A cargo flight containing more than 6 million medical items arrived on Sunday in Ethiopia's capital.
The flat,dusty roads to Vosburg are surrounded by withered fields. The streams feeding the community of a few thousand people have gone dry.
Livelihoods have been lost and people are wondering how they will cope in a country struggling with one of the world's highest poverty rates.
At least four deaths had been reported as aid groups warned of possible flooding and mudslides in the days ahead.
The second powerful cyclone to rip into Mozambique in just six weeks has stunned residents in a region where such storms had not been recorded.
There is also a high risk of the spread of infectious diseases including those caused by insects like mosquitoes,with hundreds of malaria cases reported.
The death toll in central Mozambique from Cyclone Idai that hit on March 14 has surpassed 500.
As flood waters recede and more bodies are discovered,the final death toll in Mozambique alone could rise to above the early estimate of 1000.
Fears growing about the spread of disease and the distribution of food and water.
Witnesses told of corpses floating down swollen rivers and aerial footage showed families perched on rooftops and in the upper branches of submerged trees days after Cyclone Idai tore through southern Africa.
The European Union released $5.61 million in emergency aid,and the United Kingdom pledged up to $11.24 million. Neighbouring Tanzania's military airlifted 238 tons of food and medicine.