Severe flooding across Kenya has caused widespread destruction, displacement and loss of life.
Weeks of intense rainfall triggered flooding in multiple counties, including Nairobi, Garissa, Tana River and parts of western Kenya. Homes have been swept away, roads and bridges damaged, and farmland submerged, affecting livelihoods and food supplies. Kenyan authorities and humanitarian organisations report that many communities have been forced to evacuate as rising waters inundated low-lying settlements.
The floods have also strained emergency services and infrastructure. Schools and health facilities in some regions have closed temporarily, and access to clean water has become difficult in affected areas. Relief agencies warn that crowded displacement sites and contaminated water sources could increase the risk of disease outbreaks in the weeks ahead.
Government rescue teams, local volunteers and humanitarian groups have been conducting evacuations and delivering food, shelter and medical supplies to affected communities. International aid agencies are also mobilising support as the scale of displacement becomes clearer.
Scientists note that East Africa has experienced increasingly unpredictable rainfall patterns in recent years, with extreme weather events becoming more frequent. Such events can place enormous strain on communities whose homes, crops and infrastructure are already vulnerable to flooding.
For many Kenyan families, the crisis is immediate and deeply personal: homes lost, crops destroyed, and uncertain shelter as they wait for waters to recede and recovery to begin.
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