The Guardian (USA)

Weather tracker: Cyclone Gamane unexpected­ly veers into Madagascar

- Daniel Harris

Madagascar was unexpected­ly hit by Cyclone Gamane as it veered into the island country’s northern district of Vohemar during the early hours of Wednesday, resulting in at least 11 deaths.

The storm was expected to skim the coast, but it changed course and went into the island causing disruption to 7,000 people with hundreds of homes destroyed. The slow-moving nature of the storm exacerbate­d its impact, with persistent rainfall and prolonged strong winds causing devastatio­n to infrastruc­ture and significan­t flooding. The cyclone moved across the island with an average wind speed of 93mph (150km/h) while gusts of up to 130mph were recorded, making it a category 1 storm on the Saffir-Simpson scale. Cyclone Gamane has since weakened to a tropical storm and is expected to clear the island on Friday.

In the same week, significan­t flash floods and a landslide in Indonesia left at least 19 people dead with seven others missing. Mud, rocks and uprooted trees crashed down a mountainsi­de on the island of Sumatra, engulfing villages in the western Pesisier

Selatan district late last Friday after torrential rains. Rescue operations were disrupted by power cuts as more than 80,000 people fled to temporary government shelters.

The Iberian peninsula experience­d unseasonab­ly high temperatur­es last week caused by hot southerly winds, known as the Calima, which also brought up a significan­t amount of dust from the Sahara. This resulted in orange-coloured skies and degraded air quality on 21 March. Nasa’s Terra satellite captured images of dust across the peninsula the next day, as snowy slopes at a ski resort near Granada were tinged brown, while other areas experience­d murky rain. Fresher, maritime air has since moved in across the peninsula clearing the dust farther east across the Mediterran­ean into Greece.

People in Athens woke up to a thick haze on Thursday. The persistent strong southerly winds moved east across the Mediterran­ean, bringing dust from the Sahara across Greece. These winds also resulted in unusually high temperatur­es: Wednesday recorded the highest March temperatur­e since 2009 in central Athens with a high of 25.3C. Temperatur­es at Heraklion airport, Crete, soared to 30C on the same day, the hottest March temperatur­e there since 2008.

 ?? ?? Cyclone Gamane was initially expected to skim the coast of Madagascar. Photograph: Cyclocane
Cyclone Gamane was initially expected to skim the coast of Madagascar. Photograph: Cyclocane

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