Four dead as French island reels from devastating cyclone
At least 4 people have died in Reunion during cyclone Garance (-) (-/AFP/AFP)
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Residents of the Indian Ocean island of La Reunion took
stock of the damage Saturday after a devastating cyclone barrelled through the
overseas French territory, killing four people.
Local people expressed shock at the level of destruction
after Cyclone Garance struck the territory of 900,000 people Friday, uprooting
trees, tearing off roofs and flooding homes. Entire streets were inundated, and
cars were washed away.
A red alert, ordering the population to stay indoors, was
lifted on Saturday morning after Garance was downgraded to a severe tropical
storm.
The body of a man was found trapped under a tree in the
capital, Saint-Denis, officials said Saturday.
The other victims, two women and a man, were carried away by
flash floods, trapped in a mudslide or killed by an electrical fire, the
authorities said Friday.
"We are deeply shaken," Samantha Boyer said in
Saint-Denis, where one of the women had been swept away.
"We tried to get the lady out of the drainage
outlet," she said. "We called all the neighbours and really tried to
rescue her, but we couldn't."
The east and north of the island bore the brunt of the
damage.
Fierce winds damaged the house of Therese Borel, who lives
in the eastern town of Saint-Benoit, tearing off the roof. She and her
husband took refuge at their son's house, who lives nearby.
"When I arrived at my son's house, just behind, I sat
down on the floor and started crying," said Borel.
"I didn't have much to begin with; now I have
nothing," she said.
"I had never been so scared in my life," added her
son, Jimmy.
"I've lived here for 55 years, I've been through
several cyclones," said the resident of the nearby town of Bras-Panon.
"I've never seen anything like it."
Some 120,000 people were still without electricity, while
more than 950 were staying in temporary accommodation centres.
In a gymnasium in Saint-Denis, where some locals found
shelter, Marie-Pierrette Narsou said the cyclone had left her "a bit
traumatised".
Prefect Patrice Latron, the central government
representative on the island, said "a lot of work" would be needed,
with many roads blocked by fallen trees.
"A few stores have been looted, mainly for provisions,
but we cannot say it has been widespread," he added.
Manuel Valls, France's overseas territories minister, was
due to arrive in La Reunion in the coming days, his team said.
During the passage of the cyclone on Friday, French weather
office Meteo-France recorded winds of up to 230 kilometres (143 miles) per hour
in Piton Sainte-Rose on the island's eastern coast.
Latron said Garance was fiercer than cyclone Belal, which
killed four people on Reunion in January 2024 and caused an estimated 100
million euros ($104 million) in damage.
The nearby tourist island of Mauritius had shut its main
airport on Wednesday, while Reunion had shut down to flights on Thursday.
In Saint-Gilles-les-Bains on the island's west coast, a
ravine burst its banks, sending muddy water pouring through the town centre.
Local council workers started clearing the mud from the
streets early on Saturday morning.
"We're shovelling it away," said one.
"Residents are helping us, but there's far too much mud. We've had to bring
in excavators."
About 200 firefighters and military personnel were to be
sent in over the weekend from Mayotte, a French territory nearly 1,500
kilometres away, and from mainland France, the government said.
Floris Carpaye of the farmers' union FDSEA said the agricultural
sector had been hit hard, especially market gardening.
"It's a real catastrophe," Carpaye said.
"It's going to cost tens of millions of euros."

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