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In the past three months, floods have ravaged many African nations including
Ghana and Togo in the west, as well as Sudan, Uganda,
Somalia, and Kenya
in the central and eastern regions. At least 200 people have died and hundreds
of thousands have been displaced in these countries. Half a million people
across the West African region have been hit by the heavy rains in the past 3
months. Tens of thousands of homes have been destroyed and swathes of crops on
which the region depends have been washed away.
In Uganda,
at least 21 people have died since August, and in Ghana the floods have left about 32
people dead and made 260,000 homeless. The rain, linked to ocean temperature
changes, has caught African governments off guard and many of the worst-affected
regions are remote from major capitals and thus humanitarian access is difficult.
The Ugandan government declared a state of emergency in the worst
flood-affected areas, allowing funds to be diverted directly to the relief
effort. The International Federation of
the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies say flood emergencies in Africa have risen sharply in recent years moving from
only five in 2004 to more than 40 so far this year. Among the agencies planning
to deal with the aftermath of the flooding is the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization, (FAO) which is working with many African governments to assess
the impacts of the floods and actual damages to agriculture.
In Ghana,
which also is under a state of emergency, the United Nations Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) said a field assessment has shown
that 260,000 people have been affected. Market prices for local food items have
doubled for most commodities and the lack of safe drinking water remains
another major concern. Also, the floods have caused misery for children already
at risk of hunger and disease. But the
response to this major natural disaster is slow and is not receiving much
global attention. Major international organizations such as the Red Cross, Oxfam, UNICEF, and World Food
Program (WFP), are busy debating the long term consequences of the floods
instead of giving enough immediate assistance to the people who have been
displaced. Along with the need to prevent and treat possible outbreak of
diseases, immediate requirements are shelter and food, as many houses and crops
have been washed away.
In Uganda, the US
has allegedly made a paltry donation of $500,000; Germany
has provided the equivalent of about $700,000 for emergency food aid; Japan has
given a cash donation of $100,000; while other organizations have given
assistance in the form of clothing and food. The
emergency appeal made by the Federation of the Red Cross for Ghana and Togo
at first, then extended to Burkina
Faso, has received little response. $2.1
million US dollars is expected to be raised in total for about 90,000 people
who have been affected by the flood.
The
report by a US Environment lobby group , International Rivers Network (IRN), said
climate change, coupled with rapid population growth, deforestation and other
forms of land degradation are set to trigger a serious humanitarian crisis in the
African continent.
The impacts of climate change will range from effects on agriculture (and thus further
endangering food security), sea-level rise (and thus accelerating erosion of
coastal zones), intensity of natural disasters, species extinction and the
spread of vector-borne diseases.
There
is a need for adequate preparation by African countries to contain any reoccurrence of
severe floods in the future. The daunting problems of conflicts, HIV/AIDS, and poverty
that have ravaged the continent have occupied the attention of many African countries
in the past three decades. Now is the time
to devote adequate attention to issues of climate change and efficient use of
natural resources to reduce carbon emissions.
AFJN joins other organizations in calling for more international assistance from
the U.S in response to this humanitarian crisis that is occurring in much of Africa.
-Joseph Effiong
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