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WSWS : News
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Devastating floods sweep across Africa
By Brian Smith
29 September 2007
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Torrential downpours over the last few months have caused major
floods across Africa, submerging whole towns and washing away
bridges, farms and schools. According to the United Nations, at
least 1.5 million people in 18 countries have been affected by
the worst downpours in 30 years, with hundreds of thousands of
people displaced and nearly 300 killed.
The UN and aid agencies are concerned about a rising risk of
disease outbreaks, particularly water-borne disease such as cholera
and malaria.
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies have warned that a massive aid effort is needed. Niels
Scott, operations coordinator for the Red Cross in Africa, said
in a statement that emergency food, shelter and clean water supplies
were needed, as well as pre-positioned stocks, flood-proof wells
and other measures to prepare for wider flooding.
So far the disaster has received very little coverage in the
western press, and calls for aid have been met with a muted response.
The extreme weather conditions have been blamed by some analysts
on a phenomenon known as la Niña where oceans cool faster,
thus causing the rainy season to come earlier. Lawrence Flint,
a researcher for the Dakar-based NGO, Environmental Development
Action in the Third World, says the extremes in temperature could
have roots in global warming.
People are having to cope with floods that are higher
and bigger than they are used to, and people cope with periods
of droughts that are bigger than they are used to. They cope with
extremes of temperatureextremes of heat and extremes of
cold. The weather is becoming unpredictable. It is the unpredictability
aspect that is hitting people hardest, Flint explained.
The weather is forecast to get worse, with heavier rainfall
on the way in the coming weeks. Its full intensity is likely to
be felt by mid-November in most regions and will only start to
subside in mid or late December. Famine in many parts of the continent
is forecast to go on up to 2009.
The floods have largely affected countries in a band across
western, central and eastern Africa, with Ghana and Uganda the
worst hit.
West and Central Africa
The UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(OCHA) estimates that 500,000 people across 12 countries in West
Africa have been affectedBurkina Faso, Côte dIvoire,
Gambia, Ghana, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal,
Sierra Leone and Togo, with about half those affected living in
Ghana.
Conditions are ripe for an infestation, OCHAs
Elisabeth Byrs warned, with additional fears of swarms of crop-eating
locusts in both Mali and Niger.
The head of the Red Cross for West and Central Africa, Alasan
Senghore, says that disasters like floods hit hardest in poor
regions where people have nothing to fall back on if they lose
their houses or become sick.
Ghana has declared a state of emergency across the north, the
countrys traditional breadbasket, with three regions named
as an official disaster zone after whole towns and villages were
submerged. Torrential rains between July and August have led to
major flooding which has killed at least 18 people, displaced
a quarter of a million and destroyed thousands of homes and major
bridges. Some 112mm of rain reportedly fell in two days in the
town of Sandema, where three people were reported killed. Many
of the victims are farmers whose crops have been destroyed.
It is a humanitarian disaster. People have nowhere to
go. Some of them are just hanging out there waiting for help to
come at a point, Information Minister Oboshie-Sai Cofie
said. Many people have been forced to take up refuge in trees
and others have had to be rescued by boat.
The Red Cross has launched an initial appeal for relief aid
funding of $2.1 million for emergency supplies in Ghana and neighbouring
Togo, where 20 people are dead and another 66,000 displaced. Flooding
has also washed away 100 bridges and seven dams in Togo and destroyed
more than 46 schools, causing a delay of one month in the beginning
of the school year across the country.
In Burkina Faso, the worst floods since 1954 have destroyed
many dams and wiped out thousands of hectares of maize and millet
farmland. The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the
government have calculated that some 23,000 farming households
have suffered, with an estimated 160,000 people affected.
In Niger, serious flooding has caused widespread damage to
infrastructure such as agricultural production, schools, health
care facilities, roads, bridges, water supply systems, power and
telephone lines and housing. According to the National Early Warning
System three people have died and approximately 14,000 have been
affected, including 2,600 children under five years of age.
In Benin, tens of thousands of people have been displaced and
at least 50 villages have been destroyed by floods, with crops,
granaries and livestock destroyed according to the NGO Plan International.
In Mali, at least 32,000 people have been hit by the floods,
in Liberia, some 20,000 people and in Gambia, 300 people were
hit by flooding. In Nigeria, 68 people have died and 50,000 are
affected, according to the Red Cross.
In Mauritania, 30,000 people have lost their homes in the city
of Tintane with at least two dead. Additionally thousands of families
in the southern regions of Gorgol and Assaba, have been affected.
Health centres, banks, pharmacies, mosques and the water decontamination
systems have all been flooded out.
