Cyclone Vaianu leaves clean-up under way in New Zealand

Reuters Published April 13, 2026 at 10.30am (AWST)

New Zealanders who evacuated ahead of a cyclone that battered the North Island ‌are gradually being allowed to return home as ‌the storm moves away.

Clean-up crews ‌are clearing roads, removing fallen trees and checking for possible landslides, local media reported on Monday.

Power companies continue to report unplanned outages, while some roads remain closed.

Julie Jukes, acting mayor of Whakatane, one of ‌the areas ‌hit by the ⁠cyclone, told Radio New Zealand it ​had brought the worst weather she had ever seen, but "the main thing is that everybody was safe and it's only damage to property and trees, power and things like that".

Prime Minister ⁠Christopher Luxon told Radio ‌New ​Zealand the emergency system had worked well, people had prepared ​for the storm and ‌the response had been much better than in ​previous emergencies.

New Zealand forecaster MetService said in a post on social media platform X late on Sunday that Cyclone Vaianu had ​moved ​offshore and was east ​of the North Island.

By Monday morning, ‌the only warnings still in place were for large ocean swells off the coast of the lower North Island.

New Zealand has been hit by a series of severe weather events ​in 2026, including heavy rain in January that ​triggered a landslide and ⁠killed six people.

Reuters

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