Air New Zealand today cancelled all flights in and out of the capital, Wellington as the remnants of tropical cyclone Gita pummelled the country.
The national carrier said all flights to the capital would be grounded as weather authorities issued warnings of severe weather and heavy rain and gusts of up to 150 kilometres per hour.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said in Parliament that military had been deployed to areas likely to be worst hit and the country's national Civil Defence office in Wellington was on standby to help local authorities.
She said Cyclone Gita hit the Pacific island nations of Fiji and Tonga last week, packing winds up to 275 kilometres per hour and causing widespread destruction and flooding. It had earlier caused extensive damage in Samoa and American Samoa.
The cyclone had since been downgraded to a storm, but forecasters warned it was still likely to wreak havoc as it traversed the centre of New Zealand, parts of which were still reeling from a huge storm that prompted authorities to declare of states of emergency at the start of February.
More than 40 schools and preschools were closed in the upper South Island, while local mayors urged people not to leave their homes.
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