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Vanuatu wrecked by Cyclone Pam

March 14, 2015

UN chief Ban Ki-moon has again urged help for low-lying nations exposed to climate change risks as Vanuatu counts its dead from Cyclone Pam. Experts fear it could be one of the Pacific region's worst weather disasters.

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Vanuatu Zyklon Pam
Image: Reuters//UNICEF Pacific

Attending a UN disaster avoidance conference in Japan, Ban said islands and coastal nations needed "special attention." Before Pam struck Vanuatu late Friday, Pacific islands had repeatedly warned that climate change means higher weather risks.

"Climate change is intensifying the risks for hundreds of millions of people, particularly in small island developing states and coastal areas," Ban told the conference.

What we are discussing here is very real for millions," he said.

France, which will host a crucial UN climate change summit in Paris in December and still governs territories in the Pacific, said Vanuatu's "tragedy once again highlights the danger posed to the planet by extreme weather events."

Residents shelter for second night

In Vanuatu's devastated capital, Port Vila, late on Saturday residents hunkered again in emergency settlers for a second night after gusts of up 320 kilometers (200 miles) per hour struck, destroying homes and even flooding some shelters.

Pam, a category five storm, struck populated areas full on.

Storm brought 'absolute terror'

UNICEF spokeswoman Alice Clements told Radio New Zealand that Vanuatu residents had experienced "absolute terror" as Pam passed.

Aid organizations were scrambling for information and readying rescue teams. Vanuatu has 267,000 residents spread over 65 islands.

The UN's Pacific region office for humanitarian coordination in Fiji said it had unconfirmed reports of 44 people killed on Vanuatu's northeastern islands.

A World Vision officer in Port Vila, Chloe Morrison, said communications with outlying islands were non-existent. Electricity and water supplies were down.

Zyklon / Cyclone "Pam", Satellitenaufnahme
Cyclone Pam struck Vanualu's capital full onImage: Reuters

"I can say that for anybody who wasn't in a secure shelter last night, it would have been a very, very tough time for them," Morrison said, adding that she had heard reports of entire villages being destroyed.

Houses and huts had been blown away like "confetti," she said.

Dearth of information

Pacific region Red Cross spokeswomen Aurelia Balpe said there was also no information from Vanuatu's southern islands, where 33,000 live.

"We are very worried," she said, adding that the area had little infrastructure for evacuations.

UNICEF's New Zealand-based director Vivien Maidaborn said the sheer force of the storm made it "potentially one of the worst" in Pacific history.

She said it was to be feared that tens of thousands of people were affected.

Communities were "just not set up to withstand it," she said, referring to dwellings that often consist of just corrugated iron.

Lonsdale appeals for "helping hand"

Präsident von Vanuatu Baldwin Lonsdale
Heart 'so heavy,' Vanuatu's Lonsdale tells UN conferenceImage: picture alliance/dpa

Vanuatu's President Baldwin Lonsdale told the UN conference in Sendai, Japan, his nation would need concerted rebuilding.

"I stand to appeal on behalf of the government and the people to give a helping hand in this disaster," said Lonsdale, who is also an Anglican priest.

Heading toward New Zealand

Cyclone Pam, which had already caused damage to Kiribati and the Solomon Islands, is heading southeast toward New Zealand.

Fiji meteorologist Neville Koop said Pam was weakening and was expected to pass between Fiji and New Caledonia before brushing the North Island of New Zealand.

Strong winds, heavy seas and rain have buffeted the Solomons and Fiji.

Rescue help pledged

Australia's Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said Canberra had medical and rescue staff ready to assist. New Zealand announced NZ$1 million in initial funds to assist Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands, Tuvalu and Fiji.

The European Union pledged one million euros ($1.05 million) for emergency efforts.

A year ago, cyclone Lusi hit Vanuatu, killing 11 people.

The Pacific region's previous worst storm was Zoe in 2002 that devastated Fiji.

Scientists caution that single weather events cannot be directly attributed to climate change.

ipj/sb (AFP, dpa, AP)