When the skies again unleashed their fury over Khartoum before dawn
on Sunday, there was little of Kamel Hussein's home left to be
destroyed.
The mud bricks and wood had already been reduced to
rubble early last week when a flash flood swept through his
neighbourhood of Salha, in Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman.
As
Sudan's rainy season begins, there have already been three brief,
violent storms in the capital region and beyond since 25 July.
Official media said more than 3 000 homes have been destroyed around the country.
Poor
areas like Salha and even wealthier districts in central Khartoum have
been left awash in pools of water while critics accuse the government of
negligence.
Flood victims like Hussein say help has been slow to arrive.
"Officials
didn't come to share our crisis, only to get their pictures taken for
TV, to show they are doing their job. Just propaganda", Hussein said,
sitting with his children on a bed among the rubble of his house.
Like
other newly homeless, he tried to fashion a shelter from sacks and
pieces of debris but it wasn't enough to protect against Sunday's rain
whipped by ferocious winds.
"My eldest son and I spent last night here because we have to protect what is left. It was a terrible experience", he said.
Although
the family has yet to receive emergency shelter from the government or
aid groups, they have been given three donations of cooking oil, rice
and flour.
"But the amount is very small", Hussein said.
Flooding
is the latest humanitarian challenge facing Sudan, where almost seven
million people, about 20 percent of the population, already needed aid,
the United Nations said last month.
Worsening conflict in the
country's Darfur region, an influx of people fleeing war in neighbouring
South Sudan, and a malnutrition crisis have helped increase the number
of needy, the UN said.
'Government doesn't care'
Renewed
flooding in the Khartoum area follows an inundation in August last year
which was the worst to strike the capital in a quarter-century and
affected more than 180 000 people, the UN said at the time.
The
latest deluge is the result "of the government's corruption and complete
disregard for the lives and protection of the people", Sudan Change
Now, an activist youth movement, said in a tweet on Sunday.
The
opposition Reform Now party has called for suspension of Khartoum state
governor Abdel Rahman Al-Khidir "because he completely failed to have a
solution to the rainy crisis which is repeated every year".
State
officials were, however, handing out white tent-like shelters to some of
the hundreds of needy families in Salha, a community along the White
Nile River.
"After six days we finally got something to protect us from the rain and sun", said Omer Haroun, erecting one of the tents.
He called the donation "better than nothing" and worried about how he would eventually rebuild his home.
"We
are a poor family," Haroun said. "If there is no one ready to help us
rebuild, we will continue living in this miserable condition. The
government is responding very slowly to this crisis."
About a dozen riot police and state security vehicles were deployed on the community's main street.
Surrounded by mud, another flood victim, Amina Abdurrahman, used a gas cooker to prepare food for her children.
Their
salvaged beds and a cupboard stood on a patch of dry ground while her
husband and other men tried to use what was left of their house to
construct a shelter.
"I think the government doesn't care about our suffering," Abdurrahman said.
"We
didn't receive anything from them except a little bit of food. And we
had to fight for that, spending hours waiting. This is totally
unacceptable."
Malik Bashir, an engineer who heads Khartoum's
rainfall emergency bureau, said last week that "all state organs are
operating at their maximum to face any eventuality" while the government
ordered staff back from holiday, "thus mobilising all its resources to
face the situation", the official SUNA news agency reported.
Authorities on Sunday warned people along the Nile to take care as the river level may rise.
After six days of living in the open, Hussein fears his troubles might be just beginning.
"The problem is, we are at the start of the rainy season", he said.
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