The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘Like the speed of the wind’: Kenya’s lakes rise to destructiv­e highs

- Nick Perry

BARINGO, Kenya: Peering into the lake, the village elder struggled to pinpoint where beneath the hyacinth and mesquite weeds lay the farm he lived in his entire life until the water rose like never before and swallowed everything.

A clump of sodden straw marked the spot: the tip of his thatch hut jutting from the murky depths, all that remained of his homestead after Kenya’s Lake Baringo swelled to record highs this year, submerging villages, schools, health clinics and holiday resorts.

“In my 60 years, I have never seen or experience­d anything like this,” said Richard Lichan Lekuterer, his gaze level with the tops of once-towering acacia trees poking above the water, the landscape altered beyond recognitio­n.

Baringo and the other great lakes of Kenya’s Rift Valley have risen to levels not seen in at least half a century, some by several metres or more this year alone, following months of extreme rainfall scientists have linked to a changing climate.

These tremendous bodies of water have ebbed and flowed through the ages, supporting life along the banks, but records show this latest surge is unlike any witnessed in recent memory.

“It was like the speed of the wind,” said Lekuterer, who relocated deep inland when the water shot up in March and is preparing to move again as the tide inches nearer.

The phenomenon is causing immense flooding along a chain of fresh and saltwater lakes stretching 500 kilometres along an ancient fault from the deserts of Turkana in Kenya’s north, to the fertile shores of Naivasha to the south.

Tens of thousands of people have been driven to higher ground and homes, grazing land and businesses abandoned as the lakes have unrelentin­gly pushed outward.

‘Phenomenal’

The crisis shows no sign of easing, with seasonal rains forecast this month threatenin­g further inundation.

“It has never been this bad before,” said Murray Roberts, who has lived on Baringo nearly 70 years, where he restores degraded land with his partner Dr Elizabeth Meyerhoff through their Rehabilita­tion of Arid Environmen­ts Trust.

Baringo has swollen about 70 square kilometres since 2011 but rose sharply earlier this year, flooding their offices and a nearby dispensary.

Roberts’ childhood home, and a family holiday business, disappeare­d beneath the surface.

Like Baringo, the surge at Lake Naivasha, some 200 kilometres south, began slowly about a decade ago, evoking little concern as the basin refilled after a long dry spell.

But it kept rising and in April suddenly accelerate­d, soon eclipsing the last historic high measured in the 1960s. The lake is now tracking closer to an extreme peak recorded in the early 20th century.

A monitoring station run by the Water Resources Authority (WRA), a government agency, indicates the lake rose 2.7 metres between April and June, pushing water half a kilometre inland.

“It’s been phenomenal,” said Guy Erskine, as hippos wallowed in his submerged hotel at Sanctuary Farm, a conservanc­y on Lake Naivasha his family has owned since 1978.

‘Things have changed’

Government scientists are exploring possible causes for the drastic upwelling, including whether silt flushing downstream from deforestat­ion in the highland catchments could be reducing the lakes’ storage capacity.

Research into other theories, such as the influence of seismic activity and increased seepage from undergroun­d aquifers, is less conclusive.

It follows one of the wettest periods in East Africa in recent times.

Above-average temperatur­es in the Indian Ocean have spurred consecutiv­e years of extreme and erratic rainfall, delivering frequent unseasonal downpours over the escarpment­s and rivers that feed the lakes.

“Things have changed... The effect is more pronounced than 50 years ago,” says Mohamed Shurie, a geologist and CEO of the WRA.

Twin tragedies

The massive inflow is also upsetting a delicate ecological balance in a biodiverse region famous for attracting masses of pink flamingos.

The government is particular­ly concerned about the repercussi­ons should saltwater from an ever-expanding Lake Bogoria, a flamingo refuge and wetland of internatio­nal importance, merge with the freshwater­s from Baringo 20 kilometres to the north.

Two other critical habitats frequented by the migratory birds, Lake Elementait­a and Lake Nakuru, are also brimming, the latter at a 50-year high.

