Hundreds dead as Congo River basin submerged by generational floods
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[January 11, 2024]
By Ange Kasongo and Benoit Nyemba
KINSHASA (Reuters) - The Congo River has risen to its highest level in
more than 60 years, causing flooding throughout the Democratic Republic
of Congo (DRC) and Congo Republic that has killed more than 300 people
over the past months, according to authorities.
Poor urban planning and weak infrastructure have made some African
countries vulnerable to flash floods after intense rains, which have
become more frequent due to climate change.
Ferry Mowa, a hydrology specialist at the DRC riverways authority, part
of the transport ministry, said his office had flagged the high water
level in late December, warning that almost the entire flood plain of
the capital Kinshasa, which sits on the banks of the river, could be
affected.
On Wednesday, the river reached 6.20 meters (20.34 feet) above sea
level, just shy of the 1961 record of 6.26 meters, he told Reuters,
adding that the flooding had followed exceptionally high rains inland.
"It is imperative that people who live around the river move", Mowa
said.
Several neighborhoods in DRC's densely populated Kinshasa have flooded,
as well as communities in more than a dozen provinces, the social
affairs ministry said.
Nearly 300 people have died and 300,000 households have been affected,
with tens of thousands of houses destroyed, it said in a statement last
week.
In neighboring Congo Republic, whose capital Brazzaville also sits on
the banks across the river, at least 17 people have died in floods
across eight departments including the capital, with more than 60,000
households affected, authorities told Reuters.
NO PREVENTION PLAN
Some residents use shovels to paddle their way through flooded streets
where water had risen to the roof level of some homes. The flood water
have also swept thousands of discarded plastic bottles and other debris
that now clog streets.
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People use a boat to move after the Congo River rises to its highest
level, causing flooding in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo
January 10, 2024.REUTERS/Justin Makangara
In the Ngaliema municipality in western Kinshasa, the home of local
resident Helene was plunged under water.
"I've lived in this neighborhood since I was born and I've never
experienced such an event, but I don't have the means to go and live
elsewhere," she said.
Raphael Tshimanga Muamba, director of a Congo Basin research centre
in the DRC, called for a fund to help manage natural disasters and
adapt to climate change.
He said DRC has no flood disaster prevention plan.
"I am not surprised to see that the water level is increasing to
this extent," said 18-year-old climate activist Ketsia Passou.
"What surprises me the most is the silence of the authorities in
helping these families who are suffering the effects of climate
change."
DRC's social and humanitarian affairs minister, Modeste Mutinga,
told Reuters that a meeting will be held on Thursday to evaluate
further humanitarian aid.
(Reporting by Ange Kasongo, Benoit Nyemba and Christian Elion;
Writing by Portia Crowe and Anait Miridzhanian; Editing by Bate
Felix and Sandra Maler)
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