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Madagascar, Mozambique set for 'dangerous' Cyclone Freddy

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MOMBASA, Kenya -

A cyclone which is intensifying as it approaches the southeastern African coast has been labeled as "dangerous" by the United Nation's weather agency on Monday as nations brace for landfall.

Cyclone Freddy is projected to reach Madagascar on Tuesday evening and hurtle toward Mozambique by the end of the week. The tropical cyclone is equivalent to a Category 4 hurricane and is expected to dump heavy rain and bring turbulent winds.

A "significant deterioration in weather conditions" is underway, Meteo France's multi-hazard early warning system predicted Monday. The weather agency said the cyclone is passing around 100 kilometres (60 miles) away from the islands of Mauritius then Reunion on Monday, where strong winds and dangerous seas are expected.

The regional weather observation center on the island of Reunion said that Freddy is currently rushing across the ocean with average wind speeds of 205 kilometres (127 miles) per hour.

It's feared that up to 2.2 million people, mostly in Madagascar, will be impacted by storm surges and flooding, according to the Global Disaster Alert and Coordination System. The Mahanoro, Mananjary and Nosy Varita communes in western Madagascar will be first-hit on Tuesday.

Mozambique will likely be struck on Friday, according to the country's national meteorology institute. The nation has already experienced widespread flooding in recent weeks, raising fears from the UN humanitarian agency that the "severe humanitarian situation in the region" may escalate.

Some five other coastal nations -- Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Eswatini and South Africa -- are also vulnerable as Freddy looks set to tear across the Mozambican channel after Wednesday, according to the region's climate service center.

Last year, scientists were able to show that climate change worsened cyclones in southeast Africa, already a hotspot for tropical storms and cyclones.

In the last 12 months the region has suffered a significant battering from a number of cyclones and suffered major loss of life, property, displacement of large populations and costly damages to major infrastructure.

"It is hoped that accurate warnings and forecasts will help limit the damage from Tropical Cyclone Freddy," said UN weather agency spokesperson Clare Nullis.

First spotted and named by a monitoring center in Melbourne, Australia, on Feb. 6, Cyclone Freddy has since crossed the entire southern Indian Ocean.

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