Death toll from Cyclone Batsirai in Madagascar rises to 80, state agency says

A state agency has reported that the death toll from Cyclone Batsirai has more than doubled, while tens of thousands of people have been left with destroyed or damaged homes.

People sheltering in a public elementary school as cyclone Batsirai is expected to hit Madagascar, in Antananarivo, Madagascar, 5 February 2022.

People sheltering in a public elementary school as cyclone Batsirai is expected to hit Madagascar, in Antananarivo, Madagascar, 5 February 2022. Source: AAP

The death toll from Cyclone Batsirai in Madagascar rose to 80 from a previously reported 29, the state disaster relief agency said on Wednesday as information continued to filter in from areas of the country that were badly affected.

The cyclone slammed into the large Indian Ocean island late on Saturday, knocking down houses and electricity lines as it battered the southeastern coast until it moved away late on Sunday, leaving 91,000 people with destroyed or damaged homes.

The disaster relief agency said that 60 of the deaths had occurred in a single area, the Ikongo district in southeast Madagascar. It said it was still collecting details about what had happened in Ikongo.
A handout satellite image shows widespread flooding and significant building damage following cyclone Batsirai, in Nosy Varika, Madagascar, 07 February.
A handout satellite image shows widespread flooding and significant building damage following cyclone Batsirai, in Nosy Varika, Madagascar, 07 February. Source: AAP via Mazar Technologies
A member of parliament representing the district had previously said the death toll was high there, and that most victims had drowned or been crushed when their houses collapsed.

Batsirai was Madagascar's second destructive storm in two weeks, after Cyclone Ana killed 55 people and displaced 130,000 in a different area of the country, further north.

The island nation, which has a population of nearly 30 million, was already struggling with food shortages in the south, a consequence of a severe and prolonged drought.
The World Food Programme said Batsirai had made the situation worse by destroying crops of rice, fruits and vegetables that were just two weeks away from harvest.

The cyclone caused widespread flooding and made 12 roads and 14 bridges impassable, cutting off some of the worst affected areas and impeding efforts to bring relief to local communities.


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Published 10 February 2022 6:52am
Source: Reuters, SBS


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