https://cdn.24.co.za/files/Cms/General/d/9652/5504516b52374f53b4cbbc8a22d84a85.jpg
People stand on debris blocking a highway after River Muruny burst its bank following heavy rains in Parua village, about 85 km northeast of Kitale, in West Pokot county, western Kenya on November 24, 2019. The death toll from floods and landslides in Kenya's west over the weekend has climbed to 52, an official said on November 25, with more heavy rain forecast to lash the region. (STRINGER / AFP)

East Africa struggles with heavy rains as thousands displaced

Flash flooding has hit Djibouti, where the government and United Nations said the equivalent of two years' rain fell in a single day, with several countries in East Africa, including Kenya, struggling after heavy rainfall.

Rainfall from October to mid-November has been up to 300 percent above average in the greater Horn of Africa region, according to the Famine Early Warning Systems Network.

On Thursday, a joint Djibouti-UN statement said up to a quarter-million people have been affected in recent days in the country on the Red Sea that's home to military bases for the United States, China and others.

With heavy rains forecast through the end of the month that number could grow.

Djibouti has been called one of the world's most vulnerable non-island nations in the face of climate change as sea levels rise. Neighboring Somalia has been hit hard by recent flooding as well.

Deadly floods in Kenya

In Kenya, East Africa's economic hub, the government said 120 people have been killed in flooding and mudslides during an unusually severe rainy season. More than 60 died over the weekend in West Pokot county.

More than 18,000 people across Kenya are displaced, according to the Kenya Red Cross Society. Infrastructure has been damaged, making aid delivery more difficult.

Doctors are worried that diseases, especially waterborne ones, might spread.

"We have health issues, and is it wounds, is it children who are coming up with pneumonia, is it diarrheal illnesses," said Doctor Taabu Simiu at the West Pokot County Referral Hospital.

'Life here is terrible'

Some survivors are struggling.

"Life here is terrible because we don't have money, because if someone had their money in the house it was all swept away by the floods," one survivor, Cherish Limansin, said.

"It's only poverty staring at us here. We wake up with nothing. If it wasn't for the little help we get we would have nothing and so far today we have eaten nothing."

One local official expressed frustration over relief efforts, asserting that the national government's response to the disaster has been slow and insufficient. The official spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorised to speak to the media.

Two villages with almost 5,000 residents in all remain cut off from the rest of the world several days after the flooding, said West Pokot county disaster management official Monicah Kalinyong'ar.

Governor John Lonyang'apuo said people lacked food because of the slow pace of assistance, saying a helicopter should be operating full time for the duration of the relief efforts.

Spokesman Cyrus Oguna denied that the national government was frustrating relief efforts, saying Kenya's military was helping to repair damaged roads.