Oxfam Australia

Cyclone Pam’s path of destruction

Tropical Cyclone Pam

NASA's Terra satellite captured this visible image of Tropical Cyclone Pam showing her eye in the South Pacific Ocean on March 11 at 22:50 UTC. Photo: NASA Goddard MODIS Rapid Response Team

Cyclone Pam, a massive category 5 cyclone has torn a path of destruction through the small Pacific Island nation of Vanuatu. In its wake it has left the community the huge task of rebuilding wrecked lives. Oxfam has a team based in the country and is ready to respond to support the people of Vanuatu.

Oxfam’s country director for Vanuatu, Colin Collett Van Rooyen, gives a harrowing account of what it is like to face up to a cyclone of this size and ferocity.

“IT was riveting, extremely frightening and emotional. We didn’t know if the shelter we had would stay in place. Buildings were vibrating. Roofs were being ripped off. The noise was spectacular, the rumbling, the growling, it was like nothing I have ever heard.”

“I do know that of a compound of five houses in Naneatri, four houses have gone,” he said. “We have no power or running water and are still not able to move around freely. I can see strong wave activity in Port Vila Bay. There are strong winds and persistent rain however the conditions have eased a lot since last night.”

So far there has been little information from some of the more remote islands and there is concern that the communities there have been badly affected.

“We have heard nothing from the islands, so people are just waiting,” said Colin Collett Van Rooyen.

The National Disaster Management Office (NDMO) in Vanuatu has made an initial assessment of the damage and it is clear that the people of Vanuatu will need significant help in the coming weeks.

First observations from the NDMO include:

“It’s quite clear people had no idea how to imagine a cat 5 cyclone,” said Colin Collett Van Rooyen. “They have experienced a cat 2 or 3, they are used to it, but last night three storey high trees were being uprooted, palm trees completely shredded and roofs ripped from homes.”

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