Deaths, number of missing rise as Malawi deals with Cyclone Freddy disaster

Rescuers struggle to dig up decomposing bodies from the mud and the debris of homes that had been swept away by the storm that lingered in eastern Africa since late February.

Locals of Mtauchira village walks past a home which was damage by a mudslide in the aftermath of Cyclone Freddy in Blantyre, Malawi on Thursday.
Reuters

Locals of Mtauchira village walks past a home which was damage by a mudslide in the aftermath of Cyclone Freddy in Blantyre, Malawi on Thursday.

Lacking sniffer dogs and armed just with shovels, rescuers in storm-ravaged Malawi made a grim hunt for buried bodies after Cyclone Freddy struck the eastern African country, killing more than 300 people.

On Friday, Malawi authorities said Freddy killed at least 326 people, with 200 still missing. There are hundreds of evacuation centers set up across the country for survivors.

Malawi’s president, Lazarus Chakwera, declared a 14-day national mourning period on Thursday.

In Mozambique, authorities said at least 53 were killed since Saturday, with 50,000 more still displaced. It’s expected that the death toll in both nations will continue to climb.

As the rains ceased for the first time in five days on Thursday, rescuers in Malawi dug up decomposing bodies from the mud and the debris of homes that had been swept away by the storm.

A joint operation by the military and local inhabitants recovered five bodies in Manje, a township around 15 kilometres (nine miles) south of the commercial capital Blantyre, after locals said they had spotted bubbles forming under the muddy rubble. 

In a wrecked house half-covered in mud, five soldiers and 10 community members used three shovels to unearth the corpse of a middle-aged man. 

The team created a makeshift stretcher using two logs and a sack and wrapped his remains in a second sack in the absence of a body bag. 

They then began a trek to the foot of the mountain, where an ambulance and military vehicles were waiting. 

Along the rocky and muddy path, sombre villagers made their way, whispering commiserations and condolences. 

"Since yesterday, we noticed that there have been bubbles forming in the mud so we suspected that there were dead bodies down there, and we decided to alert the rescue teams," local resident Alfred Mbule said. 

"Just this morning alone, our group has recovered three bodies and another group has recovered two bodies. Yesterday afternoon we recovered three bodies," he said. 

No one in the immediate community could identify the corpses, which were in a state of decomposition. 

Manje, on the eastern side of Soche Mountain, straddles a mudslide triggered by the pounding rains. 

"We suspect that these bodies may have come from up the mountain in the mudslide and they just happened to be trapped by these houses that are still standing," Mbule said. 

READ MORE: Malawi appeals for global help after Cyclone Freddy kills 225

Loading...

World's longest tropical storm

Freddy returned to the African coast at the weekend for the second time in less than three weeks, leaving swathes of destruction in its wake. 

Travelling 8,000 kilometres, the cyclone crossed the Indian Ocean before striking Africa in late February. 

It then looped back over the warm ocean waters, which fed energy into the storm, before it reversed course to smash into the continent a second time. 

Meteorologists say the cyclone is exceptional in its duration and has characteristics consistent with warnings about the climate crisis. 

Before dissipating on Wednesday, Freddy set an unofficial record as the world's longest tropical storm, a benchmark set in 1994 for a 31-day storm named John. 

Malawi's President Lazarus Chakwera, touring the devastation near Blantyre, said Thursday that "as of yesterday, the death toll from this disaster has risen from 225 to 326, the number of people displaced has more than doubled to 183,159."

But the grim discoveries being made in Manje suggest the numbers are set to rise.

"We believe there are hundreds more bodies under the mud," Mbule said.

At the foot of the mountain, an excavator dug through the mud as scores of villagers watched. 

"The overwhelming stench in the air is a clear sign that the corpses are rotting underneath," said an elderly resident, Rose Phiri, as she watched the machine spade through the rubble.

READ MORE: Rescuers scramble to find survivors in Malawi

Promising hope

Amidst the darkness and despair in Manje, there was one tale of hope.

Patrick Njolomole, a member of the rescue team, said a 13-year-old girl identified only as Promise had been saved after being trapped in a mud-filled house since Sunday.

"It's a miracle how she survived. She was stuck under the open doors of a falling fridge after it was hit by the falling walls of her parents' house," Njolomole said.

"The house was then filled by mud, but the fridge's open doors allowed her just enough space to breath.

"So yesterday, she somehow gained consciousness and started screaming for help. That is when we went to rescue her. She was weak and confused, but alive."

READ MORE: Cyclone Freddy hits Mozambique and Malawi, kills dozens

Route 6