‘Inland ocean’ blocks rescue efforts
MAPUTO, Mozambique — Rescue workers struggled Tuesday to reach areas devastated by a huge cyclone in Mozambique, as heavy rains swelled rivers and further isolated flooded communities in what aid agencies called the worst natural disaster in southern Africa in two decades.
In central Mozambique, the area hit hardest by Cyclone Idai, overflowing rivers created “an inland ocean” where countless people were still marooned, a U.N. official said.
Rescue workers reported seeing people on rooftops and in trees days after the storm struck. In areas near the rivers, homes were submerged, with water rising near the tops of telephone poles.
The storm swept across Mozambique on Thursday night before turning inland into neighboring Malawi and Zimbabwe. It is believed to have affected more than 1.5 million people in the three nations.
The countries, among the world’s poorest, have limited capacity to respond to the disaster, and officials called for outside help. Relief officials warned that delays in reaching survivors could lead to an outbreak of illnesses, including cholera and malaria.
“This cyclone has come at a very huge human cost,” Nick Mangwana, a spokesman for the Zimbabwean government, said on Twitter. In Mozambique, several aid agencies focused their efforts on Beira, a port city of half a million people that was all but destroyed by the storm. A cargo plane loaded with emergency supplies was able to land at the airport there, but aid groups struggled to distribute the goods to affected areas.
The main highway into the city remained impassable, said Saul Butters, CARE’s assistant director for Mozambique.