300 families missing after storm hits Mozambique

 

The families went missing in the districts of Mocuba, Milanje, Namarroi, and Gile, after their homes were swept away by the raging waters.

A team from the government, involving personnel from the country’s natural disasters office, the police and the army are looking for the missing ones.

The calamity has cut off several regions of Zambezia from the outside world, according to Rita Almeida, spokesperson for the National Disasters Management Technical Council (CTGC).

So far this year at least six people have died in severe storms in Mozambique and 572 have been displaced from their homes, she said. The six confirmed deaths were all reported from the northern city of Nampula. Some of the victims were drowned and others were electrocuted, when cables were blown down by strong winds.

The mayor of Nampula, Castro Namuaca, explained that some Nampula neighbourhoods, such as Namutequeliua and Muatala are crossed by rivers, which people walk across without any difficulty in the dry season.

But they become raging torrents during the rains. “Some people were not sufficiently cautious, and were swept away by the waters,”  said Namuaca.

According to Almeida, two other deaths have been reported, but have not yet confirmed them.

She said 447 people have been displaced in Panda, and 45 in Homoine, both districts in the southern province of Inhambane.

These CTGC figures do not take account of the destruction of houses in Nampula. According to the municipal authorities, over 1 000 houses built of flimsy materials, state buildings and electricity transformers were damaged or destroyed.

The City Council is using sheets of tarpaulin to improvise shelter for those who have lost their homes.

The damage to the electricity supply occurred mostly in parts of the city that are plagued with illegal, clandestine connections to the grid, particularly the neighbourhood of Namicopo.

The Mozambican Electricity Company (EDM) said it will take $150 000  to install a reliable electricity network in Namicopo.

The CTGC declared an “orange alert” across the country on Friday, and is preparing for possible flooding in the main river basins.

The National Water Board (DNA) has warned of significant rises in the levels of the Zambezi and Buzi rivers in the centre of the country, the Messalo in the north and the Inhanombe in the south.

The Buzi reached flood alert level at Goonda, in Sofala province, on Sunday night, and the flood surge is now travelling downstream towards Buzi town.

The Zambezi is above flood alert level at Caia and Marromeu, on its lower stretches. The DNA also warned that one of the           major rivers in the south of the country,  Save, may reach flood alert level at Massangena, in Gaza province, on Tuesday or Wednesday.

It is recommending that people take precautions, such as moving equipment and property away from river banks, and avoiding crossing rivers. — Xinhua.

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