Officials in New Zealand say Cyclone Gabrielle’s destruction, which resulted in significant flooding and landslides across the North Island, claimed the lives of at least four people, among them a child.
Officials confirmed a child’s body was discovered on Wednesday in Hawke’s Bay, one of the worst-affected areas.
About 300 people who were trapped on rooftops there had been rescued by rescue helicopters.
Although the cyclone has left New Zealand, as of Wednesday, 10,500 people were still without homes.
On Wednesday night, Prime Minister Chris Hipkins noted that “several people are missing for whom the police do hold grave concerns.”
Meanwhile, a magnitude 6.0 earthquake was widely felt across the country late on Wednesday. There were no immediate reports of damage or casualties from the quake, which struck off the coast of the North Island near the capital, Wellington.
While the rain has ceased in most parts, many remote towns and areas remain cut off by high floodwaters and a lack of power.
New Zealand’s prime minister, Chris Hipkins, has called Hurricane Gabrielle the biggest weather event to hit the country in the past century. It’s estimated to affect at least a third of the country’s five million population.
The storm’s damage has been most extensive in coastal communities on the far north and east coast of the North Island – with areas like Hawke’s Bay, the Coromandel, and Northland among the worst hit.
The situation in Hawke’s Bay, a popular tourist destination with some remote towns, was of particular concern to the authorities, said Emergency Management Minister Kieran McAnulty.
As the cyclone hit on Monday night, residents in Hawke’s Bay had been forced to swim through bedroom windows as the water level rose.
“In some cases, flood waters were up to the second storey of homes where people were being rescued,” a military spokesperson said.
At least three people have died in the area. One woman was killed in a landslide at her home, while another was found dead on the shoreline, authorities said. The police said they believed the child was caught in rising water.
The body of a missing firefighter who had been caught in a landslide in west of Auckland was also found on Tuesday.
Mr McAnulty on Wednesday said it would be unsurprising if the death toll rose further.
But he hailed the “phenomenal” effort of rescue workers who plucked “roughly 300 people from rooftops” in Hawke’s Bay, with 60 people rescued from one large building marooned by floodwaters.
Watch: Helicopters reach flood-hit homes and assess cyclone devastation.
On Wednesday, more than 140,000 people across the island were still without power, although electricity had been restored to 80,000 homes.
Residents in hard-hit areas are also being asked to conserve water and food because of fears of shortages.
New Zealand announced a national state of emergency on Tuesday, which allows it streamline its response to the disaster.
The country has only previously declared a national state of emergency on two occasions – during the start of the Covid-19 pandemic and following the 2011 Christchurch earthquake.
New Zealand’s climate minister has attributed to the scale of the disaster to climate change.
“The severity of it, of course, [is] made worse by the fact that our global temperatures have already increased by 1.1 degrees,” said James Shaw in parliament on Tuesday.
“We need to stop making excuses for inaction.” We cannot put our heads in the sand when the beach is flooding. “We must act now.”
Cyclone Gabrielle hit New Zealand’s North Island just two weeks after record downpours and flooding in the same region. Four people died in those floods.