Mozambique
floods hit power exports, displace 70,000 – ‘There used to be
only a few crocodiles in the Limpopo River. Now there are a lot.’
SABC,
25
January, 2013
Floods
in southern Mozambique have displaced up to 70 000 people and cut
power exports to energy-hungry neighbour South Africa in half,
officials said yesterday. The south and centre of the country have
been placed on red alert after experiencing the heaviest rainfall
since devastating floods killed some 800 people in 2000.
In
some places current water levels are higher than they were during
that disaster. As the Limpopo River raged through the southern town
of Chokwe, people slept in the open, many by the roadside, local
media reported.
The
record flood levels submerged houses in some places, emergency
officials said. "We are sending seven days of food for 70 000
people," the country's international humanitarian head Lola
Castro told AFP.
But
she added: "Our in-country stocks are limited. We are requesting
donor support." Nine rivers in six water systems were still
above disaster levels by yesterday. The waters were predicted to drop
in Chokwe, but rise at the Limpopo River's mouth in Xai-Xai on the
Indian Ocean.
Aid
agencies are sending trucks with food and emergency supplies to
emergency shelters near Chokwe, where people are still arriving on
foot or the back of trucks.
Helicopters
would start rescuing people stranded on rooftops from today, said
Castro. Meanwhile convoys of cars packed with people's belongings
were leaving Xai-Xai, capital of southern province Gaza, as the city
braced for the deluge, an AFP correspondent reported.
Onlookers
crowded the banks of the swollen Limpopo River watching evacuations.
Authorities say most people heeded the warning to move to higher
ground. Aid agencies are sending trucks with food and emergency
supplies to emergency shelters near Chokwe, where people are still
arriving on foot or the back of trucks.
Most
are women, children and the elderly. So far very little food has
reached them since they fled their homes early Tuesday. Locals were
slow to evacuate the town, which complicated humanitarian programmes,
said Castro.
Mozambique
remains one of the poorest countries in the world, ranking 184th out
of 187 countries on the United Nations Development Programme's Human
Development Index. Heavy rains are predicted to pelt the south until
next Tuesday. In neighbouring South Africa 15 000 crocodiles escaped
from a farm as the Limpopo flooded upstream from Mozambique.
Key
power lines to South Africa were also damaged by the flooding of the
Limpopo, Hilary Joffe, a spokesperson for South Africa's energy giant
Eskom, said. "That has meant the supplies from Mozambique have
been reduced. We are getting much less than 650 megawatts ... which
is less than half of what it should be."
Eskom
imports between 1 300 and 1 500 megawatts of electricity from
Mozambique's Hidroelectrica de Cahora Bassa (HCB), the operators of
one of Africa's largest hydro-electric projects.Work is underway to
fix the transmission line, and South Africa is helping its
impoverished neighbour with the repairs, Eskom says.
It
is getting electricity from other providers to avoid brownouts.
Thousands
of crocodiles on the loose after South Africa floods
JOHANNESBURG
(Reuters) – Some 15,000 crocodiles escaped from a South African
reptile farm in flood waters this week and were on the loose in and
around one of southern Africa's biggest rivers, a newspaper reported
on Thursday.
"There
used to be only a few crocodiles in the Limpopo River. Now there are
a lot," Zane Langman, whose in-laws own the farm in the northern
part of the country told Beeld newspaper.
Langman
said only half the escaped crocodiles from the Rakwena Crocodile Farm
close to the Botswana border had been recaptured, the report said.
Langman
added that farm gates were opened out of fear the rushing flood water
would crush the crocodiles.
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