Cyclone hits Kenya and Tanzania, already hit by floods

Cyclone hits Kenya and Tanzania, already hit by floods
Cyclone hits Kenya and Tanzania, already hit by floods

Alert in two neighboring countries in East Africa. Beaches are deserted and many shops closed Saturday in Kenya and Tanzania as heavy rains and tropical cyclone winds batter coastal areas.

Kenya and Tanzania are on alert for Cyclone Hidaya after weeks of torrential rains and floods which ravaged many parts of East Africa and left more than 400 dead.

But no casualties or damage had been reported as of Saturday afternoon as the cyclone made landfall in Tanzania from the Indian Ocean.

“It’s so strange today to see so few people at the beach, we are used to seeing crowds especially during the weekend,” said Yusuf Hassan, a resident of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania’s main city. . ” People are scared “.

Waves of more than two meters

The Kenyan meteorological department said in a bulletin on Saturday that the effects of the cyclone were already being felt offshore, with winds exceeding 75 km/h and waves of more than 2 m.

Heavy rainfall along the Indian Ocean coast is expected from Sunday and is expected to intensify over the next two days, it warned.

observations suggest that tropical cyclone Hidaya made landfall on the Tanzanian coast. But there is another depression developing behind it,” he added. Tanzanian authorities did not immediately confirm.

Kenyan Interior Minister Kithure Kindiki announced a ban on all beach, swimming and fishing activities.

Calls for caution

The Tanzania Meteorological Authority noted strong winds and heavy rainfall along the coasts overnight on Saturday.

In the Mtwara region, 75.5 mm of fell in 12 hours, while the average rainfall for the month of May is 54 mm. The Tanzanian agency asked residents in risk areas and people working in the sector to take “maximum precautions”.

The cyclone is expected to peak with gusts of 165 km/h upon landfall, the regional climate center ICPAC said on Friday.

In the Zanzibar archipelago, all maritime transport has been suspended. “We think it is not safe to travel in such conditions caused by the cyclone,” the director general of the Zanzibar Maritime Authority, Sheikha Ahmed Mohamed, told AFP.

“Terrible” weather forecast

The cyclone season in the southwest Indian Ocean usually lasts from November to April and sees around a dozen storms each year.

Kenyan President William Ruto on Friday deemed the weather forecasts “terrible” for the country, which will face the first cyclone in its history, and postponed indefinitely the reopening of schools scheduled for Monday.

About 400 people have been killed in East Africa since March and tens of thousands have been displaced by torrential rains that have caused floods and landslides, swept away homes and destroyed roads and bridges.

In Kenya, during this period, at least 210 people died and nearly 100 others were missing while 165,000 people were displaced, according to official figures. “No corner of our country has been spared from this devastation,” summarized the president.

The Interior Ministry on Thursday ordered anyone living near large rivers or near 178 “dams or reservoirs filled or almost filled with water” to evacuate the area within 24 hours. Kithure Kindiki said 138 camps had been set up to provide temporary shelter for more than 62,000 people displaced by the floodwaters.

Members of the opposition and civil society accused the government of unpreparedness in handling the crisis despite weather warnings. At least 155 people have died in Tanzania in floods and landslides.

East Africa is very vulnerable to climate change and rainfall in the region this year has been amplified by El Niño, a natural climate phenomenon generally associated with global warming, which causes droughts in some parts of the world and heavy rains. abundant elsewhere.

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