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Live: Cyclone Gabrielle death toll rises to 11; 3000 'uncontactable' people now found; criminals take advantage of floods

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Sun, 19 Feb 2023, 9:28am

Live: Cyclone Gabrielle death toll rises to 11; 3000 'uncontactable' people now found; criminals take advantage of floods

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Sun, 19 Feb 2023, 9:28am

Cyclone Gabrielle鈥檚 heartbreaking human toll has risen to 11, with police holding 鈥済rave concerns鈥 for up to the same number five days after the monster weather system unleashed across large swathes of the North Island.

Search teams have been scouring Whirinaki Beach, near the mouth of the Esk River, in the search for victims.

This afternoon Eastern District Commander Superintendent, Jeanette Park said more than 3000 people have been found from the 6000 reports of people who could not be contacted.

鈥淗aving been up and looked via a helicopter, the devastation is phenomenal across the district.鈥

A person had been lost and a body located near a river, she said.

She asked criminals who were taking advantage of the floods and stealing to put themselves in the shoes of people who had been devastated by the floods.

鈥淚t鈥檚 cruel, people shouldn鈥檛 be doing that.鈥

The two most recent deaths were announced by police this morning - after a body was found in a home in Onekawa, Napier and another in Crownthorpe, Hastings.

There are 5608 registered uncontactable people and 1196 reports from people registering that they are safe. Police are particularly concerned for around 10 of them, deputy police commissioner Glenn Dunbier said in a Beehive briefing.

鈥淲e triage the reports of people that are missing, and clearly those we have heightened concerns for will come to the top. It鈥檚 a small number that fluctuates day to day as we find people.鈥

Police are also continuing to investigate a potential 10th person who could have died as a result of the cyclone.

Search teams scour the beach at Whirinaki, near the mouth of the Esk River. Photo / Warren Buckland

Search teams scour the beach at Whirinaki, near the mouth of the Esk River. Photo / Warren Buckland

There was a strict coronial process relating to identification when a body was found, but Dunbier dismissed 鈥渞umours rife through the community鈥 that some deaths hadn鈥檛 been made public. 鈥淎s of now, everybody that has been found has been notified [to the public].鈥

This included 2-year-old Ivy Collins, swept off her mother鈥檚 shoulders as a young family of four tried to escape the torrent of water that swept down Esk Valley early Tuesday, and Marie Greene, 59, whose body was found in the roof cavity of her Puketapu home.

At least four others died in slips, including George Luke - father of former Kiwi forward Isaac Luke - and Muriwai volunteer firefighters Craig Stevens and Dave van Zwanenberg.

In a notice of r膩hui for Hawke鈥檚 Bay: 鈥淒ue to the recent Cyclone Gabrielle and the disturbance to our whenua, tangata whenua are still recovering t奴p膩paku from the 鈥榮till missing list鈥 from Tangaroa. We also believe k艒iwi from flooded urup膩 have been carried through the floods to sea.

鈥淣otice is hereby given that the Mana Ahuriri Trust has placed a R膩hui 鈥 a ban on fishing and kaimoana gathering on Te Whanga a Ruawharo - Hawke鈥檚 Bay, at least for the next 10 days.鈥

The notice was supported by other hap奴 within Te Whanga a Ruawharo.

鈥淲e ask that you respect our wishes and hereby set this R膩hui. A notice of removal will be posted in the coming days. Ng膩ti Kahungunu Iwi Incorporated and the Hawke鈥檚 Bay Regional Council support this r膩hui.鈥

A dedicated police team of 100 were matching up the names of those registered as safe with those on the uncontactable list. 鈥淲e would encourage anyone who has not yet reported themselves as safe to go online if they鈥檙e able, to the police website, to fill out the 鈥 鈥業鈥檓 alive鈥 form.鈥

Those who鈥檇 registered missing friends and family since contacted should go back to the police website and update their earlier report, Dunbier said.

He also sounded a warning to any opportunistic criminals, with a 鈥渉ard-line鈥 promised on anyone taking advantage of the state of emergency.

鈥淲e will arrest and prosecute anyone we find doing that鈥, he said, noting opportunistic crime was 鈥渙verwhelmingly鈥 in the minority.

Residents of the flood-ravaged community of Puketapu fear their neighbours will start carrying weapons after recent looting. Since yesterday,聽聽to block access to the village.

And Vodafone boss Jason Paris said that generators are being stolen from mobile sites, cutting connectivity soon after it had been restored.

鈥淭he police are patrolling the sites & most of our聽聽generators are GPS tracked, so we know who the perpetrators are. Times are tough, but don鈥檛 be a d***,鈥 Paris tweeted.

Five days after the cyclone-fuelled rain and winds swept most devastatingly across the eastern North Island emergency teams were still rushing urgent food and water supplies to isolated communities.

Tair膩whiti civil defence had reached 90 per cent of their communities and planned to reach 100 per cent by the end of today, National Emergency Management Agency acting director Roger Ball said.

Gisborne鈥檚 water crisis had been fixed, with the town鈥檚 water plant back on yesterday morning after equipment from the New Zealand Defence Force arrived. In Te Puia, a health officer with supplies was being flown in.

Six hundred members of the defence force are helping with the emergency response, supported by four aircraft, seven helicopters, trucks and ships.

Eight search and rescue workers have already arrived from Australia, with another 17 expected yesterday.

Cyclone Gabrielle flooding damage in the Esk Valley, Hawke's Bay.  Herald Photo / Neil Reid

Cyclone Gabrielle flooding damage in the Esk Valley, Hawke's Bay. Herald Photo / Neil Reid

He didn鈥檛 know how many isolated communities still needed to be reached in Hawke鈥檚 Bay, but all rapid assessments would have been completed in Wairoa by the end of yesterday, Ball said.

Getting fuel to Wairoa was a priority, with BP aiming to get fuel there by road yesterday.

Cell towers were also a priority, and 90 per cent were operating in Hawke鈥檚 Bay,

80 per cent in Northland and 30 per cent in Gisborne. In Tair膩whiti Chorus was working to restore broadband over the weekend.

About 62,000 households nationally remained without power after the cyclone, 39,000 in Hawke鈥檚 Bay.

Other parts of the island are now in clean-up mode, including Northland and Coromandel, but land instability in Auckland鈥檚 West Coast communities continues to cause concern.

The risk of landslides remains high in Piha and Muriwai, Civil Defence said, with 20 home evacuated in Piha Friday night and an exclusion zone in place for a large part of Muriwai.

Money donations remained the best way for the country to show support, Ball said.

As of yesterday, generous Kiwis had donated more than $2 million to a joint Red Cross-九一星空无限 [NZ Herald parent company] disaster relief fund.

Donations can be made at聽

And yesterday, miraculous stories of survival continued to emerge, among them 81-year-old Pam Yarnold, who crocheted for comfort as her caravan floated away in the Esk Valley floodwaters.

鈥淚t was like, if I was to go I wanted to be doing something that bought me joy.鈥

Apple bins and downed cables saved her life, stopping and then keeping the caravan upright, Yarnold said.

鈥淚t felt like I was in this quiet pool and from what I have been told the river was just raging either side of me.鈥

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