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Cyclone Idai's death toll nears 1,000 in Mozambique, Zimbabwe
by Staff Writers
Harare (AFP) April 10, 2019

The death toll from Cyclone Idai, which devastated Mozambique and Zimbabwe last month, is nearing 1,000, according to the latest figures released by the two governments.

Zimbabwe on Tuesday updated its toll to 344 while Mozambique said recorded fatalities stood at 602, taking the combined tally to 946.

Zimbabwean Information Minister Monica Mutsvangwa told reporters that 257 people listed as missing when heavy winds and floods struck the country on the night of March 14-15 were now considered dead.

"The search and recovery process is now confined to recovery. The missing persons can now be presumed dead," she said.

More than two million people -- 1.85 million of them in Mozambique -- were affected by Idai.

The UN has described the cyclone as "one of the deadliest storms on record" in the southern hemisphere."

It is seeking $282 million (251 million euros) to fund emergency assistance over the next three months.

Before the cyclone hit, floods in Malawi affected about 900,000 people and claimed 60 lives, according to the government.


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SHAKE AND BLOW
After cyclone ruin, back to square one for Mozambique's Beira
Maputo (AFP) April 9, 2019
Daviz Simango, mayor of Beira on the Mozambican coast, had worked to shore up the city's climate defences, drawing on World Bank help to build deterrents against rising seas, flooding and storms. But in just a few hours last month, Cyclone Idai devastated the city of half-a-million people, wiping out his efforts. Packing winds twice the speed Beira was built to withstand, the superstorm swamped the city's drainage system, overwhelmed its floodgates and mocked its brand-new basin, designed to hol ... read more

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