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dam-l DR Congo flooding/LS




Tuesday, 30 November, 1999, 23:48 GMT
               Thousands flee DR Congo flooding




               Thousands of people are being evacuated from Kinshasa, the
               capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, ahead of what could
               become the "flood of the century".

               Kikoy Kikum, the head of DR Congo's waterways authority
               warned that the overflowing Congo River is feeding a flood which
               "will last until January and will probably surpass" two
other major
               floods this century in 1903 and 1961-62.

               The flooding has forced the authorities to move up to 16,000
               people to disused factories and government buildings.

               Almost a fifth of Kinshasa's districts have already been hit
by the
               rising waters, and tens of thousands of people are potentially at
               risk.

               Michel Nouredine Kassa, an adviser to the United Nations in
               Kinshasa, says the River Congo is at its highest level since 1903
               and the rainy season has only just begun.

               Risk of disease

               Water supplies to 50% of the population of Kinshasa have been
               cut, and purification systems at some of the capital's pumping
               stations are silting up.

               Health officials fear outbreaks of cholera and other water-borne
               diseases, and have asked city residents to "show solidarity with
               the afflicted".

               The government has appealed to the international donor
               community for aid in anticipation of continued heavy rains.

               In a television broadcast on Monday, Health Minister Mashako
               Mamba said that any help from "partners" of DR Congo would be
               welcome.

               Exceptional rains

               The exceptional water levels are due to the simultaneous flooding
               of tributaries in the northern and southern Congo basin,
according
               to Mr Kikum. These waterways do not normally swell at the same
               time.

               Torrential rains have also started earlier than usual.

               The Stanley Pool, a great interior lake, is at capacity and
"can no
               longer play its role as the Congo's natural spill basin", Mr
Kikum
               added.

               In the neighbouring capital Brazzaville, on the opposite
side of the
               river, residents in the Yoro district have started
navigating the area
               in canoes.

               Floods earlier in November left two people dead and thousands
               homeless, according to the Brazzaville authorities.

               Towns and villages were flooded, bridges washed away and in
               many northern areas crops perished when the Congo River's
               tributaries burst.

               The ability of the Brazzaville Government to deal with the
               disasters is severely hampered by the war between government
               and rebel forces which continues in the south and centre of the
               country.

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      Lori Pottinger, Director, Southern Africa Program,
        and Editor, World Rivers Review
           International Rivers Network
              1847 Berkeley Way, Berkeley, California 94703, USA
                  Tel. (510) 848 1155   Fax (510) 848 1008
                        http://www.irn.org
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