Perilous Times and Climate Change
Niger River floods destroying homes and crops
Flooding in Karadje suburb of Niamey, Niger, August 10, 2010
BBC - Thousands of homes have been flooded in and around Niamey
Some five thousand people in Niger lost their homes and crops after the
River Niger burst its banks at the weekend.
The West African country is already suffering from severe food
shortages caused by recent drought.
Another 20,000 people are at risk of displacement in the event of
further heavy rains, UN officials have warned.
Heavy rainfall has also caused flooding across other parts of West and
Central Africa and threatens to worsen the food crisis in the region,
the UN said.
Millions of people are without food in the region after droughts over
the last year depleted stocks, the UN World Food Programme warned.
"Rain in the Sahel is much welcome but it needs to be properly
distributed over time and over space which is the major issue now," the
WFP's Naouar Labidi told Reuters news agency.
The BBC's Idy Baraou in Niger's capital, Niamey, says many more houses
in and around the city are in danger of collapsing and residents fear
that more heavy rain is still to come.
The UN said that 30,000 animals had died in the flooding and carcasses
could be seen floating near water points, spreading further fears of
outbreaks of waterborne diseases.
Regional havoc
Meanwhile, on Monday the authorities in Ghana issued a flood warning
for three northern regions because of rising water levels at two dams
in neighbouring Burkina Faso.
Map
According to the UN's Irin news agency, 40 people have already died in
flooding in Ghana in June and July.
In Burkina Faso, the agency reported that 14 people had died last month
in floods and many people were sleeping in schools and other public
buildings.
Northern Chad in the Sahara desert has recently recorded the heaviest
rain in 50 years and hail stones the size of eggs destroyed crops in
central Guinea in July, Irin said.
The International Federation of the Red Cross says it is providing aid
to flood victims in the Central African Republic and in Ivory Coast,
where there have been mudslides.
On Monday, at least 13 people died - most of them children - in the
Sierra Leonean capital, Freetown, when a building collapsed during a
mudslide, following torrential rain.