To many Westerners, Vanuatu is a holiday destination boasting crystal blue waters and luxury yachts. But it’s also one of the poorest nations in the Pacific, and many of its 260,000 inhabitants live in flimsy houses built of thatch.
Those vulnerable homes were dealt a fearsome blow over the weekend by Tropical Cyclone Pam, one of the strongest storms ever to make landfall.
The aid group Oxfam is warning that the cyclone may have caused “one of the worst disasters ever seen in the Pacific.”
The storm rampaged across Vanuatu’s sprawling archipelago of more than 80 islands on Friday and Saturday, wielding 155 mph (250 kph) winds.
The full extent of the devastation remained unclear Monday. With communication lines to many of the outer islands cut, it could take days or even weeks to emerge.
Livelihoods wiped out
In the capital, Port Vila, residents were still reeling from the storm’s destructive impact. Thousands of people have been left homeless and many who rely on subsistence farming to get by have seen their main source of food wiped out.
A CNN team that arrived in the capital Monday saw more than 100 people taking refuge in church. In one valley, trees were snapped in two or stripped of leaves.
Many residents said it was the worst storm that they can remember. And that’s in a Pacific nation that is regularly hit by cyclones.
Cyclone Pam is estimated by Oxfam to have badly damaged 90% of the houses in Port Vila, as well as flooding parts of the hospital and trashing schools and churches.
There were some small signs of progress around the capital.
Roads had been cleared of the trees the storm had flung across them. The main airport was back in business, allowing military aircraft from Australia and New Zealand to bring in aid workers and supplies. The first commercial flight since the storm also landed Monday.
Outer islands ‘incredibly hard hit’
But the big unknown remains the scale of the destruction the huge storm wrought on the outer islands to the north and south of the capital.
Six people have so far been confirmed dead and 30 others injured in Port Vila, according to the country’s National Disaster Management Office.
The agency said Monday it had no casualty figures from Vanuatu’s other six provinces yet because the communication network is still down. About 65 islands in the sprawling archipelago are inhabited.
“It’s certainly deeply concerning because those islands down there were incredibly hard hit,” said Tom Perry, a spokesman for the aid organization CARE International.
He said CARE hopes to have some of its team members on a flight Monday to one of the islands in the south of the archipelago.
‘People need our help’
Many people now lack the basics of life: clean water, food and shelter.
“Homes have been lost, crops are destroyed. The damage is enormous, and people need our help,” said Aurelia Balpe, head of the Red Cross in the Pacific. “Yet it will still take some time before we really understand the full extent of the damage.”
Some 60,000 children are in need of assistance, UNICEF reported Sunday.
Vanuatu has officially declared a state of emergency, opening the door for other countries to help.
The country’s remote location adds to the challenges facing the international response. Port Vila is more than 1,770 kilometers (1,100 miles) northeast of Brisbane on Australia’s east coast, and some 2,200 kilometers north of Auckland, the closest city in New Zealand.