French president Emmanuel Macron has arrived in the Indian Ocean archipelago of Mayotte to survey cyclone Chido’s destruction and was immediately confronted with a first-hand account of devastation across the French territory.
“Mayotte is demolished,” Assane Haloi, a security agent, told Mr Macron after he stepped off the plane.
Mr Macron had been moving along in a line of people greeting him when Ms Haloi grasped his hand and spoke for a minute about the harrowing conditions the islands faced without bare essentials since Saturday when the strongest cyclone in nearly a century ripped through the French territory off the coast of Africa.
“We are without water, without electricity, there is nowhere to go because everything is demolished,” she said. “We can’t even shelter, we are all wet with our children covering ourselves with whatever we have so that we can sleep.”
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At least 31 people have died and more than 1,500 people were injured, more than 200 critically, French authorities said. But it is feared hundreds or even thousands of people have died.
[ Cyclone Chido: Mayotte authorities fear hunger and diseaseOpens in new window ]
[ France’s Mayotte cleans up after cyclone, total death toll still unknownOpens in new window ]
Mr Macron arrived shortly after journalists from outside were able to reach Mayotte to provide accounts from survivors of the horror over the weekend when winds howled above 218km/h and peeled the roofs and walls from homes that collapsed around the people sheltering inside.
In the shantytown Kaweni on the outskirts of the capital Mamoudzou, a swathe of hillside homes was reduced to scraps of corrugated metal, plastic, piles of bedding and clothing, and pieces of timber marking the frame where homes once stood.
“Those of us who are here are still in shock, but God let us live,” Nassirou Hamidouni said as he dug in the rubble of his former home. “We are sad. We can’t sleep because of all of the houses that have been destroyed.”
Mr Macron took a helicopter tour of the damage and then met patients and staff at a hospital, who described having to work around the clock.
A woman who works in the psychological unit became emotional as she described staff becoming exhausted and unable to care for patients.
“Help the hospital staff, help the hospital,” the woman, whose name was not known, pleaded. “Everyone from top to bottom is wiped out.”
Mr Macron, who was wearing a traditional red, black and gold Mayotte scarf over his white shirt and tie, put his hand on her shoulder as she wiped away tears.
He sought to reassure people that tons of food, medical aid and additional rescuers arrived with him and more help was on its way in the form of water and a field hospital to be set up on Friday. A navy ship brought 180 tons of aid and equipment, the French military said.
But the visit took a testy turn when Mr Macron was criticised for being out of touch about what was happening on the ground by a man who said they had gone six days in Ouangani without water or a visit from rescue services.
The president said it took the military four days to clear the roads and get a plan in place to deliver aid.
“If you want to continue shouting to get airtime,” Mr Macron said as he was cut off, by the man saying he did not intend to shout. “If you are interested in my response, if not I will walk away.”
Residents have expressed agony at not knowing if loved ones were dead or missing, partly because of the hasty burials required under Muslim practice to lay the dead to rest within 24 hours.
“We’re dealing with open-air mass graves,” said Estelle Youssoufa, who represents Mayotte in the French parliament. “There are no rescuers, no one has come to recover the buried bodies.”
Mr Macron acknowledged that many who died have not been reported. He said phone services will be repaired “in the coming days” so that people can report their missing loved ones.
Mayotte, with a population of 320,000 residents and an estimated 100,000 additional migrants, is France’s poorest territory.
It is part of an archipelago located between mainland Africa’s east coast and northern Madagascar that had been a French colony. Mayotte voted to remain part of France in a 1974 referendum as the rest of the islands became the independent nation of Comoros.
The cyclone devastated entire neighbourhoods as many people ignored warnings, thinking the storm would not be so extreme. – AP