Hundreds feared dead in cyclone in France’s Mayotte

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PARIS: Several hundred people, maybe even thousands, may have been killed by Cyclone Chido in the French archipelago of Mayotte in the Indian Ocean, a top local French official said via local media channel Mayotte La 1ere on Sunday.

“I think there will certainly be several hundreds, maybe we will reach a thousand, even several thousands,” local prefect Francois-Xavier Bieuville said on the channel.

Asked about the death toll of several hundred, the French interior ministry said “it will be difficult to account for all victims” and said a figure could not be determined at this stage.

Cyclone Chido swept through Mayotte overnight, Meteo-France said, bringing winds of more than 200 kph and damaging makeshift housing, government buildings and a hospital. It was the strongest storm in more than 90 years to hit the islands, the forecaster said.

Aerial footage shared by French gendarmerie forces showed the wreckage of hundreds of makeshift houses strewn across the hills of one of Mayotte’s islands, which have been a focal point for illegal immigration from nearby Comoros.

It was difficult to ascertain the precise death toll after the cyclone, which also raised concerns about access to food, water and sanitation, authorities said.

“For the toll, it’s going to be complicated, because Mayotte is a Muslim land where the dead are buried within 24 hours,” a French interior ministry official said earlier. Over 100,000 undocumented migrants live in Mayotte, the ministry added.

Located nearly 8,000 km from Paris and a four-day trip by sea, Mayotte is significantly poorer than the rest of France and has grappled with gang violence and social unrest for decades.

Some 77 per cent of the people in Mayotte live below the French poverty line.

Tensions were stoked earlier this year by a water shortage.

The cyclone went on to hit northern Mozambique on Sunday, but the full extent of the impact was not clear. Internet monitor NetBlocks said on X (formerly Twitter) that heavy rain and winds had damaged power and telecommunications infrastructure.