At least 200 people have been confirmed dead and 500 more remain missing after flash floods devastated a Nigerian market town, media reported. Torrential rain started early on May 29, and within just a few hours caused intense flooding in the town of Mokwa, Niger state, a major trading hub for northern farmers selling beans, onions and other crops to southern traders. The town, with a population of 400,000, is 350 kilometers (about 220 miles) west of Nigeria’s capital, Abuja. Musa Kimboku, deputy chair of the local government, told the Associated Press that rescue operations have already stopped and those missing are presumed dead. The retrieval of bodies from beneath rubble is continuing in a bid to prevent disease outbreak, Kimboku added. More than 3,000 people remain displaced after floodwaters and mud completely destroyed houses. The Niger state emergency service spokesperson told AP that two bridges and two roads were washed away in the floods. Jibril Muregi, chair of the Mokwa government, reportedly told local news website Premium Times that flood-control infrastructure was long overdue. Al Jazeera quoted experts saying that climate change, in addition to unregulated construction and poor drainage, had made floods more frequent and severe. “The amount of rain you expect in a year could probably come in one or two months, and people are not prepared for that kind of rainfall,” Ugonna Nkwunonwo, a flood risk analyst at the University of Nigeria, told Al Jazeera. The report added that rapid development without adequate urban planning in…This article was originally published on Mongabay
Search
Recent Research
Want your Blog Article featured on our website?
Research
Featured News
Edward McNabb, pioneer of conservation bioacoustics died on May 7, aged 81
Founder’s Briefs: An occasional series where Mongabay founder Rhett Ayers Butler shares analysis, perspectives and
World’s first industry-wide climate mandate could be launched with shipping vote
This is Part 1 in a short series on efforts to decarbonize the global shipping
Queensland land clearing figures show state remains ‘deforestation capital of Australia’, conservationists say
Overall clearing was up 3%, with almost half in Great Barrier Reef catchment areas while
Strategies against deforestation across the Amazon Basin
The command-and-control approach to reducing or eliminating environmental wrongdoing depends on both carrots and sticks.
UN holds emergency talks over sky-high accommodation costs at Cop30 in Brazil
Concerns poorer countries could be priced out of negotiations in Belém as room rates soar
Countries failing to act on UN climate pledge to triple renewables, thinktank finds
Fossil fuel reliance likely to continue and Cop28 target of limiting global heating to below
Trump bids to scrap almost all pollution regulations – can anything stop this?
EPA tries to rescind ‘endangerment finding’ – part of ‘drill, baby, drill’ agenda that experts
Ethiopia’s national tree campaign underway with aim to plant 700 million seedlings in one day
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — Ethiopia has launched a national campaign to plant 700 million