Five people were killed and
at least 40 missing on the Yemeni island of Socotra on Friday as Cyclone Mekunu
pummeled the area then made its way towards the Arabian Peninsula’s southern
coast.
The five dead included four
Yemenis and one Indian national, residents and medical sources said, while the
missing include Yemenis, Indians and Sudanese.
Yemen declared a state of
emergency on Thursday for Socotra, which lies between southern Yemen and the
Horn of Africa and is renowned for its unique animal and plant life.
Largely untouched by
Yemen’s three-year-old war, it is under the control of the
internationally-recognised government whose President, Abdu-Rabbu Mansour-Hadi,
is in exile in Saudi Arabia.
The storm flooded Socotra’s
villages and capsized boats, leaving much of the island without access to
communications.
Omani authorities said they
expected the cyclone to pass over the city of Salalah on Friday night.
As wind and rain began to
pummel southern Oman during the day, they extended the closure of the city’s
airport through Saturday.
Mekunu was expected to
weaken to a tropical storm before reaching southeastern Saudi Arabia on
Saturday, according to the kingdom’s meteorological authority.
Yemen is already grappling
with one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
The war has killed more
than 10,000 people, displaced three million others, triggered a cholera
outbreak and pushed the impoverished country to the verge of starvation,
according to the UN.
No comments:
Post a Comment