Death Toll from Libyan Floods Tops 6,000 in Latest Climate DisasterWe get an update from Libya, where at least 6,000 are feared dead after a cat...
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network
We get an update from Libya, where at least 6,000 are feared dead after a catastrophic cyclone hit the eastern city of Derna, causing two dams to burst and flooding whole sections of the city. Storm victims are being buried in mass graves as hope is dwindling for those who have been unable to locate friends and family members. Libya’s infrastructure has crumbled over years of civil war, NATO intervention and political instability; Derna’s dams have not been maintained since 2002. Ahead of the storm, the government did not declare an emergency or carry out evacuations. “It’s obviously our government’s fault,” says Libyan youth climate activist Nissa Bek in Tripoli. She notes Libya’s lack of investment in risk mitigation or climate adaptation means the scale of the disaster was not a surprise. “I’m hoping that this tragedy could be the turning point for all of this, and for them to actually take the climate crisis more seriously,” adds Bek.
Attached link
https://www.youtube.com-nocookie/embed/9_g6cOIfcXITaxonomy
- Dams
- Flood management
- Flood damage
- Flood Risk Management
- Flood