Cyclone Kenneth has now claimed six lives, with number expected to rise
The storm is one of the most powerful to ever hit this part of Africa.
This handout picture taken on April 25, 2019 and provided by the World Food Programme shows a damaged house in Cabo Delgado, Mozambique, where cyclone Kenneth is expected. (Photo by STRINGER / WFP / AFP)
According to the latest report provided by Gauteng Weather, the cyclone wreaking havoc across northern Mozambique and the Comoros islands has claimed three lives in each country.
Hundreds of people have been injured, with tens of thousands now in need of additional aid and homes and infrastructure, including hospitals, damaged.
🌀#CYCLONEKENNETH UPDATE
🇲🇿Mozambique
⚰️At least 3 dead with rising toll
🧑🏿16,700+ people affected
🏚Nearly 3,500 home damaged
🏥3 hospitals destroyed
🍎31 classrooms damaged🇰🇲Comoros
⚰️3 dead
🚑100 injured
🌽150,000 in need of aid, 67,800 of them kids
🏚20,000 with no shelter— Gauteng Weather (@tWeatherSA) April 27, 2019
The powerful cyclone started pounding northern Mozambique on Thursday, wrecking homes and communications, barely a month after the country was hit by one of the worst storms in its history.
Cyclone Kenneth, a Category Three storm on the hurricane scale, made landfall in Cabo Delgado province late Thursday after swiping the Comoros islands.
Comores and Mozambique in dire need of assistance after deadly Cyclone Kenneth https://t.co/wor0Hnk0VQ pic.twitter.com/mjWaQ40Fbv
— eTurboNews | Trends | Travel News (@eTurboNews) April 27, 2019
By mid-Friday, its peak winds of 160 kilometres an hour had fallen back to about 70kph, according to the national meteorological institute.
But heavy rains were forecast over the next 24 hours, fuelling the risks of floods and mudslides in the poor region.
#NOAA20 captured this view of Tropical Cyclone #Kenneth with its VIIRS day-night band just hours after the Cat. 4 storm roared ashore Thursday. Kenneth is the first storm to make landfall over Mozambique’s Cabo Delgado province in the last 60 years. More: https://t.co/mKoPdzTTA6 pic.twitter.com/pWUgiTKuCE
— NOAA Satellites (@NOAASatellites) April 26, 2019
Mozambique’s emergency agency, the INGC, reported a death caused by a falling coconut tree in the port city of Pemba, Cabo Delgado’s provincial capital, along with severe flooding, mudslides and widespread power outages.
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) reported “heavy damage” and wrecked homes in some coastal towns along the northern coast, while communication lines in Macomia and Muidumbe remain down.
In many affected communities, areas “are prone to flooding and landslides in normal rainfall, and this is far from a normal situation,” it warned.
Two major storms in two months. Mozambique usually only expects one major storm per decade.
More than 30,000 people were evacuated from high-risk areas ahead of Tropical Cyclone Kenneth and now as many as 70,000 people are still at risk https://t.co/Y34hDT7fW5 pic.twitter.com/NbnYkvNOVg
— CNN (@CNN) April 26, 2019
‘Biblical’
On the tourist island of Ibo, home to 6,000 people, 90 percent of homes had been flattened, according to a spokesman for the INGC, Antonio Beleza.
“It looks like the island has been bombed… It is biblical,” said a South African tour operator and owner of a hotel on Ibo, Kevin Record.
Communities in central Mozambique are still reeling from Cyclone Idai, which hit on the night of March 14-15, causing killer floods that swept away homes, roads and bridges.
The storm also smashed into Zimbabwe and Malawi. In the three countries, more than a thousand lives were lost, and damage is estimated at around $2 billion (1.8 billion euros).
The UN World Food Programme (WFP) on Thursday said Kenneth was expected to dump over 600 millimetres (almost 24 inches) of rain over the next few days in some areas.
By way of comparison, this would be nearly double the amount that fell on the central city of Beira during Cyclone Idai — a downpour that turned parts of the region into an inland sea.
Cyclone Kenneth killed at least 3 people in Mozambique. The country is still recovering from Cyclone Idai which:
– killed 600+ people there
– displaced tens of thousands
– left almost 2M people in urgent need of aid pic.twitter.com/GvQ0q5Yhhc— AJ+ (@ajplus) April 26, 2019
‘Additional blow’
“Although floodwaters have receded in most areas it (Idai) affected, access is still a challenge as infrastructure was severely compromised,” the WFP warned.
“This second cyclone is an additional blow for the people of Mozambique and bound to complicate the humanitarian response.”
The UN agency added that it had already provided food aid to 1.3 million people after Idai.
The government has made public buildings including schools available to people seeking shelter and the WFP has “pre-positioned” over 500 tonnes of food.
A helicopter is expected to arrived in Cabo Delgado when weather conditions allow as roads are expected to be impassable because of flooding, making food delivery difficult.
Forecasters at Meteo-France warned that Kenneth could trigger waves off Mozambique’s northeastern shore as much as five metres (16 feet) higher than usual.
Tanzania worried
In neighbouring Tanzania, the authorities issued red alerts to warn of the dangers from rain, floods and landslides.
The provinces of Mtwara, Lindi and Ruvuma were at highest risk, the country’s meteorological agency said.
Residents in Mtwara were leaving the coastal enclave with their families, some on foot, for emergency shelters, witnesses told AFP by phone.
Gelasius Byakanwa, the governor of Mtwara, ordered schools closed in his province and asked “students to stay home and employees not to go to their offices”.
In Geneva, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said Mozambique’s back-to-back cyclones were unprecedented.
“There is no record of two storms of such intensity striking Mozambique in the same season,” the UN’s weather agency said.
A fact-finding WMO mission in Mozambique will look at the “impact of climate change and sea-level rise on Mozambique’s resilience” to extreme weather, it said.
Climate change has made cyclones more damaging, as rising sea levels have increased the strength of storm surges, WMO spokeswoman Clare Nullis told AFP.
Higher or more powerful waves are driven towards the shore, potentially posing a greater risk for coastal-dwelling populations.
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