A
"sea of water" horror: Dam burst in Kenya kills at least 50
people and another 132 dead with 222,000 displayed from torrential
rain
10
May, 2018
A
dam on a commercial flower farm in Kenya's Rift Valley burst after
weeks of torrential rain, unleashing a "sea of water" that
careened down a hillside and smashed into two villages, killing more
than 50 people.
The
walls of the reservoir, situated on top of a hill in Nakuru county,
190 km (120 miles) northwest of Nairobi, gave way late on Wednesday
as nearby residents were sitting down to evening meals.
Kenya
is one of the largest suppliers of cut flowers to Europe, and roses
from the 3,500-acre Solai farm are exported to the Netherlands and
Germany, according to Optimal Connection, its Netherlands-based
handling agent.
The
floodwaters carved out a dark brown chasm in the hillside and swept
away everything in their path - powerlines, homes and buildings,
including a primary school.
The
bodies of two women were found several kilometres away as excavators
and rescue workers armed with shovels picked through rubble and mud
searching for survivors and victims.
Local
police chief Japheth Kioko said the death toll could well climb.
"So
far it is 50 dead.
We
are still on the ground," he told Reuters. After a severe
drought last year, East Africa has been hit by two months of heavy
rain, affecting nearly a million people in Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia
and Uganda.
Bridges
have been swept away and roads turned into rivers of mud.
In
Solai, Veronica Wanjiku Ngigi, 67, said she was at home brewing tea
with her son at around 8 pm (1700 GMT) when his wife rushed in to say
the dam had burst and they needed to get to higher ground
immediately.
"It
was a sea of water.
My
neighbour was killed when the water smashed through the wall of his
house.
He
was blind so he could not run.
They
found his body in the morning," she said.
"My
other neighbours also died.
All
our houses have been ruined."
Nakuru
lies in the heart of Kenya's fertile Rift Valley, home to thousands
of commercial farms that grow everything from French beans to
macadamia nuts to cut flowers, nearly all of which are exported to
Europe.
The
region is dotted with irrigation reservoirs built in the last two
decades to meet the demands of the rapidly expanding agricultural
sector, the biggest foreign exchange earner for East Africa's largest
economy and a major source of jobs.
Vinoj
Kumar, general manager of the Solai farm, blamed the disaster on
massive rainfall in a forest above the dam.
"In
the past two days the intensity of the rain was high and the water
started coming down carrying boulders and roots which damaged the
wall," he told Reuters.
"The
dam wall cracked and the water escaped."
Nakuru
governor Lee Kinyanjui said 450 homes had been hit by the floodwaters
and safety engineers had been sent to inspect three other dams to
check for cracks or breaches.
Wanjiku,
the survivor, said at least one looked like it was ready to burst.
"There
is another dam which is also overflowing which is looking risky,"
she said.
"We
are scared."
One
primary school had been closed as a precaution, education officials
said.
Arriving
at the scene, Interior Minister Fred Matiangi pledged central
government assistance to those affected.
Even
before this week's dam-burst, heavy rains had caused havoc in Kenya,
killing 132 people and displacing 222,000, according to the
government.
Roads
and bridges have been destroyed, causing millions of dollars of
damage.
The
United Nations UNOCHA disaster agency said 580,000 people had been
affected by torrential rain and flooding in neighbouring Somalia,
while the Somali region of eastern Ethiopia had also taken a
hammering, with 160,000 people affected.
The
flooding could yet get worse, with heavy rains forecast to continue
in the Rift Valley and the Lake Victoria basin over the next few
weeks.
Torrential
floods in Thessaloniki, Greece
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