The death toll from Cyclone Gabrielle in New Zealand climbed to 11 yesterday as thousands of people remained missing a week after the storm struck the country’s North Island.
The cyclone hit the island’s northernmost region on Feb. 12 and tracked down the east coast, inflicting widespread devastation.
New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has called Gabrielle New Zealand’s biggest natural disaster this century.
Photo: AFP / NEW ZEALAND DEFENCE FORCE
Police yesterday said two more people had died in hard-hit Hawke’s Bay in circumstances related to the cyclone.
More fatalities are possible, Hipkins told reporters in the capital, Wellington, as 6,431 people remained missing, while 3,216 had been reported safe.
Lives had been “turned upside down” by the disaster and recovery was a “steep mountain ahead,” he said, pointing to disrupted telecommunications, shortages of fresh water and damaged roads still restricting access to some areas.
Supply chains were disrupted causing problems moving goods, many crops had been destroyed and 28,000 homes were still without power, he said.
“The true extent of the devastation and loss become clearer with every passing day,” the prime minister said.
A team from Fiji would leave for New Zealand in the coming days to assist with recovery, one of 12 offers of international aid received so far, Hipkins said.
Twenty-seven emergency workers from Australia are assisting with the relief effort.
Recovery efforts continued yesterday, with teams from the Auckland City Council carrying out rapid building assessments on damaged homes in the coastal areas of Muriwai and Piha, about 60km west of the nation’s largest city, Auckland.
Emergency authorities and the military have been dropping critical supplies via helicopter to communities stranded since the cyclone, which washed away farms, bridges and livestock, and inundated homes.
Police have sent an extra 100 officers to Hawke’s Bay and nearby Tairawhiti, including to isolated areas, amid reports of looting.
“The police are working to maintain law and order,” Hipkins said.
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