Dozens dead and thousands displaced in Madagascar by 167mph cyclone

12 February 2026, 10:43 | Updated: 12 February 2026, 11:20

Dozens of people have been killed and thousands displaced after a cyclone hit Madagascar with gusts of up to 167mph.

The trail of destruction left by Tropical Cyclone Gezani has caused at least 31 deaths, the country's disaster management office said.

Four others are missing, 36 are seriously injured, and 6,870 are displaced, with more than 250,000 people classified as disaster victims in total, officials said.

At its peak, the cyclone unleashed gusts of up to 167mph (270kph) - enough to tear metal sheeting from roofs and uproot large trees - with sustained winds of 115mph (185kph).

It comes just days after another cyclone, Tropical Cyclone Fytia, wrought havoc in Madagascar, killing 14 people and displacing 85,000 more.

Toamasina, the island nation's second-largest city, was the hardest hit by Gezani, with 29 people killed as homes collapsed beneath the onslaught.

All told, 75% of the city's infrastructure was destroyed, according to the office of President Michael Randrianirina. Power has been cut off since Tuesday.

"I have never experienced winds this violent," said resident Harimanga Ranaivo. "The doors and windows are made of metal, but they are being violently shaken."

Another resident, who gave his name only as Michel, described the scene as "devastation" when reached by phone.

He said: "Roofs have been blown away, walls have collapsed, power poles are down, trees have been uprooted. It looks like a catastrophic landscape."

Red alerts were issued for several regions at risk of floods and landslides as the cyclone made landfall.

Gezani weakened to a tropical storm as it moved inland on Wednesday, passing some 60 miles north of the capital, Antananarivo.

But it's expected to pass into the Mozambique Channel, which separates Madagascar from mainland Africa, where forecasters warn it might strengthen again.

Now the island faces the prospect of Gezani turning back and bringing fresh destruction to its southwest coast next week.

Weather alerts have also been issued across the channel in Mozambique, where floods last month hit more than 700,000 people.

Read more:
Scramble to reach the starving after devastating floods
Cameroon re-elects world's oldest president

Madagascar's cyclone season lasts from roughly November to March, with more than a dozen tropical storms or cyclones recorded since 2020.

Latest UK and World News

Ian Huntley is said to have been left blind and highly unlikely to survive prison attack.

Ian Huntley 'left blinded' and 'highly unlikely' to survive brutal prison attack

BRITAIN-US-POLITICS-DIPLOMACY-EPSTEIN

Mandelson snubs US Congress as he declines request to give evidence over 'close ties' to Epstein

Exclusive
A schoolboy and a man have been arrested in connection to viral "school war" vidoes

Man and boy arrested after viral 'school wars' videos encourage teens from rival schools to attack each other with knives

Joani Reid, Labour MP for East Kilbride and Strathaven constituency, has been suspended amid an internal investigation.

Labour MP Joani Reid 'voluntarily suspends herself' after husband arrested on suspicion of spying for China