Yemen floods leave 60 dead, nearly 268,000 affected: UN

UN warns that it urgently needs $4.9 million to scale up emergency response to Yemen's extreme weather conditions.

Drone footage shows people walking surrounded by flood waters, in Hodeidah Province, Yemen, August 7, 2024. / Photo: Reuters
Reuters

Drone footage shows people walking surrounded by flood waters, in Hodeidah Province, Yemen, August 7, 2024. / Photo: Reuters

Flooding caused by torrential rainfall in war-stricken Yemen has led to at least 60 deaths since July, with 13 others still missing and a total of 268,000 people affected, the United Nations said on Monday.

Yemen, already grappling with an almost decade-long war, suffers from severe floods on a near-annual basis that are triggered by torrential rainfall, while climate crisis is increasing the frequency and intensity of precipitation.

Since July, flash floods have caused 36 deaths in Hodeida province, nine in Ibb, eight in Marib and seven in Taiz, the UN humanitarian agency OCHA said in a report released on Monday.

"Public infrastructure, including schools, roads, and health facilities, have been affected. Livelihoods that were already hanging by a thread have been swept away," OCHA said.

At least 600 people were injured due to flooding in Hodeida and Marib alone, it said, adding that a total of 13 people were still missing in Hodeida and Taiz.

It added that a total of 38,285 families — nearly 268,000 people — have been affected, saying that "severe weather is expected to persist into September, with additional alerts for heavy rainfall".

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Over 30 people killed, hundreds displaced in Yemen flooding

The University of Notre Dame's Global Adaptation Initiative ranks Yemen as one of the region's most climate-vulnerable countries.

In recent years, it has experienced an increase in the frequency and intensity of rainfall due to climate crisis, stimulated by atmospheric circulation in the Indian Ocean, according to a 2023 report by the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Norwegian Red Cross.

The country also suffered heavy flooding in 2019, 2020 and 2021, the report said.

Yemen has been gripped by a war that erupted nearly a decade ago when Houthis seized the capital Sanaa in 2014, sending the internationally recognised government fleeing to the southern city of Aden.

The conflict has triggered one of the world's worst humanitarian crises, with aid deliveries complicated by insecurity and logistical difficulties.

Last week, the UN warned that $4.9 million was urgently needed to scale up t he emergency response to Yemen's extreme weather conditions.

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