Foreign aid begins flowing into cyclone-hit southern Africa
Relief efforts for Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi were initially stifled by airport closures.

By Matt Sedensky, Associated Press
International aid has started trickling into the east African countries of Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi to ease the humanitarian crisis created by floodwaters from Cyclone Idai.
Relief efforts that were initially stifled by airport closures slowly gained pace, and foreign governments began pledging aid to help the region recover from the worst flooding in decades.
“Everyone is doubling, tripling, quadrupling whatever they were planning,” said Caroline Haga of the Red Cross in Beira, Mozambique, referring to supplies and aid workers.
“It’s much larger than anyone could ever anticipate.”
The European Union released 3.5 million euros (£3 million) in emergency aid, and the UK pledged up to £6 million. Neighbouring Tanzania’s military airlifted 238 tons of food and medicine.
Matthew Pickard of the humanitarian organisation Care said the response to Idai has been similar to previous natural disasters.
Local authorities and international non-governmental organisations worked their way to the area in the first days, with additional aid destined to arrive soon after.
The slow-moving catastrophe of the flooding and the inability to access some of the hardest-hit areas has limited the ability of some to see the scale of the cyclone, but aid will spike as the details become clearer, Mr Pickard said.
“Over the next few days we’ll learn just how big it is,” he said from Malawi. “These are countries that are not usually making headlines and they’re making headlines. With the story comes people’s intent to respond empathetically.”
Sacha Myers of Save the Children, speaking from Mozambique, described rising floodwaters, “rivers and dams bursting their banks” and a death toll in the hundreds and rising.
She was awaiting the arrival of a cargo plane carrying 51 tons of emergency supplies, but said getting them where they needed to go remained difficult with roads washed away or submerged and few options for storage in dry areas.
“We’re having an unfolding crisis that’s getting worse and worse,” she said.
The United Nations is deploying resources too, deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said, but logistics remained challenging and the hardest hit areas remained inaccessible.
As better data emerges from the disaster zone, donors will be standing by to make money and other resources such as medicine available, said E Anne Peterson of the non-profit health organisation Americares.
“It’s early and a really big disaster gets attention fast, and the more media covers it, the more people realise there is a need and the more likely we are to see them getting engaged,” she said.
Ilan Noy, chairman in the economics of disasters at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, said aid was likely to flow from dozens of countries to the African nations.
How much is pledged and when, he said, correlates to the media coverage a disaster gets, not to mention factors such as the geostrategic interests and previous colonial ties of an affected country.
Ultimately, the figures that are announced can bear little meaning, with the numbers typically stand-ins for the value of salaries and supplies sent overseas.
“They don’t have enough helicopters or they don’t have enough doctors,” Mr Noy offered as an example. “In that emergency phase, it doesn’t really matter how you count it. You need resources. You don’t need cash.”
Press Association
Follow @Independent_ie

Latest Teen to be sentenced for rape and murder of Alesha MacPhail
Lucinda Cameron A 16-year-old boy who abducted, raped and murdered six-year-old Alesha MacPhail will be sentenced today.

Australia moving 2,000 people from powerful cyclone’s path
Independent.ie Newsdesk Australia is evacuating about 2,000 people from part of northern Australia ahead of a powerful cyclone expected to hit on Saturday.

Breaking New Zealand bans military type semi-automatic weapons used in mosque massacre
Tom Westbrook and Charlotte Greenfield New Zealand will ban military-style semi-automatic and assault rifles under tough new gun laws following the killing of 50 people in the country's worst mass shooting, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said…
- Most Viewed
- Most Shared

Model jailed for trying to smuggle heroin worth £1m into Ireland World News

Twice divorced Euromillions jackpot winner is quitting factory job, buying house with… World News

Desperate parents of missing teen Leah (19) hope €5,800 reward will unlock mystery Britain

Man's body found in river still wearing handcuffs two months after he ran away from… Britain

'Mrs May ignored advice from my father, leaving the British people in limbo' -… North America

Irish people are trolling a UK politician with hilarious 'alternative' takes on Irish history Trending

€12m HSE payout for 19,000 ex-patients and relatives Health

'I think its very unhygienic' – Salon owner gives the chop to customers turning up in their… Irish News

'I felt really, really English' – Michael Keane admits he used Ireland as a… International Soccer

Marks and Spencer seeking 97 redundancies across Republic of Ireland Irish

The Daily Digest
Editors Choice

How the resilience of Syrian women and girls is inspiring a hard-fought battle for gender equality

Declan Lynch: 'Ruby, you gotta know when to walk away, know when to run'

We need to talk about how radicals are made

Latest Teen to be sentenced for rape and murder of Alesha MacPhail
A 16-year-old boy who abducted, raped and murdered six-year-old Alesha MacPhail will be…

Australia moving 2,000 people from powerful cyclone’s path
Australia is evacuating about 2,000 people from part of northern Australia…

Breaking New Zealand bans military type semi-automatic weapons used in mosque massacre
New Zealand will ban military-style semi-automatic and…

New Zealand bans ‘military-style’ weapons after mosque attacks
New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern has…

More than 350 die in cyclone with hundreds still missing
More than 350 people have been confirmed dead and hundreds more are missing after the…

My legal experience will be vital in White House race, says Harris
Democratic senator Kamala Harris has vowed to…

Off-duty pilot saved 737 Max from crashing one day before disaster
As a Lion Air crew fought to control their diving…

'Husband from hell' – president raps Conway
US President Donald Trump yesterday escalated his feud with the husband of…

Jeweller to stars in court on €1.1bn bank fraud charges
India's most wanted man was arrested while trying to open a bank account, days…

Probe will ask if Trump is under the influence of 'foreign powers'
The House Intelligence Committee will shift its…

VIDEO: May ‘not prepared’ to delay Brexit beyond June
The Prime Minister says the delay in getting her withdrawal bill through…

WATCH: Factory worker celebrates £71million lottery win
Factory worker Ade Goodchild is unveiled as…

WATCH: Bizarre moment man performs breakdance moves before arrest in Los…
A man about to be arrested by US police broke…

WATCH: Aerial footage shows cyclone damage in Mozambique
Aerial footage of Beira, Mozambique…

WATCH: The moment police catch three children tossed out of burning apartment
Police officers in Des Moines, Iowa were assisting…

WATCH: Reef manta ray spotted for the first time in the Eastern Pacific
Scientists have reported the first sighting of a…

WATCH: 'Order, order!' – The very best of John Bercow
Speaker John Bercow has built himself a reputation internationally thanks to his…

WATCH: Two arrested after St Patrick's Day crush in Cookstown
Two men have been arrested on suspicion of…

VIDEO: Barnier – EU will assess 'usefulness' of delaying Brexit
The European Union will need to know "the reason and the usefulness"…

VIDEO: First funerals for New Zealand mosque attack victims
A father and son who fled the civil war in Syria for "the safest country in…

Gallery: New Zealand in mourning as gunman opens fire at two mosques

In Pictures: Devastation as Ethiopian Airlines flight ET302 crashes, killing all onboard

In Pictures: Aftermath of Alabama tornado that killed at least 23 people

In Pictures: Sunshine and snow – weather changes one year apart
Photographs taken on March 1, 2018 and of the same…

In Pictures: Trump arrives in Vietnam ahead of Kim Jong-Un meeting

In Pictures: US Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren officially launches bid for 2020 presidency

In Pictures: Arson suspected after deadly Paris apartment fire

In Pictures: Male cheerleaders perform at Super Bowl for first time in NFL history

In Pictures: Worst floods in a century in Queensland, Australia to worsen this week
