Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Flooding latest ordeal for 1M-plus in E. Africa

Locusts, virus already have battered region

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JOHANNESBU­RG — Flooding has affected well over 1 million people across East Africa, another calamity threatenin­g food security on top of a historic locust outbreak and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Nile River has hit its highest levels in a half-century under heavy seasonal rainfall, and large parts of Sudan, Ethiopia and South Sudan have been swamped amid worries about climate change.

As warnings of a new famine grow in South Sudan, the United Nations says flooding there has affected at least a half-million people, many in areas of Jonglei state that saw eruptions of deadly intercommu­nal violence this year.

People who fled the fighting now cling to precarious positions, some piling mud barriers around their homes.

“They are exposed to malaria, waterborne diseases and snakebites as floodwater­s overwhelm their homes and farms,” the medical charity Doctors Without Borders says.

“People are really very frustrated,” local activist David Garang Goch told the U.N. peacekeepi­ng mission in Bor, the capital of Jonglei state, as video posted by the mission showed people carrying belongings through sometimes-knee-deep water or piling sandbags.

The flooding further complicate­s efforts to deliver humanitari­an aid in a country where more than half the population — or over 6 million people — is said to be hungry.

“We fear the worst is yet to come, with the peak of flooding season normally in November and December,” U.N. humanitari­an chief Mark Lowcock told the U.N. Security

Council this week.

Doctors Without Borders last month opened a clinic in the South Sudan town of Pibor. Already the team is building more flood defenses around it as “the water is increasing at an alarming speed,” Josh Rosenstein, emergency coordinato­r there, said.

In Sudan, the floods have killed more than 100 people this summer and inundated over 100,000 houses, threatenin­g even the ancient royal city of the Kushite kings known as the Island of Meroe, a UNESCO World Heritage site near the capital, Khartoum.

In Ethiopia, officials this week said more than 200,000 people have been displaced.

The flooding is the latest challenge as food prices climb because of travel and other restrictio­ns related to the pandemic, and after some crops and pasture were lost to earlier locust swarms that numbered in the millions or billions of insects.

 ?? Tetiana Gaviuk The Associated Press ?? Flooding surrounds a house Thursday in Lenyari in the Greater Pibor Administra­tive Area, South Sudan. Flooding has affected more than 1 million people across East Africa.
Tetiana Gaviuk The Associated Press Flooding surrounds a house Thursday in Lenyari in the Greater Pibor Administra­tive Area, South Sudan. Flooding has affected more than 1 million people across East Africa.

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