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Cyclone Death Toll Climbs to 9 While Comoros Struggles to Regain Power

Cyclone Death Toll Climbs to 9 While Comoros Struggles to Regain Power

(Bloomberg) -- The death toll from Tropical Cyclone Kenneth increased to 42 as the Indian Ocean archipelago of Comoros struggles to restore power supplies and torrential rains cause flooding in Mozambique.

At least 182 people were injured by the hurricane-strength storm that swept across the two nations last week, the United Nations humanitarian office said in an emailed statement. Four people died in Comoros, it said, while Mozambique’s disaster agency said the death toll in its country stood at 38.

Kenneth was the second cyclone to hit Mozambique in two months, after a storm in March left more than 1,000 people dead in the southern African nation, along with neighboring Zimbabwe and Malawi.

Cyclone Death Toll Climbs to 9 While Comoros Struggles to Regain Power

Most of Comoros’ inhabitants have been without power since the latest cyclone damaged the country’s electricity grid last week, “leaving the majority of people without power and impacting access to health-care,” the UN said.

About 63 percent of the nation’s food crops have been wiped out, while there’s also been a “significant” loss of livestock, the agency said.

Cyclone Death Toll Climbs to 9 While Comoros Struggles to Regain Power

The authorities in Comoros reconnected about 70 percent of consumers in the capital, Moroni, while there is a blackout in the rest of Grande Comore island and workers will need at least another week to restore supplies, Fayssoil Moussa, spokesman for the state power company Sonelec, said in a phone interview. On Anjouan, the second-biggest island, only the capital Mutsamadu has power, he said.

Damage in Mozambique includes the destruction of at least 35,100 houses, the UN said.

--With assistance from Kamlesh Bhuckory.

To contact the reporters on this story: Borges Nhamire in Maputo at bnhamire@bloomberg.net;Faiza Soule Youssouf in Moroni at fsouleyousso@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin at asguazzin@bloomberg.net, Paul Richardson, Hilton Shone

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