Uganda: Floods - IRIN: 12-Oct-07
IRIN
UGANDA: Eastern districts still cut off as rains ease
12 October 2007
KAMPALA, 12 October 2007 (IRIN) - The rains that have pounded several
districts in eastern Uganda have eased slightly but parts of the region
remain cut off and inundated by floods, aid workers said.
Water levels remained high, with roads destroyed, forcing aid agencies
to resort to expensive air transportation to deliver food to communities
cut off by the floods, said Kristen Knutson, public information officer
at the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
"We have secured one MI-8 helicopter and two more are expected. The
helicopter is using sling-net deliveries [and] an Antonov 12 aircraft
will fly relief to the region from Entebbe," Knutson told IRIN by
telephone from the eastern town of Soroti.
Up to 300,000 people have been affected by the unprecedented floods,
especially in Amuria, Soroti, Kumi, Katakwi and Bukedea districts, where
the water has washed away bridges and roads, making access difficult.
"Crops have been destroyed and there are signs that a dry season may be
[close] while two planting seasons have been lost," Knutson added. "This
means that the food security of these people will remain precarious."
The UN World Food Programme (WFP) this week warned that a disaster
loomed unless donors replenished its food stocks by December.
Unusually heavy rain - the worst in 35 years - has fallen in the region
since July, destroying much of the first season harvest and disrupting
second season planting.
The flooding has also damaged shelter, water and sanitation facilities.
Many homes have collapsed, while most that remain standing have damp
floors and crumbling walls due to excessive moisture. Most pit latrines
have collapsed while those remaining are not safe.
According to aid workers, water points have been contaminated, thereby
increasing the possibility of epidemic disease outbreaks. Many health
centres in the affected areas already had little or no supply of
essential drugs at the start of the emergency, while staffing levels are
chronically low.
"The situation is dire for hundreds of thousands of people who have lost
their homes, their belongings and most of their crops," wrote WFP
executive director Josette Sheeran in a statement. "It can take just
days for the effects of acute malnutrition to claim the life of a
child."
WFP needs US$17 million to buy food for flood victims and $3.2 million
to provide trucks, boats, aircraft and emergency road and bridge repairs
on behalf of the humanitarian community.
Knutson said cases of waterborne diseases such as diarrhoea, upper
respiratory diseases, as well as malaria, had increased in most areas by
30 percent.
The appeal for funds was boosted by a $6 million grant from the Central
Emergency Response Fund (CERF). "The grant is in response to a $41
million Flash Appeal launched by the humanitarian community on September
21st," stated OCHA.
"These funds will be put to immediate use to benefit the many thousands
who require aid to cope with the effects of the floods," said Theophane
Nikyema, UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Uganda.
The European Union also announced that it had committed up to 16 million
Euros ($22.4 million) to help flood victims in Uganda.
Meanwhile, the Food Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS Net) warned that
areas of Southern Sudan could face localised food shortages due to
flooding, including the Nile-Sobat and eastern flood plains.
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