Barriers to recovery one year on from Cyclone Idai

Publisher:
Oxfam International
Publication Date:
9 March 2020
Tags:
Malawi, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Aid and Assistance, Climate, Refugees and Displacement

Tens of thousands of people across Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique are still suffering 12 months after Cyclone Idai battered Southern Africa, warned Oxfam today. Cyclone Idai, one of the worst cyclones to hit Africa, made landfall on 14 March 2019.

A new Oxfam briefing, 'After the Storm,' highlights that over 100,000 people in Mozambique and Zimbabwe are still living in destroyed or damaged homes and makeshift shelters, while critical infrastructure including roads, water supplies, and schools have yet to be repaired making it difficult for people to access vital services or get back to work. It also shows that 9.7 million people across the three countries remain in desperate need of food aid as a result of cyclones, floods, drought and localized conflict.

The briefing explains how a toxic combination of factors - including an intensifying cycle of floods, drought and storms, deep rooted poverty and inequality,  a patchy humanitarian response, and a lack of support for poor communities to adapt to, and recover, from climate shocks - have increased people's vulnerability and made it harder for them to recover.

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