Flood displaces 8,000 Ethiopian families
Addis Ababa, 16 October 2014 (WIC) -
Some 8,000 families have been displaced by the recent overflowing of
Ethiopia's Awash River across the country, the Ministry of Water, Energy
and Irrigation said Wednesday.
"Households are being moved to higher
ground and given temporary shelter," ministry spokesperson Bizuneh
Tolcha told Anadolu Agency, asserting that no casualties had been
reported thus far.
"The Ministry of Defense, UNICEF and
other donor organizations are working in collaboration with the ministry
in an effort to distribute food aid and other materials to the
displaced," Bizuneh said.
"Food aid, medicine, canopies and other
household utensils are being dropped from the air by Defense Ministry
helicopters," the spokesperson added.
He went on to note that cotton and sugarcane fields, covering more than 5,200 hectares of land, had also been flooded.
Efforts are currently underway to repair
a dike that was breached by the floodwaters, he said, adding that all
necessary equipment – including heavy trucks, excavators and bulldozers –
had already been dispatched to the area.
Repairing the dike would serve to minimize flood damage in other areas, Bizuneh said.
The flooding came in the wake of heavy rainfall, measured at between 45 and 91 millimeters, he added.
The Awash River has its source in the
central Ethiopian highlands, West of Addis Ababa, and flows towards the
Rift Valley. Its basin covers an area of 110,000 square kilometers in
Ethiopia's Oromia, Afar and Amhara regions. (World Bulletin)
No comments:
Post a Comment