Madagascar has started evacuating thousands of people from flooded areas after storm waters broke dykes as the country reeled from the impact of Cyclone Enawo.
Enawo hit Madagascarโs vanilla-producing northeastern coast on Tuesday morning, destroying roads and cutting off communications with Antalaha district, which has a population of 230,000 people.
Five people were confirmed killed and seven injured late on Wednesday, while an estimated 10,000 have been displaced by what was one of Madagascarโs worst storms in years.
By Thursday, the cycloneโs power had โsignificantly weakenedโ according to a bulletin from the countryโs meteorological office, with the storm moving at speeds of 45-50 kph.
The meteorological office said Enawo was 340 km (210 miles) south of the capital Antananarivo early on Thursday.
Ndranto Rakotonanahary, a government official in the Analamanga region, told reporters on Thursday that storm waters had made โa small break in the dykes at Imamba and Sisaony (rivers) and some people have been displacedโ.
He said technicians from the countryโs disaster management department โare on the ground to evacuate peopleโ.
Another official in the Fokontany region said the cyclone had triggered landslides and residents there were also being evacuated.
A statement from the presidency on released Thursday evening said speedboats had been dispatched to help with evacuations in parts of the capital where dykes had been breached.
An estimated 52,000 people were displaced or had their property damaged by Enawo while distribution of rice, corn and baby food had been begun in parts of Antananarivo, the statement added.
Officials have said a full assessment of the scale of Enawoโs destruction was still under way.
Source: Reuters