 The debt toll from Tropical Cyclone Basiri in Madagascar has risen to 21 according to the country's disaster management agency. The National Bureau of Risk and Disaster Management said over 70,000 people have been displaced by the storm, which brought heavy rains and winds over the weekend. Details in this report. This is what is left of Seizi Kaj's home. Her town, Manangjar, was one of the worst affected when Cyclone Basiri slammed into Madagascar's east coast at the weekend. My house started to crack and we had to leave. All of a sudden it collapsed. My house is next to the public toilet. I cried. The storm brought heavy rain and winds of up to 100 miles an hour. Kaj says she and others sheltered in a school which had been designated as an evacuation centre. But then the roof blew off, leaving them exposed and in the open. We were in a bad situation. All the houses were destroyed. Water from the river and water from the sea rose. All the houses collapsed. They were really scared. For many, the only option now is to try to rebuild. The state disaster relief agency says over 14,000 households, accounting for over 70,000 people, have seen their homes damaged or destroyed. At least 21 people have died. Madagascar was already dealing with the aftermath of Cyclone Ana, which made landfall two weeks earlier. It killed 55 people and displaced 130,000. Basiri struck a different part of the island, further south, where a severe drought has already left the population in a precarious situation. The United Nations world food programme says crops that were close to being harvested have been destroyed, making a bad situation worse. Country director Pasqualeena Desirio described the impact as severe and harsh and said they are still counting the casualties.