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TORNADO’S DESTRUCTION

By CHRIS HARROWELL

Atornado that struck east Auckland on Sunday night left parts of the community looking like a war zone.

Strong winds lifted tiles from roofs, snapped and uprooted trees, flattened timber fences, bent steel garage doors, and tossed around backyard furniture.

But for one impacted resident, the most distressing thing was being awoken to find two suspected looters standing in the kitchen of her damaged home.

The Times visited several streets impacted by the tornado on Monday morning. Numerous residents were out and about supporting their neighbours and helping to clean up the damage in Attymon Lane, off Wayne Francis Drive, in Dannemora.

Jo Clark was out when the tornado struck but received a phone call from a neighbour advising her to get home. “It’s pretty bad,” she says of the damage caused to her property.

She says large parts of its roof have “caved in”. “It’s really the roof damage from the tiles and the wires coming through in the main lounge and the master bedroom, and there’s cracks in the ceiling where the house has moved.

“Civil Defence came at 2.30am and said I can’t stay here and I had to leave. They said, ‘if one of the tiles falls through the roof, it could kill you’.”

If that wasn’t bad enough, Clark also had to deal with two looters who illegally entered her home.

She says she stayed at her house for a while because she was worried about her cat and she wanted to get an hour’s sleep. Clark then heard strange noises at about 3.30am.

She says she went back to bed but heard them again.

“I came out and there are two guys in my kitchen. One had a black hoodie on and the other guy I didn’t really see. It was so quick and there was no lighting. They were youngish, maybe late teens. It was so quick and I yelled and swore at them and they just took off.”

Clark says the two males fled on foot across her backyard.

“I tried to get my torch on my cell phone to see where they were going but it was so dark. I was yelling loud so the neighbours could hear me. That wasn’t pretty and therefore we get no sleep.”

She becomes emotional recounting having to deal with looters after suffering the shock caused by the tornado. “It was pretty devastating because you don’t really want to be here now.

“I’m too scared to leave in case they come back because we’ve had lots of strangers coming and going in the street for the last few hours.

“We’ve had drones going since 6am this morning flying over the houses and you don’t know what’s going to happen. And because there are so many broken windows they could come back.”

Clark says she didn’t phone the police about the looters because she thought the emergency services would be busy responding to calls. “We had that many people in the street. I was waiting for tarpaulins to come for the roof and they said they’d run out. So they weren’t going to do anything and I thought, ‘what’s the point?’.”

Manju Verma lives across the road from Clark in Attymon Lane. She and her family were also out when the tornado struck and when they got home at about 9.30pm they were shocked at what they found.

One of two large palm trees in their front yard was uprooted while the other, just metres away, was still standing.

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