Thursday, March 21, 2019

From him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath


Michael - Thursday

Beira, Mozambique
Today is Human Rights Day in South Africa, a public holiday, and I'd meant to write about what that means to us here and what it's trying to achieve. However, to follow the title with another biblical quote, “Man proposes, but God disposes". In the light of the staggering human tragedy in eastern southern Africa, our efforts at equality seem somehow trivial.




On 15th March—the Ides indeed—cyclone Idai struck the Mozambique coast with gale force winds of 100 miles per hour, a storm surge of 20 feet, and torrential rain. More than 25 inches fell in some places. One always hopes for the best and prepares for the worst, and on this occasion the worst happened and there wasn’t a lot of preparation. The cyclone made landfall twice—first it drenched Malawi, then returned to the sea to recharge, and then hit Beira, Mozambique’s second largest city and home to more than half a million people. According to the Red Cross 90% of the city is damaged or destroyed. In a statement, they said, "The scale of damage caused by cyclone Idai that hit the Mozambican city of Beira is massive and horrifying."



The area around the city is completely flooded. On Sunday a large inland dam burst cutting off the last remaining road access to the city. The people are stranded. Beira is now virtually an island.



The cyclone went inland causing flooding wherever it went. Like much of rural Africa, the usual concern is much more about drought than flooding, and so the results were catastrophic. The president of Mozambique estimates that as many as a thousand people may have died. The people are stunned, waiting to pick up the pieces of their lives, wondering whether or not they can survive.





But Idai wasn’t finished. It headed west into Zimbabwe—a country already struggling with economic woes. Widespread flooding there has claimed many more lives. Houses have been washed away in mudslides or simply collapsed under the winds and floodwaters. My gardener’s house in Malawi was so weakened that one wall collapsed and the second bout of wind and rain flattened the rest. One of his countrymen I spoke to just shrugged. “We can’t complain,” he said. “God wills it. At least other people didn’t do this to us.” Some comfort, I suppose.



Latest reports suggest that around two and a half million people may have had to evacuate their homes. It may well be the worst natural disaster ever to devastate the southern hemisphere.


(The pictures are from the Washington Post.)

6 comments:

  1. It puts us to shame, arguing about what colour our passports should be.

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  2. Michael, I have been following this story and filled with dread. It sometimes seems like wrath—the way our sacred planet is responding to the miserable way we have been treating it. But here it is the innocent not the guilty who are being punished. Ah! Of course. That is all too often the way. Please name an organization of helpers that you think needs our support.

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    1. The Red Cross seems to be making the most impact. But the scale is so mind blowing, it's hard to know how to start...

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  3. I've shared this to my news feed on FB and asked the question of my friends there: have you seen this reported in your mainstream media. I will be interested in their answers, although, I sadly suspect if there was any mention at all it was brief. Thanks for this post.

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    1. I think the initial tropical storm caused hardly a ripple (as far as the news media were concerned!) But there has been a lot now on the BBC and US papers like the New York Times and the Washington Post. Jeff mentions PBS.
      But I'll also be interested to know what impact it's making in the west.

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  4. The most detailed coverage was on PBS The News Hour, and last night's reporting made it seem even worse. Tragic doesn't begin to describe it.

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