
This handout photograph taken and distributed by UNICEF on March 12, 2023 shows people walking along a street damaged by the impact of Cyclone Freddy in the city of Quelimane. - Tropical cyclone Freddy, which made landfall in Mozambique overnight from March 11, 2023 to March 12, 2023 for the second time in two weeks, killed at least one person on its return and displaced dozens, according to an initial report from local authorities on March 12, 2023. Freddy had already killed 10 people in the southern African country during his first visit at the end of February and 17 in total in Madagascar where he also struck twice, describing a looping trajectory rarely known to meteorologists. (Photo by Alfredo ZUNIGA / UNICEF / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO /UNICEF/Alfredo Zuniga " - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS
Maputo, 21 Jan (AIM) – The passage of Cyclone Dikeledi has caused the death of 11 people in the northern Mozambican province of Nampula, according to the latest official figures issued by the country’s relief agency, the National Disaster Management Institute (INGD).
“Of the 11 deaths recorded following the cyclone’s passage through Nampula province, three were in Memba district and another three in Angoche, as well as a total of 34 injured. There are currently 2,316 displaced people in three accommodation centres in the province”, reads the INGD report.
The report says that almost 250,000 people were affected, “with 27,470 houses damaged and 19,751 totally destroyed.
Dikeledi also destroyed 371 classrooms and affected 807 teachers. The cyclone affected 44 health units and damaged 67 kilometers of road. The cyclonic winds blew over 2,278 medium voltage electricity pylons.
Dikeledi is the second cyclone to hit northern Mozambique in the space of a month, following the passage of cyclone Chido, which caused the deaths of 120 people, and injuries to a further 868.
Mozambique is considered one of the countries most severely affected by climate change, facing cyclical floods and tropical cyclones during the rainy season, which runs from October to April.
(AIM)
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