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Friday April 26, 2024

Malawi floods leave thousands homeless

By AFP
March 16, 2019

BANGULA, Malawi: "We just sleep on the floor in the tents," said 28-year-old mother-of-five Mary Amidu who like thousands of other Malawians fled her flood-ravaged home.

"It’s a camp, so the situation is dire. You just find a small space in the tent with your family and make it home." Her village is just 10-km away on the Mozambique border, beside the west bank of the Shire river which has burst its banks following days of torrential rain.

Across Malawi, at least 56 people have been killed following flash floods while the government estimates almost 83,000 people have been displaced. The waters last week invaded her home so swiftly that the young widow had to scramble to get her family to safety.

"The floods came very quickly and we had no time to rescue anything, most of my property went with the floods," she said. "What was important was to save lives." They are now at the emergency camp, located in Bangula, southern Malawi -- close to the border with Mozambique which was hit by tropical cyclone Idai late on Thursday, cutting off the coastal city of Berea.

"Although we have food, we have no cooking utensils to prepare the food because everything was lost," said Amidu who said she fears a long stay at the camp as waters begin to subside.

"We cannot go back soon because the water has not receded and so the house has been destroyed. So we will hang around the camp until the situation normalises. We have no other choice." Pilirani Andulu, walked 15 kms to the camp after her home collapsed and has been forced to sleep in the open with her two-year-old girl because the tents are full. A lack of blankets and mosquito nets means her child is exposed to mosquitoes, malaria and cold.