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New Zealand Braces for ‘Worst Storm in Decades’ | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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A landslide caused by rains from Cyclone Debbie is shoveled off a main road between Napier and Taupo in New Zealand. Photo: Reuters


New Zealand was bracing Thursday for a storm that meteorologists warned could be the worst for almost 50 years, with extreme weather alerts that led to the evacuation of seaside areas and closed schools.

The tropical depression, the tail-end of ex-Cyclone Cook which hit New Caledonia this week, has already generated offshore winds of more than 170 kmh.

The official Metservice said it was expected to make landfall overnight Thursday, generating five meter swells, torrential rain and gale force winds.

It warned the storm could be the most intense since ex-Cyclone Giselle in 1968, which swept a ferry onto rocks in Wellington Harbor, killing 53 people.

Cyclone Cook on Monday dumped heavy rain on New Caledonia, where four people were hurt when a tree fell on their car and power supplies were disrupted. Damage, however, was limited.

New Zealand emergency services pre-emptively evacuated some small coastal communities in the country’s north, and the military was assisting relief efforts.

“This is a very significant event and is likely to produce widespread flooding, (land)slips and wind damage, including to powerlines, and may even lift roofs and bring down large trees,” Metservice said.

More than 100 schools were shut and universities in Auckland were closing early on Thursday.

Many areas of the North Island are already sodden after the remnants of Australia’s Cyclone Debbie swept over last week and caused extensive flooding.

The situation is further complicated by the fact that the storm is bearing down as New Zealand prepares for the Easter long weekend, meaning roads are likely to be choked with holiday-makers.

The New Zealand Transport Agency urged motorists to stay off the roads if possible, saying conditions would be hazardous.

“We’re worried,” Tony Bonne, the mayor of Whakatane district, one of the areas expected to bear the brunt of the storm, said on local radio.

Air New Zealand cancelled all flights from Rotorua, Napier, Hamilton and Tauranga in the North Island, and said it expected disruptions at Nelson and Blenheim in the South Island.