World

Presidents of Mozambique, Zimbabwe return home after cyclone kills 150

The presidents of Mozambique and Zimbabwe have return home to deal with the effects of a powerful cyclone that has killed more than 150 people across southern Africa.

More than a million people affected in 3 countries, hundreds missing

Cyclone Idai is pictured in this NASA satellite image after it made landfall in Mozambique. The storm affected 1.5 million people in three countries. (Earth Observing System Data and Information System/NASA worldview)

The presidents of Mozambique and Zimbabwe have return home to deal with the effects of a powerful cyclone that has killed more than 150 people across southern Africa.

Hundreds more were missing Sunday, while tens of thousands were cut off from roads and telephones in mainly poor, rural areas.

Cyclone Idai has affected more than 1.5 million people in Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, according to the UN and government officials.

Mozambique's President Filipe Nyusi and Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa had both left for foreign trips just as the cyclone hit their respective countries. This drew criticism from some who thought they should have stayed at home to deal with a disaster whose overwhelming magnitude has not been experienced in years.

Homes destroyed

The International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies on Saturday said at least 126 people had died in Mozambique and Malawi. In Zimbabwe, 31 people have died from the floods, said the country's information ministry.

Vehicles move through heavy rain in southern Malawi as Cyclone Adai arrived Friday. Hundreds were missing by Sunday while tens of thousands were cut off from roads and telephones in mainly poor, rural areas of southern Africa. (AFP/Getty Images)

State radio in Mozambique reported that the president planned to visit affected areas after returning Sunday from Eswatini, formerly known as Swaziland.

Mozambique's central port city of Beira was hardest hit, with the airport closed and many homes destroyed. The storm hit Beira late Thursday and moved westward into Zimbabwe and Malawi, affecting thousands more, particularly in eastern areas bordering Mozambique.

Zimbabwe's president was returning home from the United Arab Emirates "to make sure he is involved directly with the national response by way of relief to victims of Cyclone Idai," the information ministry said Sunday.

UN agencies and the Red Cross are helping with rescue efforts that include delivering food supplies and medicines by helicopter in the impoverished countries.

Mozambique President Filipe Nyusi, pictured in 2018, was criticized for leaving just as the storm was arriving. (Eduardo Munoz/Reuters)