Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Staggering' destruction in Yemen after deadly flash flooding

EUR -
AED 4.206706
AFN 71.626247
ALL 95.922283
AMD 432.457649
ANG 2.050144
AOA 1050.389007
ARS 1592.12955
AUD 1.631236
AWG 2.063263
AZN 1.952288
BAM 1.954191
BBD 2.307708
BDT 140.614232
BGN 1.954679
BHD 0.432489
BIF 3401.943722
BMD 1.145462
BND 1.466412
BOB 7.918481
BRL 6.018599
BSD 1.145812
BTN 105.776299
BWP 15.615348
BYN 3.390753
BYR 22451.054
BZD 2.304633
CAD 1.5717
CDF 2494.816239
CHF 0.903774
CLF 0.026387
CLP 1042.152154
CNY 7.868136
CNH 7.901076
COP 4228.873659
CRC 539.087927
CUC 1.145462
CUP 30.354741
CVE 110.176215
CZK 24.459221
DJF 204.064665
DKK 7.472845
DOP 70.402959
DZD 151.709538
EGP 59.950617
ERN 17.181929
ETB 178.873376
FJD 2.542696
FKP 0.857988
GBP 0.864148
GEL 3.109903
GGP 0.857988
GHS 12.44432
GIP 0.857988
GMD 83.619148
GNF 10045.72933
GTQ 8.786654
GYD 239.742619
HKD 8.965817
HNL 30.333424
HRK 7.530153
HTG 150.25826
HUF 391.106844
IDR 19406.416167
ILS 3.594752
IMP 0.857988
INR 105.914737
IQD 1501.18373
IRR 1514042.95416
ISK 144.225191
JEP 0.857988
JMD 179.801184
JOD 0.812133
JPY 182.606681
KES 148.165728
KGS 100.1703
KHR 4595.216748
KMF 490.257921
KPW 1030.777103
KRW 1713.324892
KWD 0.351829
KYD 0.954922
KZT 561.005469
LAK 24555.105283
LBP 102615.9161
LKR 356.591278
LRD 209.7001
LSL 19.24392
LTL 3.382251
LVL 0.692878
LYD 7.312235
MAD 10.792908
MDL 19.990716
MGA 4758.144918
MKD 61.499337
MMK 2404.547166
MNT 4089.584866
MOP 9.237815
MRU 45.848853
MUR 52.703237
MVR 17.708981
MWK 1986.990127
MXN 20.428764
MYR 4.511407
MZN 73.198505
NAD 19.246606
NGN 1587.713489
NIO 42.159953
NOK 11.145408
NPR 169.241879
NZD 1.96992
OMR 0.440435
PAB 1.145872
PEN 3.951747
PGK 5.010918
PHP 68.44593
PKR 319.925307
PLN 4.270509
PYG 7393.010132
QAR 4.165625
RON 5.093981
RSD 117.425936
RUB 91.753954
RWF 1672.237842
SAR 4.298255
SBD 9.22287
SCR 17.366134
SDG 688.422252
SEK 10.762084
SGD 1.46756
SHP 0.859393
SLE 28.168178
SLL 24019.770616
SOS 653.770311
SRD 43.009824
STD 23708.749454
STN 24.47675
SVC 10.026745
SYP 127.875234
SZL 19.237726
THB 37.066955
TJS 10.983557
TMT 4.020571
TND 3.38891
TOP 2.757997
TRY 50.61876
TTD 7.771703
TWD 36.740672
TZS 2989.47928
UAH 50.535059
UGX 4308.452842
USD 1.145462
UYU 46.032704
UZS 13836.789337
VES 504.47799
VND 30118.776218
VUV 136.264497
WST 3.193936
XAF 655.425969
XAG 0.014087
XAU 0.000226
XCD 3.095669
XCG 2.065227
XDR 0.811332
XOF 655.414535
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.249659
ZAR 19.319905
ZMK 10310.535163
ZMW 22.304637
ZWL 368.838277
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4000

