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At least 31 people are killed by the Cyclone Gezani that ravages Madagascar.

The country's disaster-management office reported that?Fierce winds? left a?trail?of destruction on Madagascar after?Tropical? Cyclone Gezani struck the island. At least 31 people were killed and another four are still missing.

In an updated report, the BNGRC (National Bureau for Risk and Disaster Management) reported that 29 of the deaths occurred in Toamasina - the island nation's second largest city and the most impoverished in the Indian Ocean. Two other deaths occurred in a nearby district.

Residents of Toamasina and the surrounding area described scenes as chaos when the cyclone hit land late Tuesday. "I've never felt winds like this before... "The doors and windows, which are made of metal but are violently shaking," said Harimanga Ranaivo.

Gezani has also caused at least 36 serious injuries. As a precaution, more than 2,740 residents were evacuated after the cyclone hit coastal communities and then moved inland.

BNGRC reported that the cyclone’s aftermath caused?another 6,870 displaced people. A total of 250,406 disaster victims were also classified, according to BNGRC.

According to the U.N. humanitarian office, it was the second tropical cyclone that hit Madagascar in the past year. Tropical Cyclone Fytia had killed 14 people and forced over 31,000 to flee their homes just 10 days earlier.

DANGEROUS WINDS AND RISING SEA LEVELS

Gezani's peak winds were 185 km/h (115 miles/h), with gusts reaching 270 km/h. This was powerful enough to tear metal sheets from roofs and uproot large trees.

Before the arrival of the cyclone, officials closed schools and prepared?emergency housing.

The BNGRC had warned that the rising sea level in Toamasina was already flooding streets.

The wind blew down roofs, walls, and power lines, leaving neighbourhoods in darkness.

On Wednesday morning, Madagascar’s Meteorological Service reported that Gezani was downgraded to a moderate tropical cyclone and had moved westward into the interior, approximately 100 km north of Antananarivo.

The service reported that "Gezani" will move out into the Mozambique Channel tonight or this evening after crossing the central highlands today from east to western. (Reporting and writing by Lovasoa Rabary; editing by Ros Russel and Aiden Lewis)

(source: Reuters)