'You have to take a canoe': Niger's capital Niamey cut off by floodwater

Residents of Niamey have to take canoes to move out of town as most roads near the Nigerien capital have been cut off from the rest of the country by rising floodwater following heavy rains over the past three months. Most transport companies have suspended their routes to the rest of the country, prompting concerns of fuel shortages.

Niger's capital Niamey has been almost completely cut off from the rest of the country by rising floodwater following the heavy rains that have hit the Sahel region since June.

The main routes out of the city of about 1.5 million are mostly under water, and about 11,500 of its inhabitants have been affected by the disaster.

Over the past three months, the rains have caused 217 deaths across the country and affected more than 350,000 people, according to the military-led authorities that took power in July 2023.

Niamey, in the southwest of the country, was initially spared, but now canoes have replaced buses and delivery vans on the roads.

To reach other parts of the country, "you have to take a canoe and hope to find a vehicle on the other shore," explained Habiboulaye Abdoulaye, a resident of a suburb totally surrounded by water.

Most transport companies have suspended their routes to the rest of Niger.

Watching a torrent of mud flow on the edge of the city, desperate driver Ali Adamou told AFP his truck had been "engulfed by the waters" along with four others.

"I was almost killed when a minibus sank," Adamou added.

(AFP)


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