Business Day

Tanzania flooding and landslide death toll rises to more than 50

- Nuzulack Dausen Dar es Salaam

The death toll from floods and landslides in northern Tanzania after torrential rains at the weekend has risen to more than 50, with 750 acres of farmland destroyed, the president’s office said on Monday.

Zuhura Yunus, spokespers­on for President Samia Suluhu Hassan’s office, said in a statement the landslides and floods have affected 1,150 households, or 5,600 people.

Severe flooding caused by El Niño and the Indian Ocean Dipole weather phenomena has killed hundreds of people in Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia, and forced hundreds of thousands from their homes since seasonal rains began in October.

Yunus said Hassan was to shorten her trip to the COP28 climate talks taking place in the United Arab Emirates and return to Tanzania to oversee the response to the incident.

“Despite all the challenges rescue work is facing from damaged roads and mud and logs filling the roads, the government is doing its best to deal with that,” Yunus said.

Manyara region commission­er Queen Sendiga told reporters late on Sunday that the death toll stood at 47, with another 85 people injured.

Search and rescue operations were under way in the Manyara region as authoritie­s fear some bodies might be trapped in the mud, she said.

Around 100 houses in the village of Katesh, Hanang district, were swallowed by a landslide, Sendiga said, adding that they did not know the whereabout­s of people from 28 households.

Television images showed streets turned into rivers of mud carrying debris past flooded houses.

Climate change is causing more intense and more frequent extreme weather events, according to climate scientists.

The flooding comes on the back of the worst drought to hit the region in 40 years. Dry soils are less able to absorb water, increasing the risk of flash flooding.

In neighbouri­ng Kenya, where floods have so far killed at least 142 people, the banks of the Voi River in the country’s south burst on Monday, causing floods in villages in nearby Voi town, the Kenya Red Cross said on X, adding that its personnel were helping to rescue those who were stranded.

 ?? /Gallo Images ?? From far away: Weather phenomena such as El Niño and the Indian Ocean Dipole are causing severe flooding.
/Gallo Images From far away: Weather phenomena such as El Niño and the Indian Ocean Dipole are causing severe flooding.

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