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Cyclone Chido: Rescue workers search Mayotte for survivors – as authorities fear food and water is running out

Emergency workers are searching for survivors on the island of Mayotte after it was struck by Cyclone Chido, as officials warn that food and water are running out.

Winds reached above 124mph on the archipelago – France’s poorest region, located nearly 5,000 miles from Paris in the Indian Ocean – during the cyclone that struck over the weekend.

Authorities have warned it could take days to count the number of people to have died, with local TV station Mayotte la 1ere reporting that at least 20 people have died.

But many more people are feared dead, with Mayotte Prefect Francois-Xavier Bieuville telling local TV on Sunday: “I think there are some several hundred dead, maybe we’ll get close to a thousand, even thousands… given the violence of this event.”

However, he said it was currently “extremely difficult” to get an exact number.

The French Red Cross described the devastation as “unimaginable” and said more than 20 tons of supplies – including drinking water, hygiene kits and buckets to boil water – were being shipped in from nearby Reunion.

It added it was impossible to give an exact number of victims. Geneviève Darrieussecq, the French health minister, also said any figures were likely to be major underestimates “compared to the scale of the disaster”.

Image:
Rescue workers have been rushed to Mayotte after Cyclone Chido struck. Pic: UIISC7/Securite Civile/Reuters

With homes demolished and debris strewn by the cyclone, France scrambled ships and army aircraft to rush rescue workers and aid to the territory.

Authorities have used military-style vehicles to clear trees from roads so rescuers and supplies could reach those in need.

But some areas of the island have been left inaccessible because of the damage. Mayotte’s main hospital, as well as its only airport, also suffered extensive damage.

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Why was Mayotte so badly hit?

‘There’s no water’

Many residents have also been left without power and communications have been down in large parts of the country.

Authorities are also becoming concerned about a shortage of drinking water, with Mayotte senator Salama Ramia telling local outlet BFM-TV that more aid is needed.

“There’s no water, no electricity,” she said. “Hunger is starting to rise.

“It’s urgent that aid arrives, especially when you see children, babies, to whom we have nothing concrete to offer.”

The clean up begins in storm-hit Mayotte.
Pic: UIISC7/Securite Civile/Reuters
Image:
Winds reached above 124mph in Mayotte over the weekend.
Pic: UIISC7/Securite Civile/Reuters

Residents have also spoken about the scale of the damage, with Camille Cozon Abdourazak telling Reuters: “It really is a war landscape.

“I don’t recognise anything any more. There’s not even a tree left, the hills, there’s not a blade of grass, it’s extraordinary.”

Rescue workers transport a container in storm-hit Mayotte,
Pic: UIISC7/Securite Civile/Reuters
Image:
Local senator Salama Ramia has warned ‘there’s no water’ and that ‘hunger is starting to rise’. Pic: UIISC7/Securite Civile/Reuters

Another resident, Abdoulhamidi, told the Associated Press: “Nobody believed it would be that big.

“Those who live in bangas (makeshift homes) stayed in despite the cyclone, fearing their homes would be looted.”

What are cyclones, hurricanes and typhoons?

All three storms are powerful tropical cyclones which are given a different name depending on where they are in the world.

Meteorologists use the term tropical cyclone to describe a rotating, organised system of clouds and thunderstorms that originate over tropical or subtropical waters and have closed, low-level circulation and are fed by warm air.

The storm is referred to as either a cyclone, a hurricane or a typhoon once it reaches maximum sustained winds of 74mph or higher.

The term cyclone is used when the storms occur in the South Pacific and Indian Ocean.

They are referred to as typhoons when they appear in the Northwest Pacific.

The word hurricane is used when the storms appear in the North Atlantic, central North Pacific and eastern North Pacific.

It comes as French President Emmanuel Macron held an emergency meeting on Mayotte in Paris, declaring a national day of mourning over the cyclone.

He said he plans to visit the overseas territory in the coming days “to support our fellow citizens, civil servants and the emergency services”.

The wreckage of a car lies outside a home, in the aftermath of Cyclone Chido, within Labattoir, in Mayotte.
Pic: Reuters
Image:
Officials fear several thousand people could have been killed in the cyclone. Pic: Reuters

Three dead in Mozambique

Already named the worst cyclone to hit Mayotte in nearly a century by weather service Meteo France, Chico also struck the nearby islands of Comoros and Madagascar on Saturday.

The cyclone then continued west and made landfall in Mozambique on Sunday.

While it quickly weakened and was reclassified as a tropical storm, local news outlets report that at least three people died in the north of the country.

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Several homes in Mozambique were also destroyed, as aid agencies warn more than two million people could be affected.

The European Parliament observed a minute of silence for the victims – before the chamber’s president Roberta Metsola vowed support for the region.

“Mayotte is Europe, and Europe will not abandon you,” she said.

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