The United Nations and partners delivered initial aid to the victims of Tropical Cyclone Batsirai in Madagascar while the organization’s Humanitarian Air Service conducted needs assessment, a UN spokesman said on Monday. 

The first aerial assessment took place Monday with a UN Humanitarian Air Service flight, said Farhan Haq, deputy spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. 

“Other needs assessments carried out by teams on the ground will follow for a more comprehensive overview to inform response priorities in the days ahead.” 

The intense storm hit the east coast Saturday night and continued moving across the Indian Ocean island off the coast of Africa.

The spokesman said more than 71,000 people are estimated to have been displaced by the cyclone’s sweep. 

splco madagascar.jpg
The storm, Cyclone Batsirai, comes just two weeks after the island nation endured Tropical Storm Ana, which led to at least 58 deaths and 71,000 displaced people. Batsirai, which is responsible for one death on Mauritius a Category 4 storm, with sustained winds of 145 miles per hour.

Madagascar’s Office of Risk and Disaster Management recorded 58 deaths as on date . 

Officials estimated further landslides and rising river and canal levels could displace 150,000 people. 

“The United Nations and our humanitarian partners  in close coordination with government counterparts  have deployed surge teams and are ramping up the response,” Haq said. 

The World Food Programme distributed hot meals to evacuees and displaced people in shelters, he said. 

The UN Children’s Fund and other protection partners provided kits for setting up child-friendly spaces and training social workers on gender-based violence and preventing sexual exploitation and abuse. 

The UN Population Fund and partners provide psychosocial support and dignity kits for women and girls affected by gender-based violence and medical care for survivors of sexual violence.