The imposing entrance gate to Lake Nakuru National Park, one of Kenya’s premier safari destinatio­ns, barely pokes above the water, which has pushed one kilometre beyond the perimeter fence, flooding nearby villages.

On an island in Baringo, a number of Rothschild’s giraffe await relocation to the mainland, their habitat having shrunk from about 100 acres to less than 10. The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) and Northern Rangelands Trust have already rescued warthogs, impala and ostrich.

KWS Baringo warden, Jackson Komen, said conflict between humans and animals was rising, with hippos marching into vegetable patches and several ostriches turning up dead.

“Our fear is, when there’s not enough food in the homestead, people might turn to the vulnerable animals,” Komen said.

In Naivasha, a tourist hotspot popular with weekenders from Nairobi, the timing is especially cruel.

Staff at hotels and restaurant­s laid off during the coronaviru­s pandemic now find themselves without workplaces to return to as travel restrictio­ns ease — and with their own homes knee-deep in water.

“Naivasha residents have experience­d two tragedies,” said Enock Kiminta from the Lake Naivasha Water Resources Users Associatio­n.

In my 60 years, I have never seen or experience­d anything like this.

Richard Lichan Lekuterer

 ?? Photos — AFP ?? A local fisherman paddles a traditiona­l raft made from reeds past one of the submerged buildings of the Soi Lodge on the shores of Lake Baringo.
Photos — AFP A local fisherman paddles a traditiona­l raft made from reeds past one of the submerged buildings of the Soi Lodge on the shores of Lake Baringo.
 ??  ?? Local community members use lines to fish in flood waters after the rising waters of Lake Naivasha inundated the elevated woodland on part of it’s shores along with buildings and infrastruc­ture at the lakeside town of Naivasha, on the Kenyan Rift Valley.
Local community members use lines to fish in flood waters after the rising waters of Lake Naivasha inundated the elevated woodland on part of it’s shores along with buildings and infrastruc­ture at the lakeside town of Naivasha, on the Kenyan Rift Valley.
 ??  ?? Storks rests on a trunk of a tree that fell over after the rising waters of Lake Naivasha inundated the elevated woodland on part of it’s shores along with buildings and infrastruc­ture.
Storks rests on a trunk of a tree that fell over after the rising waters of Lake Naivasha inundated the elevated woodland on part of it’s shores along with buildings and infrastruc­ture.
 ??  ?? Murray Roberts, 69, who has lived on the shores of Lake Bogoria much of his life, like his father before him, is pictured in his compound holding an old photo of his sons jumping off a cliff face into the lake from the edge that is now that is now submerged under a few metres of the rising lake waters near Marigat, Baringo county on the Kenyan Rift Valley.
Murray Roberts, 69, who has lived on the shores of Lake Bogoria much of his life, like his father before him, is pictured in his compound holding an old photo of his sons jumping off a cliff face into the lake from the edge that is now that is now submerged under a few metres of the rising lake waters near Marigat, Baringo county on the Kenyan Rift Valley.
 ??  ?? Residents of Kihoto estate on the shores of Lake Naivasha stand on elevated pavements outside their residences after the rising waters of the lake inundated buildings and infrastruc­ture forcing people from their homes.
Residents of Kihoto estate on the shores of Lake Naivasha stand on elevated pavements outside their residences after the rising waters of the lake inundated buildings and infrastruc­ture forcing people from their homes.
 ??  ?? A Rothschild subspecies of Giraffe browse on ol-Kokwe Island on Lake Baringo where it now faces a threat from the rising waters of the lake that have already forced an evacuation of smaller species of wildlife like antelopes and warthog off the island due to habitat loss, near Marigat, Baringo county on the Kenyan Rift Valley.
A Rothschild subspecies of Giraffe browse on ol-Kokwe Island on Lake Baringo where it now faces a threat from the rising waters of the lake that have already forced an evacuation of smaller species of wildlife like antelopes and warthog off the island due to habitat loss, near Marigat, Baringo county on the Kenyan Rift Valley.

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