Floods Make Triple Tragedy in East Africa: Your Gift Will Bring Hope and Help

May 11, 2020

image
A Kenyan woman and her goats make their way to safety through the floods [© Ondari Ogega/Daily Nation]

“As I write now, all the Christians have lost shelter and crops,” came the WhatsApp message to Barnabas Fund yesterday from flood-stricken western Uganda.

Torrential rains

Torrential rains in East Africa have caused flooding and landslides, displacing 100,000 people in Kenya alone. At least 194 were killed. The waters have washed away 8,000 acres of crops that had escaped locust damage. Extreme rainfall began in mid-April and is forecast to continue until the end of May.

image
Ugandan children affected by the floods

In Uganda, a river burst its banks causing people to flee for safety. The waters of Lake Victoria have risen to unprecedented heights, forcing shoreline communities to abandon their homes.

Rwanda, too, has seen houses, roads and crops destroyed, and people killed by mudslides.

Trillions of locusts

At the same time, a second generation of locusts has descended on the region. With the right wind, they can move at more than 100 miles a day. If the first generation was numbered in billions, the second is said to number trillions. There are 18 separate swarms in Kenya at present, and weather conditions are expected to favour breeding, so that a third generation could hatch in June and July.

Triple tragedy

These two tragedies come on top of the coronavirus, making three simultaneous disasters in East Africa. What’s more, one tragedy impacts another. The huge numbers of displaced people are complicating the Kenyan government’s efforts to prevent the spread of coronavirus. At the same time, borders closed in the fight against coronavirus are delaying the delivery of pesticides to locust-affected areas in the region.

image
Helping an injured man through the muddy floodwaters in Uganda

Homeless Christians need your help now

With crops destroyed by locusts or floods, food prices are rising, but a gift of just £30 ($37; €34) could feed a flood-affected family in Uganda for a month.

Please give now.

Related Countries

East Africa, Kenya