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A new start for over 600 people affected by Cyclone Eloise in Mozambique - Mozambique


A new start for over 600 people affected by Cyclone Eloise in Mozambique
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© IFRC
Nhamatanda, 20 February 2021 Survivors of Cyclone Eloise have received materials from Mozambique Red Cross Society (CVM) to construct houses and start a new life.
“I would like to thank the Red Cross for giving me and my neighbours these materials. We were suffering at the camp; there wasn’t enough space. With this donation, we will be able to construct our house and live a normal life again,” said Amelia Lewanhe, one of the families that received shelter materials.
Over 300,000 people have been affected by Eloise that made landfall on 23 January. Thousands were forced from their homes and have been living in temporary accommodation shelters. More than 117,000 hectares of crops were destroyed by torrential downpours and floods. The most affected districts are Nhamatanda, Buzi, Beira and Dondo. ....

John Segredo , Amelia Lewanhe , Jose Custodio , International Federation Of Red Cross , Disaster Relief Emergency Fund , Sofala Mozambique Red Cross Society , Mozambique Red Cross Society , Cyclone Eloise , Red Cross , Tropical Storm Chalane , Giro Jose Custodio , Provincial Secretary , International Federation , Red Crescent Societies , ஜான் செக்ரேதோ , ஜோசே காவலாளி , சர்வதேச கூட்டமைப்பு ஆஃப் சிவப்பு குறுக்கு , பேரழிவு துயர் நீக்கம் அவசரம் நிதி , சோஃபாலா மொசாம்பிக் சிவப்பு குறுக்கு சமூகம் , மொசாம்பிக் சிவப்பு குறுக்கு சமூகம் , சிவப்பு குறுக்கு , ஜிரோ ஜோசே காவலாளி , மாகாண செயலாளர் , சர்வதேச கூட்டமைப்பு , சிவப்பு பிறை சமூகங்கள் ,

'The sea is rising, the climate is changing': the lessons learned from Mozambique's deadly cyclone | Cyclone Idai


‘The sea is rising, the climate is changing’: the lessons learned from Mozambique’s deadly cyclone
Mother and farmer Palmira Mussa, 38, standing by her banana tree which is being destroyed by locusts. Photograph: Elena Heatherwick
Mother and farmer Palmira Mussa, 38, standing by her banana tree which is being destroyed by locusts. Photograph: Elena Heatherwick
As another severe tropical storm hits Mozambique, people still struggling to rebuild lives destroyed by 2019’s Cyclone Idai tell their stories
Sat 2 Jan 2021 04.00 EST
The tree had stood in the square for nearly 100 years. It was planted by his father, before Afonso Reis was born. He worked as a driver and “liked trees”, says Reis, who is in his 70s. People used to eat the bitter red fruit, but more recently it had provided welcome shade for the stallholders of a busy market in Beira, one of Mozambique’s largest cities. ....

Mozambique General , Mozambique Channel , John Segredo , Rita Chiramswuana , Afonso Reis , International Monetary Fund , Cyclone Idai , Fatima Vasco Limo , Vasco Limo , மொசாம்பிக் ஜநரல் , மொசாம்பிக் சேனல் , ஜான் செக்ரேதோ , சர்வதேச பண நிதி , பாத்திமா வாஸ்கோ எலுமிச்சை , வாஸ்கோ எலுமிச்சை ,