicopter­s to rescue people. We also set up a successful medical camp with the Red Cross now taking over,” Dr Imtiaz Sooliman, founder of Gift of the Givers, said.

According to Sooliman, people are starving on the ground, and the food packages they have been given are totally inadequate.

“We experience­d the horror of the cyclonic wind followed by torrential rain, and then watched people’s family members being washed away. At one point, seven people climbed up a mango tree, it snapped, and a baby fell out of the arms of its mother into the raging waters. The body was found a day later,” Sooliman said.

Sisulu said the damage from cyclone Idai is far worse than the one that hit Mozambique in 2000, as the previous damage had been localised, whereas Idai was along the Indian Ocean and has destroyed vast expanses of territory.

 ??  ?? DISPLACED people look at Portuguese marine boats near the village of Muchenesse, Mozambique. | TIAGO PETINGA EPA-EFE
DISPLACED people look at Portuguese marine boats near the village of Muchenesse, Mozambique. | TIAGO PETINGA EPA-EFE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa