Yachts damaged by Cyclone Pam in Port-Vila, Vanuatu, on Saturday. Credit Unicef Pacific, via Associated Press
HONG KONG â A cyclone mauled the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu on Saturday, killing at least eight people, tearing apart many homes and leaving residents to fear even worse death and destruction on remoter parts of the archipelago that remained out of contact.
Tropical Cyclone Pam has left a path of damage across the Pacific Ocean, and it bore down on the islands of Vanuatu from late Friday with winds of around 160 miles an hour, according to the Vanuatu meteorological service. Residents endured a night of roaring winds, and several in the capital, Port-Vila, said it was the most ferocious cyclone they could remember.
On Sunday morning, many towns and villages remained out of contact with the capital, leaving government officials and relief workers uncertain, but fearful, about the extent of the damage.
âItâs absolutely devastating here,â Charlie Damon, a program manager for the charity CARE International, said in a phone interview from Port-Vila. âWe can make assumptions on the outer islands based on what we see here.â
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Tom Skirrow, the country director for the aid group Save the Children, said eight deaths had been confirmed by Vanuatuâs disaster management office, Reuters reported. But aid workers stressed the preliminary death toll was only for the relatively well-built capital. âWeâre assuming that the death toll will grow,â Ms. Damon said.
The president of Vanuatu, Baldwin Lonsdale, who was in Japan attending the World Conference on Disaster Risk and Reduction, told participants on Saturday that the amount of damage was unclear but that it appeared to be devastating. âAll I can say is that our hope for prospering into the future has been shattered,â Mr. Lonsdale said, according to an account from the conference organizers.
On Saturday night, thousands crowded into emergency centers in schools and other larger buildings, as fierce winds and rain continued to whip the islands.
âAround here, I would say 90 percent of houses have been damaged,â Isaac Savuah, a field officer for CARE, said in a telephone interview from Port-Vila.
Vanuatu has a population of 270,000, and about 50,000 live in Port-Vila. But the archipelago of some 80 islands also has many remote towns on 65 inhabited islands, and the destruction of power and communications lines means there has been little contact with some communities.
âFor some of the most remote island villages, it could take days or even weeks to reach them by boat to see the full extent of the damage,â Chloe Morrison, a spokeswoman for World Vision, a humanitarian group focused on helping children, said in an email from Vanuatu.
âLocal homes here are quite simple, usually thatched roofs, and theyâd likely be absolutely blown away by the winds.â
The countryâs main airport, Bauerfield International Airport, could be shut to regular flights for weeks because of flooding and damage, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported. Vanuatu is more than 1,500 miles northeast of Sydney, Australia, and many of the islandâs goods must be shipped or flown in.
âEnsuring safe drinking water, sufficient nourishment, especially for mothers and babies, will be a priority,â Mark le Roux, the country director for the Adventist Development and Relief Agency, said in a telephone interview.
Winds from the cyclone also pummeled other Pacific island countries, including Tuvalu, the Solomon Islands and Kiribati.
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