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High winds pummel Mozambique, killing one, as cyclone Freddy nears

Trees are strewn across a street in Quelimane, Mozambique, Saturday, March 11, 2023. (AP Photo) Trees are strewn across a street in Quelimane, Mozambique, Saturday, March 11, 2023. (AP Photo)
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MAPUTO -

High winds from Cyclone Freddy pummeled Mozambique on Saturday, killing one person, ripping roofs off houses and triggering a lockdown in one port town, a resident and local media said, two weeks after 27 died when the storm first made landfall.

Freddy, one of the strongest storms ever recorded in the southern hemisphere, seemed to have stalled offshore, satellite data showed, but was still battering the coast with rain and was potentially hours away from coming onto land for a second time since it was named off Southern Africa on Feb. 6.

The Mozambique National Meteorology Institute predicted the storm would make landfall around midnight local time (2200 GMT).

"The town is a no-go zone; no shops or businesses open. Everything is closed. We're locked up," resident Vania Massingue said by telephone from her house in the port town of Quelimane, located in the storm's path in the country's Zambezia central province.

"I can see some houses with roofs torn apart, broken windows and the streets flooded. It's really scary."

After swirling for 34 days, the weather system is likely to have broken the record for the longest-lasting tropical cyclone. According to the World Meteorological Organization, the previous record was held by a 31-day hurricane in 1994.

State broadcaster TVM said one person had died when his house collapsed, and that the power utility had switched off the electricity completely as a precaution. All flights were suspended, it added.

The cyclone is slow-moving, which meteorological experts say means it will pick up more moisture off the sea, bringing heavy rainfall.

Around the world, climate change is making hurricanes wetter, windier and stronger, scientists say. Oceans absorb much of the heat from greenhouse gas emissions, and when warm seawater evaporates its heat energy is transferred to the atmosphere, fueling more destructive storms.

More than 171,000 people were affected after the cyclone swept through southern Mozambique last month, bringing heavy rains and floods that damaged crops and destroyed houses, with OCHA putting its death toll at 27 so far -- 10 in Mozambique and 17 in Madagascar.

More than half a million people are at risk in Mozambique this time, notably in Zambezia, Tete, Sofala and Nampula provinces.

Freddy, which is also expected to hit northeastern Zimbabwe, southeast Zambia and Malawi, has set a record for the highest accumulated cyclone energy, a measure of the storm's strength over time, of any southern hemisphere storm in history, according to the U.S. National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration.

(Reporting by Manuel Mucari in Maputo and Tim Cocks in Johannesburg; Writing by Tim Cocks; Editing by Mike Harrison and John Stonestreet)

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