In Cameroon intense rains from July onwards have left at least
six people dead, an estimated 1,220 homeless, and swept away 225
granaries, and four bridges.
In eastern Chad floods are hampering efforts by aid agencies
to help tens of thousands of Sudanese refugees and 170,000 Chadian
internally displaced persons. Several refugee camps near the border
with Sudans Darfur region have been cut off including Goz
Amir, which houses some 230,000 Sudanese refugees.
East Africa
In East Africa severe weather going back to July has badly
affected Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya, Eritrea, Rwanda and Uganda.
Hailstorms and landslides have compounded the problems.
In Uganda the heaviest rainfall for 35 years has triggered
floods in mostly eastern and northern regions, causing the government
to declare a state of emergency, with local NGO, the Pilgrim,
estimating that 200,000 people are in urgent need of food. Hundreds
of thousands have fled the devastating floods with an estimated
400,000, mainly subsistence farmers, having lost their livelihoods
after roads were washed away and 600,000 hectares of crops were
flooded. The floods have so far killed 21 people, including two
children who died from malaria.
There is no water to drink and we are already being overwhelmed
by people with cases of diarrhoea and malaria, Asege Florence,
a local medical worker, said. Accessibility and lack of food is
a major problem because all the stored grains and dried foods
have been submerged in water.
The Red Cross has launched appeals for relief aid funding for
290,000 people displaced by floods in Uganda totalling $7.2 million,
whilst the WFP has called for $65 million to feed 1.7 million
people, many of them already displaced by the war in the north.
Other UN agencies in Uganda have also launched a $43 million floods
appeal.
The floods have caused a major break down of infrastructure
with heavy rains washing away roads and more than 30 bridges in
the Teso sub-region. Pit latrines have also collapsed, infecting
the rising waters with faecal matter and raising fears for an
outbreak of water borne diseases such as cholera and dysentery.
The problem is getting worse by the hour, said
Ugandas Minister for Relief and Disaster Preparedness Musa
Ecweru, who told journalists that the government lacked sufficient
resources to handle the crisis. Resources are not adequate
for a problem, of such a magnitude. We are overwhelmed. We are
trying to humanly do whatever we can do. The heavens are opening
wider and we need everybodys support, Ecweru said.
In some places, the water is the same colour as the earth
so when you look at it you think it is a field then you realise
its water, he added.
In Ethiopia floods in the north have affected 183,000 people
and displaced 42,000 according to the UN World Food Programme.
Several health clinics and schools, a food grain store and other
infrastructure have been washed away or severely damaged, and
villages have been inundated with crocodile-infested flood waters.
The Red Cross reported that at least 63 people had died from
acute watery diarrhoea in the flood-hit Oromia region, with a
total of 3,680 cases reported last month. They earlier said in
a statement that some 4,000 head of livestock have been
drowned or washed away, and 34,000 hectares of land have been
damaged.
In Rwanda 15 people have died after torrential rains ravaged
the districts of Nyabihu and Rubavu in Western Province. Thousands
of homes, and hundreds of hectares of potato plantations were
also destroyed.
Charles Ngirabatware, the Mayor of Nyabihu, blamed the heavy
rains on the destruction of Gishwati Forest in the north-western
part of the country, which is one of the most severely deforested
areas in Rwanda. Formerly covering 21,000 hectares before 1981,
it had been reduced to only 600 hectares by 2002.
Floods in Somalias Middle Shabelle region 30 kilometres
north of the capital, Mogadishu, have affected thousands of people,
displaced hundreds, and destroyed eleven villages and many hectares
of farmland when the Shabelle River burst its banks after heavy
rainfall in neighbouring Ethiopia caused the rivers downstream
to flood.
In Sudan, refugees returning to the south following the civil
war had to flee their homes again through waist-high waters in
what the government called the worst floods in living memory.
So far, 119 people have died and over 250,000 have been made homeless
since the flooding began in mid-June.
In western Kenya floods have displaced at least 20,000 people,
marooned another 6,000 and killed 12. Last year floods killed
dozens of people and displaced 700,000 across the country.
Western governments have largely managed to ignore the growing
humanitarian disaster sweeping Africa. Only a massive injection
of funds into early warning systems and the development of an
adequate infrastructure can have any chance of stopping such disasters
having a devastating impact in future years.
That Africa has been hit so badly confirms the warning made
in April of this year by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) on the impact of climate change on agriculture and
food production. Their report noted that developing countries
would be amongst the most affected by climate change with more
frequent drought, floods and resultant crop damage, water shortages
and disease.
See Also:
Reports show impact of climate
change in Africa
[18 July 2007]
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