National Tree DayRecycling Near YouNational Recycling WeekBusiness RecyclingCartridges 4 Planet ArkCarbon Reduction LabelProducts & SolutionsMake It Wood

Planet Ark World Environment News - in partnership with Colonial First State U.N. Says 270,000 At Risk As Floods Loom In Ethiopia

Date: 31-Aug-10
Country: ETHIOPIA
Author: Barry Malone

More than a quarter of a million Ethiopians are at risk from severe flooding next month when heavy rain is expected in the country, according to government estimates issued by the United Nations on Monday.

The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said 19 people were killed in mudslides after flooding last week and nearly 12,000 people had been displaced since then.

"Some 270,000 people could be affected by flooding in the (Amhara region)," OCHA said in a statement, quoting a contingency plan issued by regional authorities.

Flooding often affects Ethiopia's lowlands during the rainy season between June and September. In 2006, more than 1,000 people were killed and more than 300,000 made homeless.

"New flooding has been reported in recent days, including in the eastern Amhara lowlands and in northern Somali Region," it said.

The plan says $6.8 million would be needed to respond to such an emergency.

The country's disaster management office gave a lower estimate, saying 153,000 people were likely to be affected by next month's floods, of whom 25 per cent could lose their homes.

"Good contingency planning needs to be in place," an aid worker monitoring the flooding told Reuters. "According to data from the meteorological office, the heavy rains will continue through September."

Almost 5,000 people who fled to higher ground are now stranded and inaccessible to local authorities, according to the OCHA statement.

Significant flooding damages the country's agriculture-based economy, washing away thousands of cattle, ruining crops and submerging roads.

(Editing by George Obulutsa and Andrew Dobbie)

Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Stumble It Email This More...

Reuters
© Thomson Reuters 2010 All rights reserved