Villagers on the cyclone-battered Fijian island of Koro had
their chainsaws, shovels and assorted tools out today
clearing roads, rebuilding homes and dealing with damage from
winds which gusted to 240kmh.
Koro, to the northeast of the main island of Viti Levu, was
badly damaged by Cyclone Tomas in the last two days, with
many homes among the island's 14 villages badly damaged or
destroyed.
However, the islanders were resourceful and independent and
had already started rebuilding, a spokesman for the Dere Bay
Resort on the western side of the island, Julian Hennings
told NZPA .
He said during the cyclone, when winds gusted to 240kmh,
islanders helped each other.
"They depend on each other. That is the way they have been
living for hundreds of years. They are quite
self-sufficient."
But this time they may need help from outside the island
community because many of the houses were built from modern
materials shipped from the mainland, rather than traditional
materials.
A New Zealand Air Force Hercules has arrived in Fiji loaded
with relief supplies. It was also expected to fly over the
most badly damaged islands to give government authorities an
assessment of the damage.
One person was confirmed dead but authorities expected the
death toll to rise. Many areas had lost power and
communications.
On Koro, houses and trees were blown over and the main road
on the island was covered with rocks blown from the sea by
heavy winds.
The island was lucky to have had two days' warning of the
approaching cyclone and many of the 4500 people who live in
the 14 villages on the island went to village community halls
for shelter. The halls were well build and strong but as the
people sheltered in them they knew their homes were being
blown down, he said. Damage was extensive.
"Some of the houses have blown away. A lot of trees have been
uprooted, some of the roads have been blocked off because the
waves have picked up rocks and coral and have dumped it on
the road so there is a major cleanup happening today."
Mr Hennings said the islands had not experienced a category
four cyclone for several years but they were lucky this one
was not accompanied by very heavy rain.
He walked around the island yesterday and on the eastern side
the damage was severe, not only to houses but also to one of
four new jetties.
He said of the 14 villages about seven had been badly damaged
on the exposed eastern side of the island where they met the
full force of the cyclone.
While rebuilding had already begun much of the roofing iron
was unusable because it had been twisted and ripped by the
strength of the wind.
Cyclone Tomas had been slow moving, not like other cyclones
which hit the islands and quickly moved on.
"This one took its time and it really got to the villages and
did a lot of damage." Cyclone Tomas was expected to pass
Fiji's southernmost island, Ono-i-Lau, today, and the
hurricane force winds were likely to start weakening.
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