Thousands homeless as floods, landslides hit Kenya

At least 116 people died due to floods caused by torrential rains in Kenya, local media reported since Wednesday.
The floods in the eastern African country have affected some 29 counties, leaving 100,000 households displaced, Devolution Cabinet Secretary Eugene Wamalwa announced Wednesday.
"We want to urge the counties to comply with the guidelines put in place including moving to higher ground," daily The Star quoted Wamalwa as saying.
"We are also releasing face masks to families and sanitizers. Even as we distribute food, we want to ensure that we do not take coronavirus there. We have enough food to support all those displaced," he added.
The ongoing heavy rains in parts of Mt Kenya, as well as Aberdares regions, have caused an increase in the volume of water spilled by the Seven Fork dams, according to the daily.
Last week, Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta called on people living in flood- and landslide-prone regions to move to safe grounds.
In November last year, dozens of people were killed due to landslides in western Kenya’s Pokot Country, leaving thousands of people homeless as their homes were swept away by floods due to above-average rainfall.
Ahead of the signing of the Paris Agreement on climate change in 2016, top scientists warned of the effects left by the climate change on the African continent.
“Africa is greatly affected by global warming and related greenhouse gas emissions; droughts and floods are some of the environmental impacts of global warming,” Hoesung Lee, chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) told Anadolu Agency in an interview on April 14, 2016.
More than 1,800 families in western Kenya have been rendered homeless after the River Nzoia burst its banks, according to the Kenya Red Cross.
In the Buyuku village of Budalangi, residents loaded their belongings on boats to get them away from submerged homes.
"It's been flooding for three days now," said Vincent Ochieng, one of the residents affected by the floods. "I think the government is not even aware, but now we are telling them. We are asking them if there are any plans to assist us, only two boats are here for evacuating people."
Heavy rainfall in recent days has led to flooding and landslides across the region.
On April 30, Eugene Wamalwa, cabinet secretary of the Ministry of Devolution, told Citizen TV Kenya that 116 people had died in the country due to the flooding across 29 counties.
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