Miami Herald (Sunday)

West Africa floods destroy crops, worsening hunger fears

- BY CHINEDU ASADU

ABUJA, NIGERIA

Ocheiga Enoch isn’t expecting much of a rice harvest from north-central Nigeria after floodwater­s submerged his fields and those of so many other farmers this season.

Many in Benue state — known as the country’s “food basket” — now find themselves in the unusual position of looking for seedlings in preparatio­n for next year’s farming season at a time when they should be harvesting the current crop.

“The kind of suffering we are passing through now is terrible,” Enoch said of the floods, now Nigeria’s worst in more than a decade after killing more than 600 people and forcing 1.3 million to flee their homes.

Above-average rainfall and devastatin­g flooding have affected 5 million people this year in 19 countries across West and Central Africa, according to a new U.N. World Food Program situation report.

In Chad, the nation’s government this week declared a state of emergency after floods affected more than 1 million people there.

“This catastroph­e resulting from climate change is one of the most severe the region has known for years, acting as a multiplier of misery for communitie­s already struggling to keep their heads above water,” said Chad’s interim leader Mahamat Idriss Deby

Itno.

The disaster has now worsened the fate of this Central African nation already going through a food crisis, said Mbaindangr­oa Djekornond­e Adelph, an analyst in Chad.

Nigeria has recorded at least 600 deaths while authoritie­s in neighborin­g Niger authoritie­s say at least 192 people have died there as the result of storms, either from homes collapsing or from drowning in flood waters.

Already the floods have led to “a major increase in cholera cases and other preventabl­e diseases in Nigeria,” the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee (IRC) warned in a statement on Friday, calling for more resources to scale up its response.

Experts point to unusual rainfalls and the failure of government­s to set up early warning systems to better prepare for climate extremes.

The floods in West Africa are “majorly due to government negligence to environmen­tal related issues like climate change over a period of time,” said Ibrahim Raji, a climate researcher focusing on the region. The situation “boils down to the government’s reluctance to address environmen­tal issues,” Raji added.

Long before the floods and Russia’s war in Ukraine, West Africa already was facing its worst food crisis in 10 years with more than 27 million hungry people, according to a report released by internatio­nal aid organizati­ons in April.

Chi Lael, a spokeswoma­n for the U.N. World Food Program in Nigeria, is concerned about the “worrying harvest season ahead.”

Some farmers have lost close to 75% of everything planted this year, said Kabir Ibrahim, national president of the local farmers associatio­n.

The damage caused by the floods in Nigeria also extends to livestock in areas like Bayelsa state, where Innocent Aluu said he lost nearly 10,000 fowl in his poultry farm to the floods, most of them dying from waterborne diseases.

“I feel like running away — nobody can think straight,” a devastated Aluu said by phone, estimating his losses at $68,600.

In neighborin­g Niger, tens of thousands have also been displaced by the floods in the Maradi and Zinder regions, with many homes and farmlands damaged.

It is a similar tale in Cameroon where flood waters have caused significan­t damage in the northern region, destroying crops and houses.

“The rainfall this year is exceptiona­l,” said Kousoumna Libaa, a climate specialist in Cameroon. “There have been sustained rains since the beginning of the season, since August, September and even until October now, it continues to rain.”

Experts fear that the damaged farmlands will further increase food prices at a time when inflation rates are already at record highs — Nigeria and Ghana at 20.7% and 37% respective­ly.

In Nigeria, WFP said it is providing emergency assistance in the state of Yobe, one of the hardesthit places. But the agency urgently needs $129 million to support its operations in Nigeria over the next five months, its spokeswoma­n said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? People walk through floodwater­s with flooded farmlands foreground after heavy rainfall in Hadeja, Nigeria, in September. ‘Above-average rainfall and devastatin­g flooding’ have affected 5 million people this year in 19 countries across West and Central Africa, according to a new U.N. World Food Program situation report.
Associated Press People walk through floodwater­s with flooded farmlands foreground after heavy rainfall in Hadeja, Nigeria, in September. ‘Above-average rainfall and devastatin­g flooding’ have affected 5 million people this year in 19 countries across West and Central Africa, according to a new U.N. World Food Program situation report.
 ?? CHINEDU ASADU AP ?? Ibrahim Mohammed, left, a farmer who lost most of his seedlings and farmlands to violent attacks in Nigeria's north, works on a rice farm along with his family members in Agatu village on the outskirts of Benue northcentr­al Nigeria, in January.
CHINEDU ASADU AP Ibrahim Mohammed, left, a farmer who lost most of his seedlings and farmlands to violent attacks in Nigeria's north, works on a rice farm along with his family members in Agatu village on the outskirts of Benue northcentr­al Nigeria, in January.
 ?? SUNDAY ALAMBA AP ?? A woman sells food items at a market in Owo, Southweste­rn Nigeria, in June. West and Central African countries are battling deadly floods that have upended lives and livelihood­s, raising fears of further disruption of food supplies in many areas battling armed conflict.
SUNDAY ALAMBA AP A woman sells food items at a market in Owo, Southweste­rn Nigeria, in June. West and Central African countries are battling deadly floods that have upended lives and livelihood­s, raising fears of further disruption of food supplies in many areas battling armed conflict.

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