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Kenya floods kill 194, people evacuated from risk areas near dams

Kenya floods kill 194, people evacuated from risk areas near dams
epa08351667 A Kenyan man (L), washes his hands with soap and water at a road side after water tanks and soaps where distributed by Ghetto Foundation, a non-governmental organization in Mathare slums, one of the most densely populated slums in Nairobi, Kenya, 08 April 2020. Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta on 06 April 2020 imposed a 21-days ban on movement into and out of Nairobi and three other counties identified as high risk areas due to the number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 reported from those counties. The ban is meant as a further effective measure just days after a night curfew from 07:00 pm was imposed as a preventive measure to curb the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus which causes the COVID-19 disease. EPA-EFE/DANIEL IRUNGU

NAIROBI, May 6 (Reuters) - Floods and landslides in Kenya have killed nearly 200 people, displaced 100,000 and strained critical infrastructure, with unprecedentedly high water levels at two dams forcing the evacuation of villagers at risk, officials said on Wednesday.

The heavy rain, which accelerated in mid-April, is expected to continue in already hard-hit areas in the coming weeks, the Kenya Meteorological Department said in its most recent forecast. May usually marks the end of the rainy season.

In Budalangi, western Kenya, residents have had to carry their belongings away from their submerged houses using boats and motorbikes, after the River Nzoia burst its banks, spilling over the land for miles around.

Government spokesman Cyrus Oguna said on Twitter that over the past three weeks, floods had displaced 100,000 people — complicating efforts to protect against the spread of the coronavirus, which has killed 24 people in the country.

The government is providing food and water to the displaced people and has also requested the Health Ministry to provide them with masks as a precautionary measure.

The floods and landslides have been concentrated in western Kenya and have so far killed 194 people, Eugene Wamalwa, the minister in charge of relations between the regional leadership and the national government, said.

“Yesterday alone, we have lost 30 people in a matter of 24 hours,” Wamalwa said.

Energy Minister Charles Keter said the water levels at two major Kenyan dams were unprecedentedly high.

The two dams, Masinga and Turkwel, have a combined installed electricity generation capacity of 140 MW, representing about 6% of Kenya’s total installed capacity.

As Masinga also feeds into several other dams, officials advised people living near those downstream reservoirs to evacuate.

“We are telling people who are downstream, Garissa all the way to Tana River – things are worsening,” Keter said about residents of the two eastern counties.

“We are asking them to move. Let them not wait for water, because this is historical.”

Security officials were already evacuating residents in high-risk areas, Interior Minister Fred Matiang’i added.

“We are not waiting for people to move – we are moving some people away from danger,” he said.

The floods have also destroyed 8,000 acres of rice fields, the cabinet secretary for water and irrigation, Sicily Kariuki, said.

Kenya was already facing a looming rice shortage due to shipping disruptions caused by the coronavirus outbreak.

The heavy rains and landslides could also lead to water shortages, Kariuki said.

“The infrastructure to deliver water has been washed away … pipelines have been clogged,” said Kariuki, asking residents of several cities including the capital of Nairobi to use their water in a “rational” manner. (Reporting by Ayenat Mersie, Additional reporting by George Obulutsa; Editing by Alison Williams)

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