Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene July-August 2015 Vol. 10 No.4 | Page 5

NEWS in brief Around Africa Cameroonians Cameroonians plagued by urban flooding By Sylvestre Tetchiada The number of floods per year across Africa between 1961 and 2013. Days of heavy rain during the week of 20 June 2015 left roads, buildings and homes in Cameroon’s Douala city flooded. Photo: Sylvestre Tetchiada/IRIN DOUALA, 1 July 2015 (IRIN) - More than a week after floods caused by heavy rain in Cameroon’s economic capital, Douala, killed at least four people and destroyed the homes and businesses of thousands of others, displacing at least 2,000 people and directly affecting more than 30,000, the city remains devastated. Fallen electric poles are a grim reminder that much of the city is still without power, upturned wrecked cars and motorcycles lie abandoned in gutters, trash and other debris litter the muddy streets. The Ministry of Homes and Urban Development and the Urban Community Delegation of Douala says “millions of dollars” of damage have been caused. “Our whole life is now shattered,” said 39-year old nurse Arlette Mbappe. “I have no home. It’s up to me to repair the damage of what remains, but even finding food for my children has become difficult. I would look for other accommodation, but that has become very difficult to find.” Tropical monsoon rains and subsequent flooding are becoming more frequent in southwestern Cameroon, as well as in other countries with shores on the Gulf of Guinea. Each year the heavy rains seem to become more deadly and do more damage. “The floods, like those that are shaking our city, are becoming more common in light of global warming, and as other factors, such as urbanization and agricultural practices, are taken into account,” said Philippe Edimo, an urban planning engineer who works for the National Meteorological Directorate in Douala. Annual rainfall fluctuates from year to year, but in Douala, for example, averaged 3,000mm of rain per year between 1906 and 1965. This has since increased to 3,200mm in 1989 and 3,800 mm in 2010, before falling to 3,080mm in 2014, according to the National Department of Meteorology (DMN). Between 1998 and 2006, 4,200 people were affected by flooding in Cameroon, according to data from the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters’ Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT). In 2007, more than 10,000 people were affected in a single year. In 2008, 25,000 and in 2012, nearly 52,000. Ethiopia The African Water Facility Catalyzes the Development of Waste Management Businesses to Improve Sanitation Services in Arba Minch. The African Water Facility (AWF) announced on July 1, 2015 that it is providing a €1.2-million grant to the Government of Ethiopia to improve sanitation and faecal waste management in Arba Minch. The project will benefit over 21,000 people who will have access to improved toilet facilities. It will also boost local agriculture through the provision of new and affordable fertilizer. Specifically, the project will focus on improving and increasing the various public and private services provided along the sanitation value chain, from waste collection, to transportation and processing. This will be done by helping small p ɥمє