Kuwait Times

Kenyans protect wetlands to curb water scarcity

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Armed with a hoe and Wellington boots, George Wandera planted bamboo seedlings in neatly dug holes along the banks of a stream on his farm that feeds a nearby lake in western Kenya. “I’ve never tried this on my farm before but it’s the first step in protecting the stream,” he said. “Before the last downpour a few days ago, the water source had completely dried up.” Large swathes of Kenya - including parts of Busia county where Wandera lives - are experienci­ng severe water shortages, which have damaged crops and left 2.6 million people in need of aid.

The country’s wetlands too have suffered in the drought, putting at risk communitie­s who depend on them for fishing or irrigation, and who rely on them to act as a buffer from floods and drought. “Wetlands such as lakes and floodplain­s act as natural safeguards against disasters, by absorbing excess rainfall during floods, with the stored water then available in times of drought,” said Julie Mulonga, program manager at Wetlands Internatio­nal Kenya, a conservati­on charity in Busia.

During the current drought, farmers and herders have been drawing water from the wetlands, and streams feeding them have run dry. Unpredicta­ble rainfall is not the only reason Kenya’s wetlands are under threat. Local communitie­s have also been draining them to grow crops, Mulonga said. Wandera remembers when large parts of the Sio-Siteko wetland, near the border with Uganda, were drained to make way for farmland. “We never thought our activities were harmful until we saw the consequenc­es - that is, more floods during the rainy season and less water during the dry season, leading to a decline in vegetation and animal species,” he said.

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