France rushes aid to Mayotte, with hundreds feared dead and hunger rising after Cyclone Chido
CTV
France used ships and military aircraft to rush rescue workers and supplies to its Indian Ocean territory of Mayotte on Monday after the island group was battered by its worst cyclone in nearly a century. Authorities fear hundreds and possibly thousands of people have died.
France used ships and military aircraft to rush rescue workers and supplies to its Indian Ocean territory of Mayotte on Monday after the island group was battered by its worst cyclone in nearly a century. Authorities fear hundreds and possibly thousands of people have died.
Survivors wandered through streets littered with debris, searching for water and shelter after Cyclone Chido leveled entire neighbourhoods when it hit Mayotte, France's poorest department, on Saturday.
"Chaos" is how resident Fahar Abdoulhamidi described the aftermath. In Mamoudzou, Mayotte's capital, destruction was total: Schools, hospitals, restaurants, and government offices were in ruins.
Hillside villages were reduced to a jumble of snapped trees and piles of corrugated metal and wood. Electricity was down across the archipelago, with only the capital spared, and authorities were concerned about a shortage of drinking water.
The French Red Cross described the devastation as "unimaginable" and said that it was impossible to give an exact number of victims, with rescuers still searching for bodies in the rubble.
Many ignored the warnings issued 12 to 24 hours before the storm hit, underestimating its power.
"Nobody believed it would be that big," Abdoulhamidi, 46, told The Associated Press by phone. "Those who live in bangas stayed in despite the cyclone, fearing their homes would be looted," he said, referring to the island's precarious informal settlements.
A Canadian Cancer Society report, published Monday in partnership with Statistics Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada with analysis by Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, estimates a cancer patient will face almost $33,000 on average in out-of-pocket cancer-related costs in their lifetime, including loss of income.