General NewsFocus on Africa

Flooding hits six million people in East Africa –UN reports

Listen to this Article Now
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
Spread the love

By Isaac Newton Tetteh – GITFIConline.com

Nearly six million people have been affected this year with 1.5 million of them forced from their homes.

Parts of the region are recording the heaviest rains in a century.

In 2019, a big temperature differential between the east and west sides of the Indian Ocean was blamed for heavy rainfall.

The data gathered by the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs paints a worrying picture.

The number of people affected by flooding in East Africa has gone from 1.1 million in 2016 to four million in 2019, now close to six million so far this year  this is before the short rains, which normally peak in November and hit most countries in the region.

In Sudan, one of the worst affected countries, 860,000 people have had their homes destroyed or damaged and more than 120 have died, the UN says quoting government figures.

Nearly every state in Sudan has experienced heavy flooding and in neighboring South Sudan, 800,000 people have been affected with 368,000 people forced from their homes.

“Entire communities have fled to higher ground to escape the rising waters,” the UN said in a statement.

After a visit to some of the worst hit areas in South Sudan last month, the UN’s humanitarian coordinator for the country, Alain Noudéhou, said “vast areas of the country along the River Nile are now under water”

In Ethiopia, which has a much larger population, 1.1 million people have been affected by flooding.

Burundi, Djibouti, Kenya, Rwanda, Somalia, Tanzania and Uganda are also included in the figures.

Source bbc.com

Leave a Reply