Vanuatu is experiencing the wrath of Tropical Cyclone Judy with its destructive hurricane force winds damaging homes, uprooting trees and causing power cuts.
On Wednesday afternoon Judy was upgraded to a category four storm with winds of up to 230km/h an hour.
Vanuatu emergency management spokesperson Brenda Williams said a Red Alert has been issued for much of the country.
She said residents are being advised to stay home, and police are assisting with evacuations.
A journalist in Vanuatu, Dan McGarry, is in the capital Port Vila and told RNZ Pacific people there are hunkering down.
“The weather has become quite dramatic, and it is unsafe to be outside. It’s very noisy and very dangerous.
“A red alert is the highest level of warning that our meteorological service offers. It’s basically an instruction, an order, to go home and seek shelter.”
Damaging gale force winds and flooding are also expected.
Evacuation centres
The National Disaster Management Office has identified evacuation centres in Port Vila but on other parts of Efate and the offshore islands, the office was looking to use church buildings for this purpose.
Radio Vanuatu was forced offline following a power cut.
On Tuesday, damaging gale-force winds affected the northern provinces of Torba, Sanma, Penama and Malampa.
The cyclone is bearing down on Vanuatu’s northern provinces, moving in a southerly direction.
Red alerts are in place for Penama, Malampa, Shefa and Tafea.
Vanuatu Metservice forecasts destructive hurricane force winds will affect the central and southern islands.
It said Judy was close to the capital Port Vila.
Air Vanuatu has cancelled all domestic and international flights, with flights expected to resume on Wednesday.
Banks closed their doors early and sent staff home, while boarding schools in the capital have also sent students home.
Commercial ships were urged by Port and Marine Departments to find safe anchorage after the met service issued a high seas warning for open coastal waters of Vanuatu.
Port Vila was severely damage by tropical cyclone Pam in 2015 which was a category five cyclone.
Getting prepared in New Caledonia
The Meteorological Service in New Caledonia has activated its pre-cyclone alerts as Judy makes its way south.
The population is advised to gather essential items and to secure boats properly.
The storm is expected to be about 230km off the island of Mare in the Loyalty Islands by Wednesday night.
Swells of up to 4 metres are expected to hit the north-east coast of the island group on Thursday.
Another tropical depression is currently forming south of Papua New Guinea and is expected to intensify into a Cyclone Category one in the following few days.