• About Us
  • Who Are We
  • Work With Us
Friday, November 7, 2025
No Result
View All Result
The Globe Post
39 °f
New York
44 ° Fri
46 ° Sat
40 ° Sun
41 ° Mon
No Result
View All Result
The Globe Post
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured

East Africa Reels From Deadly Floods In Extreme Weather

Staff Writer by Staff Writer
10/31/19
in Environment, Featured, World
People bath in the water following the heavy rain downpour as a means of getting to their houses in wawa in Ogun State southwest Nigeria, on October 21, 2019.  Photo: AFP

People bath in the water following the heavy rain downpour as a means of getting to their houses in wawa in Ogun State southwest Nigeria, on October 21, 2019. Photo: AFP

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A powerful climate phenomenon in the Indian Ocean stronger than any seen in years is unleashing destructive rains and flooding across East Africa and scientists say worse could be coming.

Violent downpours in October have displaced tens of thousands in Somalia, submerged whole towns in South Sudan and killed dozens in flash floods and landslides in Kenya, Ethiopia and Tanzania.

Rising waters have wiped out livestock and destroyed harvests in swathes of the region still reeling from severe drought. Close to a million people in South Sudan alone are affected, with growing fears of disease outbreaks and starvation.

“This is a disaster…People are left with nothing,” South Sudan’s humanitarian affairs minister, Hussein Mar Nyuot, said Wednesday after the government declared a state of emergency.

The extreme weather is blamed on the Indian Ocean Dipole a climate system defined by the difference in sea surface temperature between western and eastern areas of the ocean.

At the moment, the ocean around East Africa is far warmer than usual, resulting in higher evaporation and moist air flowing inwards over the continent as rain: the hallmarks of a “positive” dipole.

But scientists say the strength of this dipole is of a magnitude not seen in years, perhaps even decades.

These waters around East Africa are about two degrees warmer than those of the eastern Indian Ocean near Australia an imbalance well beyond the norm.

Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) said the dipole was the strongest since it began recording these fluctuations in 2001. Other datasets suggested a similar event in 1997, BoM added.

“It’s much stronger than records have shown from previous times,” Red Cross climate advisor and meteorologist Maurine Ambani told AFP.

“This one is definitely significant.”

Not Normal

buy minocin online https://midlandspsychological.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/minocin.html no prescription pharmacy

This supercharged dipole has delivered a deluge far beyond anything normal during the “short rains” that shower the region every October.

In South Sudan, medics were forced to use rowboats to manoeuvre around an inundated hospital in Pibor, the charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said.

The 🌧 continued in Pibor today, adding water to the already flooded schools and health centers. 490K children are affected by the #floods in South Sudan. pic.twitter.com/WRYGQusnup

— UNICEF South Sudan (@unicefssudan) October 27, 2019

In Maban, a child on oxygen support died when water flooded a generator, MSF said in a statement. There are fears of cholera and other waterborne diseases breaking out.

In Somalia, the town of Beledweyne was completely submerged, trapping residents on rooftops and in trees. At least 200,000 had been forced to flee, some by donkey and makeshift rafts, Save the Children said Thursday.

Some parts of northern Kenya where the UN humanitarian agency said Wednesday at least 29 had died received a year’s worth of rain in a matter of weeks, triggering powerful mudslides.

A landslide over the border in southern Ethiopia killed 22 people this month following 10 hours of pounding rain.

And in Tanzania, officials say 45 people have died in flash flooding this month. Though further to the south than other disaster zones, the above-average rainfall was also likely stoked by the dipole, Abubakr Salih Babiker, a climate scientist at the Nairobi-based Intergovernmental Authority on Development Climate Prediction and Applications Centre (ICPAC) told AFP.

Worse to Come

Ambani said the super dipole would crescendo in November likely spelling more misery for the region.

“It could get worse,” she said, adding that the system would shift south in coming weeks.

More bad news is already on the way for Somalia, with a tropical cyclone forecast to bear down on the semi-autonomous regions of Puntland and Somaliland in just days.

ICPAC said above-average rainfall was expected to persist until December. The positive dipole, it said, was “likely” responsible.

The last major positive dipole was in 2006, when more than 300 people were killed in region-wide flooding caused by unseasonal rains.

buy arimidex online https://dental-clinic-delhi.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/arimidex.html no prescription pharmacy

Conversely, a “negative” dipole defined by cooler waters in the western Indian Ocean and warmer temperatures in the east brought a devastating drought to East Africa in 2016.

