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Cyclone's huge floods endanger thousands in southern Africa

JOHANNESBURG (AP) - Rapidly rising floodwaters have created "an inland ocean" in Mozambique endangering scores of thousands of families, aid workers said Tuesday as they scrambled to rescue survivors of Cyclone Idai who clung to rooftops and trees.

Hundreds were dead, many more were missing and thousands were at risk in Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi. Mozambique's President Filipe Nyusi has said the death toll could reach 1,000.

Emergency workers called it the region's most destructive flooding in 20 years. Heavy rains are expected to continue through Thursday.

"This is a major humanitarian emergency that is getting bigger by the hour," said Herve Verhoosel with the World Food Program. Many people were "crammed on rooftops and elevated patches of land outside the port city of Beira" and WFP was rescuing as many as possible and airdropping food, water and blankets, he said.

Mozambique's Pungue and Buzi rivers had overflowed, creating "inland oceans extending for miles and miles in all directions," Verhoosel said. Dams have reached 95 percent to 100 percent capacity.

"People visible from the air may be the lucky ones and the top priority now is to rescue as many as possible," he said.

The extent of the damage was not yet known as many areas remained impassible. With key roads washed away, aid groups were trying to get badly needed food, medicine and fuel into hard-hit Beira, a city of some 500,000 people, by air and sea.

Cyclone Idai swept across central Mozambique before dropping huge amounts of rain in neighboring Zimbabwe's eastern mountains. That rainfall is now rushing back through Mozambique, further inundating the already flooded countryside.

"It's dire," Caroline Haga of the Red Cross told The Associated Press from Beira. "We did an aerial surveillance yesterday and saw people on rooftops and in tree branches. The waters are still rising and we are desperately trying to save as many as possible."

Satellite images are helping the rescue teams to target the most critical areas, Haga said.

"We're in a very scary situation," she said. Rescue operations were based at Beira airport, one of the few places in the city with working communications.

The waters flooded a swath of land more than 30 miles wide in central Mozambique, said the aid group Save the Children, and more than 100,000 people were at risk from the overflowing rivers.

"The assessment emerging from Mozambique today is chilling," said Machiel Pouw, Save the Children's response leader in Mozambique. "Thousands of children lived in areas completely engulfed by water. In many places, no roofs or tree tops are even visible above the floods."

Torrential rain was still lashing the region, and Buzi town could be entirely submerged within 24 hours, the aid group said.

Hardest hit is Beira, where thousands of homes have been destroyed.

The city and surrounding areas have no power and nearly all communication lines have been destroyed. Beira's main hospital has been badly damaged. The cities of Dondo and Chimoio in central Mozambique are also badly affected.

Beira could face a "serious fuel shortage" in the coming days, WFP said, and the city's power grid is expected to be non-functional through the end of the month.

The medical charity Doctors Without Borders said its work in Beira and other local health centers had "ceased completely" but it was working to resume operations.

In Zimbabwe the death toll rose to 98, the government said. The mountain town of Chimanimani was badly hit. Several roads leading into the town were cut off, with the only access by helicopter.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa arrived in the area on Tuesday, saying a number of countries including the United Arab Emirates, South Africa, Botswana, Namibia and Angola were offering aid.

Malawi's government has confirmed 56 deaths, three missing and 577 injured in the severe flooding. Rivers have burst their banks, leaving many houses submerged and around 11,000 households displaced in the southern district of Nsanje.

Neighboring Tanzania's military airlifted some 238 tons of emergency food and medicine to the three countries.

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This image made available by International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) on Monday March 18, 2019, shows an aerial view from a helicopter of flooding in Beira, Mozambique. The Red Cross says that as much as 90 percent of Mozambique's central port city of Beira has been damaged or destroyed by tropical Cyclone Idai. (Caroline Haga/International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) via AP) The Associated Press
The poor neighbourhood of Nhamudima, which has been razed by the passing cyclone, in the coastal city of Beira, Mozambique, Sunday March 17, 2019. Families are returning to the vulnerable Nhamudima shanty town following cyclone high winds and rain. More than 1,000 people are feared dead in Mozambique four days after a cyclone slammed into the southern African country. (Josh Estey/CARE via AP) The Associated Press
People wait in a queue to receive food supplies from soldiers in Chimanimani, about 600 kilometers southeast of Harare, Zimbabwe, Monday, March 18, 2019. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi) The Associated Press
Luckymore Rusero and his family walk past a collapsing road in Chimanimani, southeast of Harare, Zimbabwe, Monday, March 18, 2019. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi) The Associated Press
A woman makes her way to a school building being used as an emergency shelter for some 300 local people who are unable to return to their homes following cyclone force winds and heavy rain in the coastal city of Beira, Mozambique, Sunday March 17, 2019. More than 1,000 people are feared dead in Mozambique four days after a cyclone slammed into the southern African country destroying vulnerable residential areas. (Josh Estey/CARE via AP) The Associated Press
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