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More than 16,000 people are displaced by Cyclone Gezani in Madagascar.

The disaster management office announced on Monday that at least 59 people were killed by Cyclone Gezani, which struck Madagascar in the last week. It is assessing the impact of the second tropical storm to strike the Indian Ocean island nation.

According to the National Bureau of Risk and Disaster Management, (BNGRC), the cyclone caused 16,428 people to be displaced, while 15 remain missing. 804 people were injured, and 423,986 others were affected.

Gezani swept through the country only 10 days after Tropical Cyclone Fytia, which killed 14 people and caused 31,000 to be displaced.

Gezani's peak winds were 185 km per hour (115 miles per hour) with gusts of up to 270 km per hour. This was powerful enough to tear metal sheets from roofs and uproot trees.

The Mozambique Channel was affected by a cyclone that moved westward, bringing with it heavy winds and waves up to 10 meters high in the southern part of the country, according to a weather service statement.

Forecasts indicate that the weather system is looping back toward Madagascar again. A second landfall in southwest Madagascar is expected on Monday.

The?weather service has warned that the Ampanihy District in southwestern Madagascar is on high alert. Gezani, which is forecast to pass 100 km off the coast of Ampanihy on Monday night, will bring winds?of 65 km/h, but no heavy rain, according to authorities. (Reporting and additional reporting by Anathi madubela in Johannesburg, Writing by George Obulutsa; Editing by Bate Felis; Editing By Anil D'Silva.)

(source: Reuters)