Madagascar braces for Cyclone Gezani’s return

Island nation struggles to recover from dual cyclone impact

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Reuters

A man pulls a cart on a flooded street in Toamasina, Madagascar, February 12 2026. Picture: REUTERS/Stringer (Stringer)

By Agency Staff

Antananarivo — At least 59 people died when Cyclone Gezani struck Madagascar last week, the disaster management office said on Monday, as it assesses the impact of the second tropical storm to hit the Indian Ocean island nation this year.

The cyclone displaced 16,428, while 15 people remain missing, 804 were injured and 423,986 were classified as affected by the disaster, the National Bureau for Risk and Disaster Management (BNGRC) said.

Gezani barrelled through the country just 10 days after Tropical Cyclone Fytia killed 14 people and displaced over 31,000, according to the UN’s humanitarian office.

Children wade through a flooded street in Toamasina, Madagascar, February 12 2026. Picture: Reuters (Stringer)

At its peak, Gezani had sustained winds of about 185km/h, with gusts rising to nearly 270km/h ― powerful enough to rip metal sheeting from rooftops and uproot large trees.

The cyclone moved westward across the Mozambique Channel, bringing heavy winds and waves of up to 10m in the southern end of Mozambique, its weather service said in a statement.

The weather system has since curved back eastward over the channel, and forecasts show it looping toward Madagascar again, with a second landfall expected in southwestern Madagascar on Monday.

Authorities have placed Ampanihy district in southwestern Madagascar on red alert, with Gezani forecast to pass about 100km off its coast on Monday evening, bringing winds of about 65km/h but no heavy rainfall, the weather service said.