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Daños en Vanuatu por el ciclón Pam

Daños en Vanuatu por el ciclón Pam

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  • Varios residentes de Port Vila valoran los daños del ciclón

    Varios residentes de Port Vila valoran los daños del ciclón

    Local residents inspect a damaged house in Port Vila, the capital city of the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu March 14, 2015. Winds of up to 250 kilometers an hour (155 mph) ripped metal roofs off houses and downed trees in Vanuatu on Saturday, as relief agencies braced for a major rescue operation and unconfirmed reports said dozens had already died. Witnesses described sea surges of up to eight meters (yards) and flooding throughout the capital Port Vila after the category 5 cyclone named Pam hit the country late on Friday. Picture taken March 14, 2015.   REUTERS/Kris Paras    (VANUATU - Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT)

  • Escombros y edificio dañados tras el paso de Pam por Port Vila

    Escombros y edificio dañados tras el paso de Pam por Port Vila

    Debris lies in a street near damaged buildings in Port Vila, the capital city of the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu March 14, 2015. Winds of up to 250 kilometers an hour (155 mph) ripped metal roofs off houses and downed trees in Vanuatu on Saturday, as relief agencies braced for a major rescue operation and unconfirmed reports said dozens had already died. Witnesses described sea surges of up to eight meters (yards) and flooding throughout the capital Port Vila after the category 5 cyclone named Pam hit the country late on Friday. Picture taken March 14, 2015.   REUTERS/Kris Paras    (VANUATU - Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT)

  • Un gran árbol caído por los fuertes vientos de Pam cerca de la prisión de Port Vila

    Un gran árbol caído por los fuertes vientos de Pam cerca de la prisión de Port Vila

    A large tree uprooted by Cyclone Pam lies on a street near a prison in Port Vila, the capital city of the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu March 15, 2015. The first shipments of aid landed in Vanuatu on Sunday as authorities declared a state of emergency and global relief agencies geared up after the "monster" cyclone tore through the vulnerable Pacific island nation. With winds of more than 300 kph (185 mph), Cyclone Pam razed homes, smashed boats and destroyed crops as it struck late on Friday and into Saturday. Aid workers described the situation as catastrophic. The official count of confirmed deaths was at eight with 20 people injured. But those numbers were almost certain to rise as rescuers reached the low-lying archipelago's outlying islands. REUTERS/Kris Paras (VANUATU - Tags: DISASTER ENVIRONMENT)

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