Early warning, anticipatory action and rapid response help villagers bounce back from flood.
Every year, the Far North region of Cameroon is the setting of devastating floods that leave thousands
homeless. In the department of Logone-et-Chari, the localities of Blangoua and Makary are among the
most affected areas. Torrential rains and rising waters from the Logone, Chari, El beid, Taf Taf and
Serbowel rivers destroy homes and crops, jeopardizing people’s livelihoods and food security.
Since 2021, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) has been improving the
anticipatory action and emergency response system in Cameroon, analysing the food and nutrition
security impacts of humanitarian crises. Funded by the Directorate-General for European Civil Protection
and Humanitarian Aid Operations (ECHO), this project helps governments and communities better
prepare, anticipate, analyse and make decisions ahead of a crisis.
In October 2022, FAO’s early warning system showed a high risk of flooding in the Far North region. The
project activated the distribution of assistance through four pre-positioned contingency stock warehouses
filled with food, tools and other essential items, in each community (Blangoua, Makary, Koza and Mora).
FAO also provided 6 000 bags that the communities filled with sand to make protective dykes ahead of the flooding.
The project also helped establish different community preparation and response bodies. These groups
work directly with the people at risk, reporting on relaying information on potential crises. Ahead of the
floods, these committees helped the communities organize the filling of sandbags and constructing the
dykes.
The anticipatory actions proved successful in mitigating a lot of the flood’s impacts. However, when the
Logone River rose due to excessive rains, the waters broke through the protective dykes in some areas.
Saleh Youssouf, his wife and eight children were among the families forced to abandon their homes and
crops, which promised good harvests. When the floods engulfed Saleh’s home and farm, his family had
no choice but to find refuge on higher ground in Kinabari.
Saleh recounts with great emotion that these violent rains destroyed everything they had built. « Our huts
collapsed before our eyes and our belongings were washed away by the waters, » he says.
Over the course of the year, the damage caused by heavy rains and overflowing rivers ravaged a total of
48 464 hectares of fields and 41 278 homes in the Far North region, seriously impacting the living
conditions of households who were left to fend for themselves. Like Saleh, 313 200 people were affected
by flooding, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
A fresh start for flooding victims
In situations like the October 2022 floods, where anticipation and contingency aren’t enough, FAO has
established response plans to help communities get back on their feet and restart their livelihoods as
quickly as possible.
Relocated to Kinabari, Saleh and his family received more than one hectare of land from Blama, the head
of the neighborhood. FAO provided him with onion seeds and an agricultural kit consisting of hoes,
machetes, sprayers and shovels to enable him to resume his agricultural activities.
Saleh says fondly that the help he received gave him « the courage to make a fresh start. »
Dandi Eloi Ganaf, Sub-Prefect of the commune of Blangoua, explains that FAO helped the people of
Blangoua to get out of the difficult situation in which they found themselves after the floods.
« Thanks to FAO, the district of Blangoua is now part of the onion production basins in the Far North Region” Ganaf states with great joy.
Like Saleh, several flood victims say that the project’s support in terms of inputs, seeds, agricultural
emergency kits and other tools, as well as the on-the-ground monitoring provided by FAO, have greatly
contributed to improving their living conditions.
Agbassi Adoum, Mayor of Makary commune, said, “FAO has brought such great hope that these people
have smiled again. »
« It was not enough to give them clothes and food, but to make them independent by giving them seeds
to work their own fields. That’s what FAO did! » he concludes.
With this alert system, populations exposed to agro-climatic risks are now better equipped to face future hazards.
« We are now more organized, more prepared for the occurrence of a crisis, we no longer panic as was the
case before, » says Abaicho Abakar, President of the Committee for Preparation and Response of the
Blangoua region.
In the long term, the project plans to take this anticipatory action initiative to other communes in Cameroon.
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