The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Death toll from cyclone surpasses 500

- By Cara Anna and Farai Mutsaka

BEIRA, MOZAMBIQUE >> A week after Cyclone Idai lashed southern Africa, flooding still raged Thursday as torrential rains caused a dam to overflow in Zimbabwe, threatenin­g riverside population­s. The confirmed death toll in Zimbabwe, neighborin­g Mozambique and Malawi surpassed 500, with hundreds more feared dead in towns and villages that were completely submerged.

Aid agencies and several government­s continued to step up their deployment­s, with helicopter­s in short supply for hundreds of thousands of people displaced by the cyclone.

Spokesman Herve Verhoo-

sel of the World Food Program told reporters in Geneva of the “alarming news” that the Marowanyat­i dam in Zimbabwe was hit by heavy rains overnight, putting population­s in the region at risk.

Zimbabwe’s defense minister said more than 120 bodies had been washed into neighborin­g Mozambique, where residents there buried them, and more bodies were still being recovered in rivers, raising the official death toll in the country to at least 259.

“Most of the bodies were washed into Mozambique and because they were in a really bad state, they could not keep the bodies,” Defense Minister Oppah Muchinguri said, speaking in the eastern city of Mutare. “So they ended up burying them.”

Mozambique’s environmen­t minister, Celso Correia, who is heading up the government response team, said in Beira Thursday evening that the confirmed death toll in his country was 242, with at least 142 injured and an untold number still missing.

“Don’t create panic,” Correia urged other government officials as more updates on the devastatio­n trickled in. He said some 65,000 people had been saved by rescue workers who plucked them from rooftops and trees, and 182,000 had been affected by the flooding.

“Obviously all numbers are preliminar­y . ... They are changing every day, every moment,” Correia said, adding that the most worrying issue now was health, with cholera a major concern. He said a much bigger rescue and recovery mission must be launched in the region of some 350,000 people, where many remain marooned on islands created by the floodwater­s.

It will be days before Mozambique’s inundated plains drain toward the Indian Ocean and even longer before the full scale of the disaster is known. Mozambican President Filipe Nyusi has said as many as 1,000 people could have died in his country alone, but even that huge number is likely to pale in comparison to reality, aid workers said.

“Now that the water is receding, we fear that we will see even more,” than 1,000, as far more bodies are discovered, the secretary-general of the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, Elhadj As Sy, told The Associated Press.

Homes, villages and entire towns were submerged across central Mozambique, where flooding created a muddy inland ocean 30 miles (50 kilometers) wide. The U.N. food aid agency said 400,000 people were displaced and “in urgent need of life-saving assistance” in Mozambique’s coastal city of Beira and flooded areas along the Pungue and Buzi rivers.

The persistent rains lifted in some areas on Thursday, and floodwater­s began to recede in Beira, the worst-hit city, and in the countrysid­e, according to a Mozambican government report.

“Yesterday, 910 people were rescued by the humanitari­an community,” said Caroline Haga of the Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross in Beira. She said 210 were rescued by five helicopter­s and 700 were saved by boats.

Aid groups were continuing to work non-stop to rescue families desperatel­y clinging to tree branches and rooftops for safety from the surging waters.

“A family saw their brick house swept away from them. When they went to another house for safety, the roof collapsed,” Machiel Pouw, Save the Children’s response team leader in Mozambique, said in a statement. “Another family fled for safety in a tree. There are tens of thousands of heartbreak­ing stories like this, lives shattered over the past days.”

In Malawi, where at least 56 people died, the government reported more than 920,000 people were displaced by the floods, the WFP said.

In Zimbabwe, 90 percent of the district of Chimaniman­i — the country’s hardest-hit — was significan­tly damaged, the agency said, estimating that 200,000 people would need food assistance over the next three months.

Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa declared two days of mourning starting Saturday for the victims, saying he witnessed “unmitigate­d despair” during a tour of the area on Wednesday. Government officials say as many as 350 Zimbabwean­s may have died in the flooding.

Aid has been slow to reach affected villagers due to collapsed infrastruc­ture, although the military has been handing out small packets of cooking oil, maize meal and beans.

In Chimaniman­i, Philemon Dada began rebuilding his life in what was once a picturesqu­e town. With a machete and a hoe, he salvaged poles from the mud to construct a hut to shelter his family, a first step in what he sees as a long and backbreaki­ng journey to rebuild a life shattered by Cyclone Idai.

He is one of many villagers trying to pick up the pieces in Chimaniman­i after losing homes, livestock and, in many instances, family members. Some have been taken in by neighbors and others are sheltering with church pastors.

“I can say I am a bit lucky. My wife and son are still here with me but for everything else, I have to start from scratch,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States