-
'Free France': Macron reveals name of Europe's largest warship
-
Oil surges as Iran gas facilities hit, stocks slide
-
Foreign press group slams Israeli police for breaking journalist's wrist
-
Aston Villa want to be more than 'maybe team' in Europa League quest
-
McIlroy happy with back injury recovery as Masters looms
-
Vinicius 'should be loved by everyone' says Donnarumma after celebration row
-
Iran was not rebuilding nuclear enrichment, US intelligence finds
-
Carrick urges England boss Tuchel to call up United trio
-
Three sporting champions to be stripped of titles for non-doping reasons
-
Chilean GDP beats 2025 forecast despite mining dip
-
Storms, warm seas drove sudden drop in Antarctic ice: study
-
Aston Villa want to be more than a 'maybe team' in quest for Europa League
-
Trump administration takes steps to curb energy cost hikes
-
Vaccines facing misinformation spike: WHO experts
-
'Happened so fast': UK students panicked by meningitis outbreak
-
WNBA, players union agree 'transformative' labor deal: reports
-
Global music market grows, calls for AI compensation: industry body
-
Maiduguri bombings follow surge of jihadist violence in Nigeria
-
Belgian court suspends TotalEnergies climate trial
-
Troubled waters: Thai fishermen marooned by rising fuel costs
-
Doku adamant Man City still have plenty to play for after Champions League exit
-
Afghanistan vows to avenge deadly Kabul bombing but says open to talks
-
Stocks fall, oil surges as US inflation jumps and Israel strikes gas facilities
-
Nigerian president meets royals on 'historic' UK state visit
-
South Lebanon residents flee death and destruction
-
Buttler ready to continue England career despite 'poor' T20 World Cup
-
Why convoys cannot fully protect oil tankers from Iran attacks
-
UK PM leads efforts to halt deadly meningitis spread
-
EU lawmakers back ban on sexualised AI deepfakes
-
Stripping Senegal of AFCON title a 'disgrace for Africa' say fans
-
Under Hezbollah fire, people in north Israel hope for better days
-
Iran women's football team cross Turkish border to head home: AFP
-
Fear in central Beirut as Israel strikes, with and without warning
-
'France is wild': Macron to unveil name of Europe's largest warship
-
Arsenal's Trossard says Leverkusen win ideal ahead of League Cup final
-
Israel conducts wave of strikes on Beirut
-
Seven-year term sought for Norway princess's son for alleged rapes
-
US govt says Anthropic AI an 'unacceptable risk' to military
-
Head of victorious Nepal party hails 'win for the country'
-
Brussels touts 'EU Inc.' company status to lure start-ups
-
UN maritime body kicks off emergency talks on Mideast shipping
-
China tech giant Tencent bets on AI agents
-
AFCON stripping of Senegal's title a 'disgrace for Africa' say fans
-
Japan thrash South Korea 4-1 to set up Women's Asian Cup final with Australia
-
Fernandez uncertain over Chelsea future after Champions League exit
-
Iran women's football team arrive in eastern Turkey, heading home
-
Russia slams Oscar-winning anti-Putin documentary
-
Mass burials expected for victims of Kabul drug rehab centre strike
-
Celtic keeper Schmeichel fears shoulder injury could end his career
-
Israelis shelter with pets from threat of Iran missiles
Mayotte hospital on life support after cyclone
The haggard faces in the wreckage-and-water-strewn corridors betrayed the nerves and exhaustion of those soldiering on at the main hospital on the French archipelago of Mayotte, ravaged by a deadly cyclone last weekend.
"It's chaos," summed up medical and administrative assistant Anrifia Ali Hamadi.
"The roof is collapsing. We're not very safe. Even I don't feel safe here."
Perched on a cliffside overhanging the capital Mamoudzou, the hospital offers a fine vantage point from which to view the vast wreckage Cyclone Chido wrought when it barrelled into the French Indian Ocean territory.
Despite its blown-out windows and doors ripped off their hinges, most of the hospital's medics have taken to sleeping at their battered workplace as the storm had swept their homes away, Hamadi said.
As best as they could, its doctors and nurses have kept calm and kept working -- some without a pause since the cyclone made landfall on Saturday.
That day four women gave birth even as the worst gale to hit Mayotte in a century raged outside, said the hospital's head of obstetrics Roger Serhal.
One needed a caesarean, but the operating theatre was flooded -- forcing the medics to chance a natural delivery.
Luckily the baby was born healthy after what Serhal called "a lot of effort and a bit of risk".
- Lack of medicine -
Four days on, entire sections of the Mamoudzou hospital are still out of action.
In the high-risk pregnancies section of its maternity ward -- France's largest with around 10,000 births a year -- electricians raced to restore the rooms to their proper state, in the near-indifference of expectant mothers and their carers.
Many parts cannot accommodate patients as the cyclone left them without electricity, while the storm smashed the windows of the intensive care unit.
"The Mamoudzou hospital suffered major damage. So it's important to know that during the cyclone, we continued to operate despite the flooding and the difficulties," said the hospital's director Jean-Mathieu Defour.
"Everything is still functioning, but in a degraded state."
Hope is on the horizon: reinforcements have already arrived, their camping beds set up on the hospital lawns, and more are expected.
What is lacking is medicine.
Although the first orders arrived "very quickly" after the cyclone, Defour said more were needed.
"Seventy percent of our stock of medicines in Longoni (Mayotte's commercial port) has been destroyed," the hospital chief lamented.
With a face marked by four days of non-stop toil, the intensive care unit's head Vincent Gilles praised how the hospital's medics rose to the occasion.
"Immediately after the winds stopped, we had to receive victims in absolutely critical conditions, sometimes patients who were already dead."
Then came those with trauma, fractures and other complex wounds.
"And now that we're a few days away from the event, we have more chronic illnesses, people who did not have access to care and treatment, and that's what's rising sharply," the doctor said.
- Cholera fears -
With communications down, around a 10th of the hospital's 3,000 staff are still unreachable.
In the face of the never-ending stream of patients and the slew of homes destroyed in the cyclone, its workers have made no secret of their mood.
Some have even expressed their desire to leave.
Security issues have been reported at several of the hospital's branches across the archipelago, with opportunists hoping to pillage their premises.
And the Mamoudzou hospital was plagued with issues even before the cyclone's passage.
Around 50 doctors protested outside the hospital in June warning of staff shortages, leaving night shifts without a medic on duty in the emergency services.
But many fear this crisis is set to last.
"Things are going to get really hectic over the next few weeks with all the gastroenteritis and hygiene issues," huffed one doctor.
Workers have re-erected a tent in one wing of the hospital for patients suspected of having contracted cholera -- an epidemic that was declared over in Mayotte in July.
Yet medical assistant Hamadi said she was still optimistic.
"We're hoping that after all the tidying up we're going to do today we'll be able to resume consultations very, very quickly and be able to welcome patients (to the out of action wards) as soon as possible," she said.
"But we still have to do everything we can to save what we can and to be able to continue."
B.Baumann--VB