Cyclone aftermath is recalled
Dublin People 29 Mar 2019
A NORTHSIDE man has described scenes of complete desolation following a visit by boat to villages and towns cut off by floodwaters after Cyclone Idai in one of the worst hit areas along the Malawi and Mozambique border.

Gavin Douglas, from Artane, a photographer with aid agency Concern Worldwide, said: “We passed endless abandoned villages. Only the skeletal remains of wood houses remained, some still sitting in four or five feet of water. It was complete desolation. Whole villages have just been swept away.”
During his trip to an area south of Nsanje on the southern tip of Malawi, Gavin met a number of local people who had returned to fish for food and to start repairing their homes.
“They were too frightened to bring their families back with them in case the floods would return,” he said.
“The floods came so fast, they left with only the clothes on their backs and a few bits and pieces.
“They have lost everything. The strength of the floods took everything with it. There is nothing left on the ground, only soaked earth. They have lost vast amounts of crops they were relying on.
“It was very hard to process the sheer scale of the destruction.”
Gavin and his team left their boat at one point and trekked across a field to visit a village a few kilometres inland.
“It was hard to believe that last month this was a maize field almost ready for harvest,” he recounted.
“Now it resembled a bog with large streams of water flowing through it. We were knee deep in mud by the time we got to the village.”
Many of the residents they met during their trip had returned to fish, as there is a shortage of food in the displacement camps where people had fled to.
“The only thing on the minds of the people I met during our trip was food and shelter,” he said.
The previous day Gavin visited the displacement camp where many of the residents of these abandoned towns and villages are currently staying.
“Aid is slow in coming to the camp,” he said. “The people have not received a food delivery in six days.
“There are more than 11,000 people staying there – mainly women and children. The camp, in the grounds of a school, has less than 20 toilets for the entire camp population. There is a real threat of Cholera and other water-borne diseases.
“It is very apparent a bigger crisis is looming,” he warned.
Over 800,000 people have been affected by the flooding in the wake of Cyclone Idai in Malawi, with 87,000 displaced, 59 dead and 672 injured.
Concern is working with staff in the camps to construct latrines and bathrooms and to provide safe water supplies.
This week it will commence distributing emergency kits containing essential items such as plastic sheeting, cooking utensils, mosquito nets and soap to those who are displaced.
Concern is aiming to provide relief support to 45,000 people in the coming days and weeks.
Concern World chief executive Dominic MacSorley said: “Concern’s team on the ground in Malawi are responding but support from the public and the international community is desperately needed to raise €5 million to fund this work.”
Mr MacSorley is urging members of the public to donate to Concern’s Malawi flood appeal by visiting www.concern.net
- Cyclone aftermath is recalledÂ
- Cyclone aftermath is recalledÂ