Storm With Power of Entire Hurricane Season Kills 308 in Africa

Malawi raised the death toll from floods triggered by Cyclone Freddy, potentially the longest-lasting tropical cyclone ever recorded, as the storm continued to dump rain on the southern African nation.

(Bloomberg) — Malawi raised the death toll from floods triggered by Cyclone Freddy, potentially the longest-lasting tropical cyclone ever recorded, as the storm continued to dump rain on the southern African nation.

At least 255 people died and 88,312 others have been forced to flee their homes, the Department of Disaster Management Affairs said Wednesday in an emailed statement. Finance Minister Sosten Gwengwe told reporters on Tuesday he will have to reconfigure the annual budget he presented to parliament two weeks ago because of the damage wrought by the storm.

In neighboring Mozambique, at least 53 people have died and 49,000 have been displaced, President Filipe Nyusi said in a televised address Wednesday. The storm has destroyed 27,000 homes, impacted 3,908 kilometers (2,428 miles) of roads, and 66,417 hectares of farmland.

Jindal Group’s Mozambican unit has paused coal exports after flooding damaged the Nacala Corridor export railway line, the company said in an emailed statement.

The nation’s meteorological agency warned of continuing heavy rain through Thursday in areas that are already flooded.

Cyclone Freddy hit the region for a second time in a month, bringing downpours and havoc to other African nations including Madagascar. Freddy’s accumulated energy — an index used to measure the energy released by tropical cyclones — is the equivalent of an average full North Atlantic hurricane season, according to the World Meteorological Organization.

Tropical cyclones — also called hurricanes or typhoons in other regions — are a typical occurrence in the southern hemisphere, usually between November and April. Freddy, which earned its name on Feb. 6 when it was still just a few hundred kilometers off the northwest coast of Australia, has proved more lasting. 

Longer and more intense storms have been predicted by climate-change models for decades. Malawi and Mozambique are among the world’s poorest nations, and also among those most impacted by changing weather patterns.

Malawian President Lazarus Chakwera on March 13 declared a state of disaster in southern districts of the country to enable the state to accelerate its response to the storm. The government has since released 1.6 billion kwacha ($1.5 million) to the DODMA to help deal with the disaster and is asking donors for more funds.

–With assistance from Borges Nhamire.

(Updates with latest death toll in Mozambique in paragraph three)

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