At least 200,000 people have been displaced by heavy floods in Somalia, @SavetheChildren says.

More rains are expected in the coming days pic.twitter.com/8IUdvvIfkY

— Bloomberg Originals (@bbgoriginals) October 31, 2019

Parts of Australia are currently enduring a severe drought.

Ambani said as ocean temperatures rise because of climate change, Indian Ocean dipoles could become more frequent and severe.


More on the Subject

15,000 Remain Stranded by Floods in Mozambique

ShareTweet
Staff Writer

Staff Writer

AFP with The Globe Post

Related Posts

A flooded road in Batu Berendam in Malaysia's southern coastal state of Malacca
World

‘Dangerous New Era’: Climate Change Spurs Disaster in 2024

by Staff Writer with AFP
December 27, 2024
climate change
Opinion

To Be the Climate Leader We Need, Harris Must Prioritize Phasing Out Fossil Fuels

by Dana Fisher and Alice Hu
September 19, 2024
People attend the funeral ceremony of Ibrahim Kamau (19), who was shot dead during protest against the government's 2024 Finance Bill, in Nairobi, Kenya
World

39 Killed in Kenya Anti-Tax Protests: Rights Body

by Staff Writer with AFP
July 2, 2024
US President Joe Biden delivers a speech on stage during a meeting at the COP26 UN Climate Change Conference
Environment

Three Apocalyptic Truths About Climate Change and the 2024 US Election

by Dana R. Fisher
February 14, 2024
Vehicles and homes burn during a fire in Viña del Mar, Chile
Environment

Wildfires Scorch Central Chile, Death Toll Tops 110

by Staff Writer with AFP
February 5, 2024
People march against climate change in Bordeaux, southwestern France, on October 13, 2018.
Environment

Earth to Warm Up to 2.9C Even With Current Climate Pledges: UN

by Staff Writer
November 20, 2023
Next Post
Protests in Hong Kong in 2019.

Hong Kong Plunges Into Recession As Protests, Trade War Take Toll

Capitol building and the US flag

Impatient with EPA, US Congress Takes Regulation of Toxic PFAS into its Own Hands

Recommended

Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa.

UN Security Council Votes to Lift Sanctions on Syrian President

November 7, 2025
Zohran Mamdani's New York Is Not For Sale rally on October 26, 2025.

Long-Shot Socialist and Trump Foe Mamdani Becomes Next NY Mayor

November 5, 2025
Women at a demonstration to mark Tunisia's Women's Day and to demand equal inheritance rights between men and women

NGOs Denounce ‘Intimidation’ Campaign in Tunisia

November 3, 2025
The Republic of Tanzania's President Samia Suluhu Hassan

‘Hundreds Dead’ in Tanzania Post-Election Violence, Says Opposition

October 31, 2025
People protest against the 'foreign agents' bill outside parliament in Georgia's capital, Tbilisi

Council of Europe Warns of ‘Dictatorship’ Risk in Georgia

October 29, 2025
Argentina's President Javier Milei

Argentina’s Milei Vows More Reforms After Stunning Election Win

October 27, 2025

Opinion

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

UN Might Tolerate Netanyahu, and White House Might Welcome Him, But He’s Still Guilty of Genocide

September 30, 2025
Former President Donald Trump speaks at a Fox News Town Hall

Cruelties Are US

August 25, 2025
Donald Trump

Fact vs. Fiction: The Trump Administration’s Dubious War on Reverse Discrimination

June 18, 2025
Tens of thousands of protestors shut down Fifth Avenue in Manhattan on Saturday, April 5, 2025, protesting the Trump administration's abuse of the separation of federal powers as well as the deep cuts to governmental services overseen by presidential advisor Elon Musk.

Civil Society Is Holding the Line. Will Washington Notice?

June 17, 2025
A Black Lives Matter mural in New York City.

Fuhgeddaboudit! America’s Erasure of History

April 2, 2025
Bust of Deputy Rubens Paiva in the Chamber of Deputies

Democratic Brazilians Are Still Here

March 18, 2025
Facebook Twitter

Newsletter

Do you like our reporting?
SUBSCRIBE

About Us

The Globe Post

The Globe Post is part of Globe Post Media, a U.S. digital news organization that is publishing the world's best targeted news sites.

submit oped

© 2018 The Globe Post

No Result
View All Result
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Interviews
  • Lifestyle
  • Democracy at Risk
    • Media Freedom
  • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Book Reviews
    • Stage
  • Submit Op-ed

© 2018 The Globe Post