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New French PM vows to bring back power, restriction shantytowns in storm-hit Mayotte

New French Prime Minister Francois Bayrou stated on Monday that power will be brought back to all families on the stormravaged Mayotte archipelago by the end of January, while the rebuilding of its shantytowns will not be allowed.

The sluggish speed of aid and hold-ups in the arrival of tidy water and electrical power have angered homeowners of France's poorest overseas area, situated between Madagascar and Mozambique about 8,000 km (4,971 miles) from mainland France.

Bayrou, whose first days in workplace were rocked by Cyclone Chido, the worst storm to strike Mayotte's 2 primary islands in 90 years, travelled to the archipelago on Monday to announce a raft of brand-new emergency situation procedures to restore, called Mayotte Standing.

A special emergency situation expense, which will consist of procedures to prohibit the kind of makeshift housing that was common before the storm, will be presented in a cabinet conference on Jan. 3 and be sent to parliament in the next fortnight, Bayrou said.

We can't let Mayotte end up being the capital of shantytowns, he informed reporters. It can't have to do with rebuilding Mayotte as it was. We should draw a various future for Mayotte, he said earlier.

Bayrou did not say how he would re-house the thousands, many of them undocumented immigrants from close-by Comoros, who lived in hillside shantytowns consisted of flimsy huts before the storm and who have currently begun reconstructing them. He was criticised for not going to the islands earlier. President Emmanuel Macron was also heckled when he took a trip to Mayotte previously this month. Bayrou stated water products, a flashpoint even before the catastrophe, will be back at pre-storm levels before completion of next week. Some 200 Starlink antennas will be deployed to help bring back interactions. Bayrou likewise said that early price quotes offered by the local prefect, who discussed a death toll of possibly several thousands in the days following the cyclone, might have been overstated.

We need to be really mindful when we discuss this, however what's. striking with those we fulfill is that the rumours of countless. deaths are not established, he said, discussing a possible death. toll in the hundreds.

The official death toll still stands at 39.

(source: Reuters)