The death toll from Cyclone Pam has been revised from 24 to 11 in Vanuatu, the U.N. said, with storm damage still limiting access to affected areas.
The U.N. lowered its earlier toll, citing figures from the Pacific nation's disaster office.
"The National Disaster Management Office (NDMO) has confirmed 11 fatalities in Tafea and Shefa Province, including five from Tanna Island," the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a revised situation report.
Aerial assessments by military aircraft from New Caledonia, Australia and New Zealand found "severe and widespread damage," it said.
"Damage to infrastructure is limiting access to affected populations and hampering movement, however commercial flights have resumed to Port Vila," said the report dated March 16 but released Tuesday.
Radio and telephone contact with outer islands were still to be reestablished, with efforts focused on the capital and accessible parts of the main island.
On Tuesday, Prime Minister Joe Natuman said it would be "at least a week or two" before authorities had a better sense of the destruction caused by the storm which carried winds of up to 320 kilometers (200 miles) an hour.
While initial assessors had been able to enter the eastern and western parts of the island chain, northern and southern areas were still largely inaccessible, he said.
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