<p>Military helicopters winched stranded storm survivors to safety in New Zealand on Wednesday after Cyclone Gabrielle killed four people and displaced 10,500 more.</p>.<p>With the storm now fading into the South Pacific, rescue teams are finally reaching regions cut off by days of torrential rain and gale-force winds.</p>.<p>The New Zealand military deployed three NH90 helicopters on reconnaissance and rescue flights to the hard-hit Hawke's Bay area, finding families, pets and workmates clustered on sodden zinc rooftops -- surrounded by a sea of murky, debris-filled floodwater.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/new-zealand-declares-emergency-as-cyclone-gabrielle-eases-1191021.html">New Zealand declares emergency as cyclone Gabrielle eases</a></strong></p>.<p>"In some cases, floodwaters were up to the second storey of homes where people were being rescued," a military spokesperson said.</p>.<p>The disaster has severed roads, collapsed houses and cut power across a swathe of New Zealand's North Island, home to more than three-quarters of the country's five million residents.</p>.<p>The human toll continues to rise. Police said the body of a child was found in a town on the remote east coast, with the youngster "believed to have been caught in rising floodwater".</p>.<p>Three other bodies have also been recovered, including a woman killed when her house was crushed by a landslide and a victim believed to be a volunteer firefighter trapped by a collapsing home.</p>.<p>"The devastation is widespread and has taken a toll beyond property and livelihoods to people," New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins said.</p>.<p>"There have been four confirmed fatalities and the grief must be unimaginable."</p>.<p>With the cellphone network disrupted, police have received over 1,400 reports of people who are still "uncontactable".</p>.<p>"We expect the vast majority of these people will be accounted for," Hipkins said, "but there are several people missing for whom police hold grave concerns."</p>.<p>At an evacuation centre in Whangarei in the far north, Margaret, 66 -- who asked for her surname not to be published -- said she fled her property when floodwater poured in and the power went out.</p>.<p>Her daughter, who lives 600 kilometres (373 miles) away in Napier on the east coast, was also forced out of her home when a landslide hit the area.</p>.<p>"She'd been calling me earlier, checking I was okay and then she's had this happen; it's unbelievable, really," she told AFP.</p>.<p>"She's young, so it's a big setback for her and her husband. I'll be ok, I've got people up here I can stay with and things will dry out eventually."</p>.<p>Emergency minister Kieran McAnulty indicated that around 10,500 people had been displaced. Officials estimate 160,000 households are still without power.</p>.<p>McAnulty hailed the "phenomenal" efforts of rescue workers and military personnel who plucked "roughly 300 people from rooftops" in Hawke's Bay -- a sprawling expanse of lush farmland, rugged mountains and hard-to-reach towns.</p>.<p>He said a group of 60 people were rescued from one large building marooned by floodwaters.</p>.<p>Aerial images from the area showed a once-bucolic landscape riven with torrents of floodwater, latticed with crumbling roads and scarred by massive landslides.</p>.<p>Authorities on Tuesday announced a national state of emergency for only the third time in the country's history. The other two were for the 2019 Christchurch attacks and the Covid-19 pandemic.</p>.<p>Cyclone Gabrielle formed off the northeastern coast of Australia in the Coral Sea on February 8, before barrelling across the South Pacific.</p>.<p>It bore down on New Zealand's northern coast on Sunday, bringing gusts of 140 kilometres (87 miles) an hour.</p>.<p>Over the next 24 hours, coastal communities were doused with 20 centimetres (almost eight inches) of rain and pounded by 11-metre (36-foot) waves.</p>.<p>Many parts of northern New Zealand were already waterlogged when Cyclone Gabrielle hit, having been drenched by record rainfall two weeks ago.</p>.<p>Scientists say Gabrielle had fed off unusually warm seas, driven by a combination of climate change and La Nina weather patterns.</p>
<p>Military helicopters winched stranded storm survivors to safety in New Zealand on Wednesday after Cyclone Gabrielle killed four people and displaced 10,500 more.</p>.<p>With the storm now fading into the South Pacific, rescue teams are finally reaching regions cut off by days of torrential rain and gale-force winds.</p>.<p>The New Zealand military deployed three NH90 helicopters on reconnaissance and rescue flights to the hard-hit Hawke's Bay area, finding families, pets and workmates clustered on sodden zinc rooftops -- surrounded by a sea of murky, debris-filled floodwater.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/new-zealand-declares-emergency-as-cyclone-gabrielle-eases-1191021.html">New Zealand declares emergency as cyclone Gabrielle eases</a></strong></p>.<p>"In some cases, floodwaters were up to the second storey of homes where people were being rescued," a military spokesperson said.</p>.<p>The disaster has severed roads, collapsed houses and cut power across a swathe of New Zealand's North Island, home to more than three-quarters of the country's five million residents.</p>.<p>The human toll continues to rise. Police said the body of a child was found in a town on the remote east coast, with the youngster "believed to have been caught in rising floodwater".</p>.<p>Three other bodies have also been recovered, including a woman killed when her house was crushed by a landslide and a victim believed to be a volunteer firefighter trapped by a collapsing home.</p>.<p>"The devastation is widespread and has taken a toll beyond property and livelihoods to people," New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins said.</p>.<p>"There have been four confirmed fatalities and the grief must be unimaginable."</p>.<p>With the cellphone network disrupted, police have received over 1,400 reports of people who are still "uncontactable".</p>.<p>"We expect the vast majority of these people will be accounted for," Hipkins said, "but there are several people missing for whom police hold grave concerns."</p>.<p>At an evacuation centre in Whangarei in the far north, Margaret, 66 -- who asked for her surname not to be published -- said she fled her property when floodwater poured in and the power went out.</p>.<p>Her daughter, who lives 600 kilometres (373 miles) away in Napier on the east coast, was also forced out of her home when a landslide hit the area.</p>.<p>"She'd been calling me earlier, checking I was okay and then she's had this happen; it's unbelievable, really," she told AFP.</p>.<p>"She's young, so it's a big setback for her and her husband. I'll be ok, I've got people up here I can stay with and things will dry out eventually."</p>.<p>Emergency minister Kieran McAnulty indicated that around 10,500 people had been displaced. Officials estimate 160,000 households are still without power.</p>.<p>McAnulty hailed the "phenomenal" efforts of rescue workers and military personnel who plucked "roughly 300 people from rooftops" in Hawke's Bay -- a sprawling expanse of lush farmland, rugged mountains and hard-to-reach towns.</p>.<p>He said a group of 60 people were rescued from one large building marooned by floodwaters.</p>.<p>Aerial images from the area showed a once-bucolic landscape riven with torrents of floodwater, latticed with crumbling roads and scarred by massive landslides.</p>.<p>Authorities on Tuesday announced a national state of emergency for only the third time in the country's history. The other two were for the 2019 Christchurch attacks and the Covid-19 pandemic.</p>.<p>Cyclone Gabrielle formed off the northeastern coast of Australia in the Coral Sea on February 8, before barrelling across the South Pacific.</p>.<p>It bore down on New Zealand's northern coast on Sunday, bringing gusts of 140 kilometres (87 miles) an hour.</p>.<p>Over the next 24 hours, coastal communities were doused with 20 centimetres (almost eight inches) of rain and pounded by 11-metre (36-foot) waves.</p>.<p>Many parts of northern New Zealand were already waterlogged when Cyclone Gabrielle hit, having been drenched by record rainfall two weeks ago.</p>.<p>Scientists say Gabrielle had fed off unusually warm seas, driven by a combination of climate change and La Nina weather patterns.</p>