Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
France is bracing for a heavy death toll in its Indian Ocean territory of Mayotte, its poorest department, after cyclone Chido ravaged the island over the weekend and threatened a humanitarian catastrophe.
“I think there will surely be several hundred [deaths], we may even approach a thousand, or even thousands,” François-Xavier Bieuville, Mayotte’s prefect, told France 2 television. Winds from the tropical storm reached speeds of more than 225kmh on Saturday.
France’s interior ministry was unable to confirm Bieuville’s estimates. Caretaker interior minister Bruno Retailleau arrived in Mayotte on Monday to address the damage wreaked by Chido.
Météo France said that the storm was the strongest to hit the island territory in 90 years.
“Incredibly high” temperatures in the Indian Ocean this year contributed to the cyclone’s strength, said Helen Hooker, a meteorologist at the University of Reading. The year 2024 is on course to be the warmest recorded, with November the second-warmest month on land and at sea.
While scientists had forecast the path of the cyclone, islanders struggled to evacuate because they had nowhere to go. Alex Baker, another meteorologist at the university, said that the cyclone’s peak strength had been “somewhat underestimated” in part because it had intensified rapidly.
Mayotte’s large number of unregistered migrants — the official population of 321,000 is considered a big underestimate — will make it hard to calculate the final death toll. Many migrants have been living in shacks that were destroyed by the cyclone.
The human tragedy also poses political challenges for President Emmanuel Macron and François Bayrou, his new prime minister, at a time when a caretaker government is in place. Bayrou held a crisis meeting on Sunday evening and Macron will do the same on Monday.
“The concern is not only for the short term and the relief and assistance that we can provide but it is also for the medium term: water supply, food supply, especially for the most sensitive places — prisons, detention centres,” said Bayrou. “All these are risk factors that pile up.”
In addition to the large number of migrants, Muslim traditions of burying the dead within 24 hours were also likely to complicate efforts to make an accurate count of the victims, the interior ministry said.
The French government has sent 800 medical staff and other personnel to the island to deal with the emergency, including 110 sent last week to prepare for the coming storm.
Paris has also dispatched a field hospital, satellite transmission equipment and electrical staff from state-owned EDF, the energy group, to help repair Mayotte’s ravaged infrastructure.
Read the full article here