Source: Agence France Presse
Thursday 12 September 2024 10:20:25
Sitting by their ruined home, Abu Ibrahim wept for his son and seven grandchildren killed by flash floods in Yemen, where increasingly severe downpours are piling more misery on the impoverished, war-torn country.
The greying, bearded villager gestured at the fallen stone walls, all that remains of their home after raging torrents and landslips cut great scars across the mountainside.
Abu Ibrahim, who lives nearby, fought back tears as he recalled the terrible sound of his son’s dwelling collapsing in the deluge.
“Shortly afterwards, my wife saw that Ibrahim’s house was no longer there,” he said.
“She screamed loudly, saying, ‘Ibrahim and his children have been swept away by the floods!’”
They were not the only ones killed, injured or uprooted by this year’s seasonal rains, which experts say are growing in intensity and frequency because of climate change.
According to OCHA, the United Nations humanitarian agency, about 40 people died or are missing since the disaster in Al-Mahwit province’s Melhan district, part of the vast swathe of Yemen held by Iran-backed Houthi militia.
Fifteen houses were destroyed and 50 were badly damaged, forcing 215 families to shelter in nearby schools, OCHA said.
Across Yemen in recent weeks, nearly 100 people have died in floods, an AFP tally compiled from UN data shows.
And more than 560,000 people across the country have been affected since late July, according to the UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM).
“The scale of the destruction is staggering,” said Matt Huber, acting Yemen mission chief of the IOM, which appealed last week for $13.3 million in emergency funds.
The mountains of western Yemen are prone to heavy seasonal rainfall, but this year’s extreme weather conditions are “unprecedented”, said Huber.
In the Melhan tragedy, landslides crashed through homes and buried some of their occupants.
“We heard the mountain shake,” said Abdullah al-Malhani, another neighbor of Ibrahim and his family.
Access for aid workers has been “almost impossible” because of “destroyed and flooded roads”, the UN Population Fund posted on X.
It published pictures of camels carrying aid to stricken villagers through winding, hilly terrain.
The flooding in Yemen has destroyed homes, displaced thousands of families and seriously damaged critical infrastructure such as health centers, schools and roads.
The Arabian peninsula’s poorest country, engulfed in war since 2015, was already struggling with rising malnutrition and has suffered a spike in cholera cases linked to the heavy rains and floods.
The situation could worsen in the coming months, the UN’s World Health Organization (WHO) warned last month.
Yemen’s central highlands, Red Sea coastal areas and parts of the southern uplands are expected to receive “unprecedented levels” of rainfall in excess of 300 millimeters (12 inches), the WHO said.
“Climate change is not only making floods more frequent but also more severe,” said Maha Al-Salehi, a researcher at Holm Akhdar, a Yemeni environmental group.
Mohammed Hamid, assistant under-secretary of the meteorology department in the Houthi-held capital, Sanaa, said recurring extreme weather events in Yemen clearly indicated the impacts of climate change.
Since May 2015, there have been around nine tropical cyclones, or one every year -- an unusually high number -- Hamid told AFP.
“We need to get ready for new cyclones” in October, Hamid said.
As the planet heats, the warmer air can hold more moisture, creating heavier and more frequent storms, weather experts say.
Weakened by years of conflict, Yemen’s creaking infrastructure and disaster response capabilities add to the threat from climate change, said Karim Elgendy, a climate consultant and associate fellow at the Chatham House think tank.
“The combination of more extreme precipitation events and a country destabilized by war has left Yemen exceptionally vulnerable to the unprecedented rainfall, resulting in catastrophic flooding across multiple governorates,” he told AFP.