TOPSHOT-MALAWI-WEATHER-CYCLONE-FREDDY (AFP or licensors)
By Linda Bordoni
Mar 16 2023
The death toll in Malawi from tropical cyclone Freddy has risen to over 220, thousands of people have been displaced and aid workers are struggling to reach remote areas. Climate campaigners highlight how the poor, the least drivers of climate change, are paying its highest price.
After barreling through Mozambique and Malawi since late last week, Cyclone Freddy is set to move away from land bringing some relief to regions that have been ravaged by torrential rain and powerful winds.
But the death toll from flood-devastated areas continues to rise, it is estimated that at least 20,000 people have been displaced, and millions more urgently need clean water, shelter and food.
Cyclone Freddy – the longest and strongest tropical storm on record in the Southern hemisphere – has damaged thousands of homes, roads, and telecommunication infrastructures.
Its devastating impact further compounds the crisis caused by the deadliest cholera epidemic Malawi and neighbouring Mozambique have ever recorded and that risks spreading further due to the flooding of polluted rivers and water basins.
It also comes in the wake of Cyclone Idai which killed more than 1,500 people and wreaked enormous destruction in Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi in 2019.