    16.55

    -2.42%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    23.12

    -0.09%

  • GSK

    -0.3200

    53.96

    -0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.1700

    25.51

    -0.67%

  • BP

    0.4800

    42.64

    +1.13%

  • RIO

    -2.5250

    88.175

    -2.86%

  • NGG

    0.2300

    91.04

    +0.25%

  • AZN

    -1.6900

    190.81

    -0.89%

  • BTI

    0.2600

    60.15

    +0.43%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    34.21

    +0.09%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.8

    -0.16%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.07

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    0.0000

    69.62

    0%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    14.42

    +0.76%

'Staggering' destruction in Yemen after deadly flash flooding
'Staggering' destruction in Yemen after deadly flash flooding / Photo: Khaled ZIAD - AFP

'Staggering' destruction in Yemen after deadly flash flooding

Sitting by their ruined home, Abu Ibrahim wept for his son and seven grandchildren killed by flash floods in Yemen, where increasingly severe downpours are piling more misery on the impoverished, war-torn country.

Text size:

The greying, bearded villager gestured at the fallen stone walls, all that remains of their home after raging torrents and landslips cut great scars across the mountainside.

Abu Ibrahim, who lives nearby, fought back tears as he recalled the terrible sound of his son's dwelling collapsing in the deluge.

"Shortly afterwards, my wife saw that Ibrahim's house was no longer there," he said.

"She screamed loudly, saying, 'Ibrahim and his children have been swept away by the floods!'"

They were not the only ones killed, injured or uprooted by this year's seasonal rains, which experts say are growing in intensity and frequency because of climate change.

According to OCHA, the United Nations humanitarian agency, about 40 people died or are missing since the disaster in Al-Mahwit province's Melhan district, part of the vast swathe of Yemen held by Iran-backed Huthi rebels.

Fifteen houses were destroyed and 50 were badly damaged, forcing 215 families to shelter in nearby schools, OCHA said.

Across Yemen in recent weeks, nearly 100 people have died in floods, an AFP tally compiled from UN data shows.

And more than 560,000 people across the country have been affected since late July, according to the UN's International Organization for Migration (IOM).

"The scale of the destruction is staggering," said Matt Huber, acting Yemen mission chief of the IOM, which appealed last week for $13.3 million in emergency funds.

- 'We heard the mountain shake' -

The mountains of western Yemen are prone to heavy seasonal rainfall, but this year's extreme weather conditions are "unprecedented", said Huber.

In the Melhan tragedy, landslides crashed through homes and buried some of their occupants.

"We heard the mountain shake," said Abdullah al-Malhani, another neighbour of Ibrahim and his family.

Access for aid workers has been "almost impossible" because of "destroyed and flooded roads", the UN Population Fund posted on X.

It published pictures of camels carrying aid to stricken villagers through winding, hilly terrain.

The flooding in Yemen has destroyed homes, displaced thousands of families and seriously damaged critical infrastructure such as health centres, schools and roads.

The Arabian peninsula's poorest country, engulfed in civil war since 2015, was already struggling with rising malnutrition and has suffered a spike in cholera cases linked to the heavy rains and floods.

The situation could worsen in the coming months, the UN's World Health Organization (WHO) warned last month.

Yemen's central highlands, Red Sea coastal areas and parts of the southern uplands are expected to receive "unprecedented levels" of rainfall in excess of 300 millimetres (12 inches), the WHO said.

"Climate change is not only making floods more frequent but also more severe," said Maha Al-Salehi, a researcher at Holm Akhdar, a Yemeni environmental group.

- 'Exceptionally vulnerable' -

Mohammed Hamid, assistant under-secretary of the meteorology department in the Huthi-held capital, Sanaa, said recurring extreme weather events in Yemen clearly indicated the impacts of climate change.

Since May 2015, there have been around nine tropical cyclones, or one every year -- an unusually high number -- Hamid told AFP.

"We need to get ready for new cyclones" in October, Hamid said.

As the planet heats, the warmer air can hold more moisture, creating heavier and more frequent storms, weather experts say.

Weakened by years of conflict, Yemen's creaking infrastructure and disaster response capabilities add to the threat from climate change, said Karim Elgendy, a climate consultant and associate fellow at the Chatham House think tank.

"The combination of more extreme precipitation events and a country destabilised by war has left Yemen exceptionally vulnerable to the unprecedented rainfall, resulting in catastrophic flooding across multiple governorates," he told AFP.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)