Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Deadly cyclone hammers Fiji

Storm Yasa kills 2 people, destroys dozens of island homes

- AILEEN TORRES-BENNETT AND NICK PERRY

SUVA, Fiji — A powerful cyclone hit Fiji overnight, killing at least two people and destroying dozens of homes in the Pacific island nation, authoritie­s said Friday.

While Cyclone Yasa was terrifying for those in its path, there was a sense of relief in other parts of the country that the devastatio­n wasn’t as widespread as many had feared.

Fijian Prime Minister Frank Bainimaram­a said in a video message that those confirmed dead were a 3-month-old baby and a man in his mid-40s.

“The dust is yet to settle,” Bainimaram­a said. “But we are likely looking at hundreds of millions of dollars in damages.”

He said the cyclone hit with wind gusts up to 214 mph.

FBC News reported the man who died was a farmer who was sheltering from the cyclone in his home on the island of Vanua Levu when part of his house fell on him, also injuring his eldest son.

Richard Markham, the co- owner of KokoMana, a small company that makes chocolate on a farm on the island, said there were broken trees everywhere and the power was out.

“I went out this morning to visit some of our staff a mile from where I live. It was devastatio­n,” he said. “The hillsides and the fields are strewn with ripped-off roofing iron. It’s pretty shocking.”

The storm destroyed many homes on the island, which is Fiji’s second-largest.

Saras Wati, a resident of a town hit by the cyclone, said it ripped the roof off her home.

“The house was shaking up and down. It was shaking so bad. All of a sudden the roof came up,” Wati said. “We ran out of the house.”

Wati said the house is soaked but her family is trying to stay there, squeezed into one bedroom.

The eye of the storm moved through Vanua Levu starting about 6 p.m. Thursday. It missed the capital city, Suva, and the major tourist hub of Nadi on Fiji’s largest island, Viti Levu.

Authoritie­s said the cyclone was weakening Friday as it moved southeast over some of Fiji’s outer islands.

However, they warned of danger from flooding. Fiji’s government said the Rewa River was rising, with rain continuing intermitte­ntly. The Rewa skirts Suva and runs through Nausori, where Suva’s airport is located.

Many had worried the storm could rival the destructio­n caused by Cyclone Winston, which killed 44 people and caused widespread damage in 2016.

The Fiji Times newspaper reported Yasa destroyed about 20 homes and a community hall in the village of Tiliva and that homes in other villages had also been damaged or destroyed.

Authoritie­s had warned the cyclone would hit with sustained winds of up to 155 mph, but by Friday the winds had dropped to about half that speed.

The storm prompted more than 20,000 people to move into government evacuation centers. It also downed power lines, cut communicat­ions, and caused flash flooding and road closures.

Before the cyclone hit, authoritie­s had imposed an overnight curfew throughout the nation and declared a state of natural disaster. They were imposing another curfew Friday night.

Located about one-third of the way from New Zealand to Hawaii, Fiji has a population of about 930,000 people.

 ?? (AP/Aileen Torres-Bennett) ?? Clouds hover as intermitte­nt rain falls and wind blows Friday at Suva Harbour in Fiji after a destructiv­e Cyclone Yasa blasted the island nation.
(AP/Aileen Torres-Bennett) Clouds hover as intermitte­nt rain falls and wind blows Friday at Suva Harbour in Fiji after a destructiv­e Cyclone Yasa blasted the island nation.

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