Cyclone-hit Vanuatu declares state of emergency

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 15 Maret 2015 | 22.40

The first shipments of aid have landed in Vanuatu as authorities declared a state of emergency and global relief agencies geared up after a "monster" cyclone tore through the vulnerable Pacific island nation.

With winds of more than 300km/ph, Cyclone Pam razed homes, smashed boats and destroyed crops as it struck late on Friday and into yesterday.

Aid workers described the situation as catastrophic.

The official count of confirmed deaths was at eight with 20 people injured. But those numbers were almost certain to rise as rescuers reached the low-lying archipelago's outlying islands.

Vanuatu's National Disaster Management Office said the government still had no word from outside the capital.

"Our communication link is still down," said Paolo Malatu, a relief official at the office.

"We haven't got any information from outside Port Vila."

"The biggest need at the moment is shelter and food and wash kits," Mr Malatu said.

Witnesses described sea surges of up to eight metres and flooding throughout Port Vila after the category five cyclone hit.

Satellite images showed a menacing spiral of storm covering virtually the whole archipelago as it swirled around its eye.

Residents said the storm sounded like a freight train. Port Vila, the capital, was strewn with debris and looked as if a bomb had gone off.

President Baldwin Lonsdale, who happened to be at a disaster risk conference in Japan on Saturday, appealed to the world to "give a lending hand". Mr Lonsdale, who was trying to reach home on Sunday, told the BBC the storm was like a monster.

"Most of the buildings have been destroyed, most houses have been destroyed, schools, health facilities have been destroyed," he told the BBC, adding that his people were "hopeless" and in a state of panic.

Kris Paraskevas, a consultant from Melbourne who has lived in Port Vila for three years, said the situation was catastrophic.

"The villages are no good. Many houses were just poles and tin or thatch. There's nothing left, people are just sitting in rubble," Paraskevas said.

Formerly known as the New Hebrides, Vanuatu is sprawling cluster of 83 islands and 260,000 people, 2,000km northeast of the Australian city of Brisbane.

It is among the world's poorest countries and highly prone to natural disasters, such as earthquakes, tsunamis and storms.

Aid officials said the storm was comparable in strength to Typhoon Haiyan, which hit the Philippines in 2013 and killed more than 6,000 people, and looked set to be one of the worst natural disasters the Pacific region has ever experienced.

First aid flights land

Aid flights, including a New Zealand military Hercules aircraft carrying eight tonnes of supplies and an initial team, began to land as Port Vila's airport partially reopened.

Australia sent two military aircraft including one with medical experts, search and rescue teams and emergency supplies while a U.N. team was also due in Port Vila on Sunday with members drawn from as far away as Europe.

Oxfam's country manager Colin Collett van Rooyen said Vanuatu's outlying islands were particularly vulnerable.

"We are talking about islands that are remote and really small, with none of what we would call modern infrastructure," he said.

"We anticipate that that will go higher," he said, referring to the confirmed death toll of eight.

Sune Gudnitz, regional head of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said he was particularly worried about the densely populated volcanic island of Tanna in the south.

Nothing had been heard from the island, which has a population of about 29,000 people, he said.

Australia has promised AUS$5m in aid, while Britain, which jointly ruled Vanuatu with France until independence in 1980, has offered up to £2m in assistance.

The World Bank said it was exploring a swift insurance payout to the government.

"We will also be deploying humanitarian supplies to provide support for up to 5,000 people in the form of water, sanitation and shelter," Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop told reporters in Perth.

Aurelia Balpe, regional head of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, told Reuters Vanuatu's medical system was poorly equipped to handle such a disaster.

"The country mostly relies on first aid posts and the supplies in the clinics are probably just antibiotics and pain relief."

On Sunday, Pam was moving away to the southeast, and New Zealand's northern regions were starting to feel its effects. Authorities there were warning the public to prepare for damaging winds, heavy rain and massive seas.


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