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Cyclone Kenneth “poses no threat to Southern Africa at this stage”

According to Storm Report SA, Cyclone Kenneth poses no threat to Southern Africa at this stage as its trajectory will see the Comores Islands bearing the brunt of the cyclone.

POLOKWANE – As Mozambique picks up the pieces after the catastrophic Tropical Cyclone Idai brought its greatest natural disaster in history, Tropical Cyclone Kenneth is making its way towards the country.

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According to Storm Report SA, Cyclone Kenneth poses no threat to Southern Africa at this stage as its trajectory will see the Comores Islands bearing the brunt of the cyclone. As a result, a red alert has been issued for the Comores and Mozambique and people in these areas have been encouraged to evacuate to safer grounds.

Photo: Storm Report SA

“Kenneth moves at 15 km/ph with winds of 194 km/ph and it is set to rapidly intensify over the course of Wednesday due to warm sea surface temperatures. Upon landfall, it is set to be a category 2 cyclone,” Storm Report SA said.

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The report added that the storm will make landfall tomorrow (Thursday), when a strong south-easterly wind will begin to build up, with scattered torrential rain and thunder storms developing in the far north-eastern segment of the province of Cabo Delgado. “Unfortunately, this storm looks set to move slightly southward and then stall, yielding three to four days of floods for the northern regions of Cabo Delgado and Niassa.”

According to Weather Underground, if Kenneth enters a period of rapid intensification, it could become even stronger.
“Kenneth will be a very wet and slow-moving storm at landfall. The storm is expected to meander just inland after landfall, keeping a portion of its circulation over water and thus allowing the storm to dump potentially catastrophic rainfall amounts over northern Mozambique.”
With Cyclone Idai having taken over 1 000 lives in Mozambique, the double impact of both Idai and Kenneth would be unprecedented as the country has never been hit by two storms of at least Category 2 strength in the same year.
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Raeesa Sempe

Raeesa Sempe is a Caxton Award-winning Digital Editor with nine years’ experience in the industry. She holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Media Studies from the University of the Witwatersrand and started her journey as a community journalist for the Polokwane Review in 2015. She then became the online journalist for the Review in 2016 where she excelled in solidifying the Review’s digital footprint through Facebook lives, content creation and marketing campaigns. Raeesa then moved on to become the News Editor of the Bonus Review in 2019 and scooped up the Editorial Employee of the Year award in the same year. She is the current Digital Editor of the Polokwane Review-Observer, a position she takes pride in. Raeesa is married with one child and enjoys spending time with friends, listening to music and baking – when she has the time. “I still believe that if your aim is to change the world, journalism is a more immediate short-term weapon." – Tom Stoppard

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