The death toll from a tropical storm that struck three African countries climbed to 80 Thursday as emergency efforts continued to repair damaged infrastructure and help tens of thousands of victims.
Tropical Storm Ana hit Madagascar on Monday and made landfall in northern Mozambique, bringing widespread flooding and destroying roughly 600,000 hectares (1.48 million acres) of agriculture crops, especially in Malawi’s southern districts.
Madagascar’s National Bureau of Risk and Disaster Management reported 41 dead, with 32 deaths in the Analamanga region, including seven people who died following the collapse of a car park in Ankadifotsy. The bureau reported 422 classrooms damaged and 25 other schools destroyed across the country.
In Mozambique, 18 people were killed, while in Malawi, the tropical storm left a death toll of 19 people.
Rescue workers and authorities in the three countries were still assessing the full extent of the damage. Tens of thousands of homes were ruined as some collapsed under the heavy rain. Bridges were washed away by flooded rivers, leaving several hectares of crops submerged and livestock drowned.
In Madagascar, the number of displaced across the country amounted to 110,394 people from 24,050 households. In the capital Antananarivo, schools and gyms were turned into emergency shelters.
In northern and central Mozambique, the storm destroyed infrastructure including 10,000 homes, dozens of schools, hospitals and power lines.
In Malawi, meanwhile, President Lazarus Chakwera on Thursday declared a state of disaster in the country’s south, where the tropical storm wreaked havoc.He extended his condolences to the families of the people who lost their lives in flood-related incidents. He also appealed for help from both local and international donors.
Earlier, the disaster management department said some 216,972 people have become homeless and 107 were injured as Tropical Storm Ana hit the southern part of the country. The southeast African nation of over 20 million people also plunged into darkness after floods damaged part of the country’s main hydropower plant, forcing it to shut down.
Water pumping stations into cities have stopped working due to the lack of power, resulting in water shortages in all major cities. The Ministry of Education temporarily suspended classes at all public schools in the southern region to protect the lives of students in the affected areas. Heavy damage has also been caused to infrastructure such as roads, bridges and buildings.
Southern Africa, and especially Mozambique and Malawi, have suffered repeated destructive storms in recent years attributable to climate change, which has made weather-related disasters more frequent.
In 2009, Cyclone Ida killed 59 and affected 900,000 people in Malawi.