“The Middle East right now is dealing with highly unusual weather. Storm after storm, and fallouts from the storms in the region have created torrential rains and flash floods everywhere. Areas like Gaza, Yemen, Jordan, Egypt, parts of Iraq and Saudi Arabia are all witnessing strange and out-of-place weather. Basically if an area is adjacent to a river or the ocean, or is dropping from the sky”
Panic, deaths as Yemen's Socotra hit by new cyclone
8
November, 2015
Aden
(AFP) - Another cyclone made landfall in war-ravaged Yemen's Socotra
island Sunday, causing panic as a minister posted an "urgent
appeal" to save residents from the second tropical storm in a
week.
At
least two people were killed and dozens injured, a government source
said.
Heavy
winds, rain and flash floods swept through Socotra as the storm,
named Megh, hit the island, already badly battered by last week's
cyclone Chapala, residents said.
Fisheries
Minister Fahd Kavieen, who is from Socotra himself, urged the United
Nations and neighbouring Oman to "urgently intervene with
emergency teams to save residents" on the island "which is
now facing a cyclone stronger than Chapala".
The
Arabian Sea island is 350 kilometres (210 miles) off the Yemeni
mainland.
The
World Meteorological Organization (WMO) spokeswoman Clare Nullis said
Friday that Megh is not as powerful as Chapala, which had killed
eight people in southeast Yemen.
But
Socotra resident and humanitarian activist Abdulrauf al-Juhaimali
differed, telling AFP on Sunday that "this cyclone is stronger
than Chapala".
The
government source gave a provisional toll of two dead, a man and a
woman when their homes collapsed, and said there were also "dozens
of injured".
Many
people who had returned to seafront homes already destroyed by
Chapala fled again to government buildings on higher ground as heavy
flooding hit once more, he said.
Tropical
cyclones are extremely rare over the Arabian Peninsula, and two
back-to-back was "an absolutely extraordinary event", said
Nullis.
The
UN's humanitarian agency OCHA said on Friday that up to 44,000 people
had already been displaced by Chapala, which hit mainland Yemen on
Tuesday, triggering heavy flash floods and mudslides.
Chapala
had forced the evacuation of 18,000 people on Socotra and completely
destroyed 237 homes, according to OCHA spokesman Jens Laerke.
No
one on the island was killed, despite initial reports of three
deaths, he said.
OCHA
had set up a special 11-man support and response team, based in Oman,
to help relief efforts, Laerke added.
More
than 900 UN staff are already on the ground in Yemen to help respond
to the needs after Chapala, but also because of the conflict plaguing
the country
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