Severe flooding in the southern African state of Namibia has affected 700,000 people and left 40,000 homeless and in acute need. The Zambezi river rose
over 8 metres after heavy rains this month, flooding the north of the country.
Regional Caritas coordinator Sr Aine Hughes said on a recent visit to the affected area,
“The majority of the houses and homesteads are built with clay bricks. They have been either partially or totally destroyed with the result that people are either homeless or their
homes are now uninhabitable.
“Some had to abandon everything with only the clothes they wore, leaving them totally destitute now. They’re living in tents
and makeshift shelters of plastic sheeting. They don’t have ground sheets or mattresses.�
There is an urgent need for warm blankets and clothing for
children, plastic sheeting, water purification tablets, and extra food for infants. Caritas Namibia(NACADEC) is offering facilitate the distribution of these through its local structures where the
many volunteers are offering their services.
Over 200 schools have been closed and 100,000 children have had to interrupt their schooling. Crops have been destroyed, leaving no harvest for
the upcoming winter, health clinics have been forced to close, leaving people living with HIV at serious risk.
Sources of clean water for drinking and cooking have been either destroyed or
polluted. Access to the rivers is impossible due to the flooding, so the people are subjected to severe water restrictions. Many camps are inadequately supplied with drinking water.
Caritas plans to work with affected communities, to find them higher land to resettle, offer training in adaptation technologies so new homes will be better able to with stand flooding, and promote
sustainable agriculture.
“The impact of climate change is having more severe effects on vulnerable communities in these parts of the country, who are dependent on rain-
fed agriculture and subsistence livelihoods. People here need to be able to mitigate against impact of climate change where possible and adapt to the variations in weather to secure their livelihoods.
There are also some simple technologies such as the introduction of housing using ‘soil-cement’ bricks to withstand rain and water damage,� said Sr
Hughes.
For more information, please contact Patrick Nicholson on 0039 334 359 0700 or nicholson@caritas.va
[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]
A resident retrieves valuables at a house flooded by mud flows from a volcano in Porong, East Java Province May 29, 2009. Three years ago, a hot mud volcano erupted in ...