As southern Africa has experienced another devastating bout of floods,
questions are being asked as whether the disaster management
strategies being used by the regional governments ought to be
overhauled.
Coming hard on the heals of two serious floods in the past successive
seasons, the current season has left hundreds of thousands homeless
and in need of food aid and shelter. This means for the coming few
years many in southern Africa will require assistance to restock their
food and livestock while rebuilding their homesteads. This is in a
region where the majority of the population was already languishing in
poverty.
Complains have been raised already that some of these people ignore
early warnings by civil protection authorities, hoping to sit out the
floods being caused by rising waters resulting from incessant rains in
already waterlogged areas.
Some critics however have attributed this to the lack of trust of the
local people in their meteorological stations which have often been
accused of inaccuracies in their whether predictions.
A case in point is the announcement by the meteorological services in
Zimbabwe in early March that some parts of the country were going to
experience heavy torrential rains, with possible flooding in a period
of 10 days. These rains were not experienced to the extent that had
been predicted leading some to quickly point fingers. The truth
however was that there were torrential rains but not as heavy; there
was weather activity in the Mozambique channel which caused all the
stir and this in fact turned into a cyclone, making the issuance of an
early warning necessary.
Despite a revision of the SADC Protocol on Shared Watercourse Systems,
shared rivers have proven to be tricky in disaster management.
Mozambique has become a victim of its neighbours’ actions. Every
time Zambia and Zimbabwe agree to open the floodgates of the Kariba
dam along the Zambezi River during such a wet season, Mozambique’s
Tete province has suffered as a the river swells and burst its banks.
Weather experts at the Southern Africa Region Climate Outlook Forum (SARCOF)
in Botswana predicted normal to above normal rainfall for most parts
of the SADC region during the period October 2000 to March 2001.
True
to SARCOF’s prediction, there was below normal rainfall in northern
Tanzania; above normal rainfall in Angola, central Zambia, Zimbabwe,
South Africa, central and southern Mozambique, much of Botswana and
Namibia, Malawi, Lesotho, Mauritius, Swaziland and
southern
Tanzania.
Following two wet seasons and unprecedented flooding in the eastern
and south-eastern countries of the region namely Botswana, Mozambique,
Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe, flooding was experienced again in
these low-lying areas where the water tables are high and soils were
already saturated.
REWU predicts that only three countries, namely Malawi, South Africa
and Zambia will have an overall cereal surplus during the 2000/2001
marketing year. The rest of the countries face overall cereal deficits
ranging from 109,000 tonnes in Swaziland to about 1.17 million tonnes
in Tanzania.
Hit by recurrent floods, southern Africa needs to reorganise its
disaster management and early warning institutions and mechanisms to
effectively deal with the disasters ravaging the region.
A
harmonisation of mechanisms by countries sharing watercourses is
necessary to curb flooding which can be averted by joint water
management.
The
need to foster trust in national weather services is urgent and
governments can best work on it through intensive public awareness
programmes and community involvement in some of discussions on
disaster management.(SARDC)