Buea Drowns Without Clouds: The Drainage Crisis Behind Cameroon’s Paradox Floods
Buea Drowns Without Clouds: The Drainage Crisis Behind Cameroon’s Paradox Floods
By Rosa Martinez, Global1.news
Buea, Cameroon – Families wade through murky water, sandbags line doorways, yet the sky remains stubbornly blue. In Buea, at the foot of Mount Cameroon, a perplexing crisis is unfolding: persistent flooding in the absence of any rainfall.
For weeks, residential areas like Molyko and Mile 17 have been submerged, displacing dozens. “It’s surreal,” says local shopkeeper Emmanuel Njoh. “The sun beats down, but my floor is still underwater.” No storm clouds gather, yet gutters overflow, transforming streets into stagnant canals.
The culprit, experts say, is not the heavens but the ground beneath. Rapid, unregulated construction has sealed off natural drainage paths, while garbage-choked waterways cannot cope. Even without fresh rain, underground water tables, bloated from the preceding rainy season, are forced to the surface. Leaks from decrepit water infrastructure compound the problem, turning a hidden trickle into a relentless flood.
“We’ve concreted over every absorption point,” explains environmental engineer Dr. Sophie Ewane. “Now, even minor groundwater seepage has nowhere to go but into people’s lives.” Health officials warn of surging waterborne diseases as latrines overflow and breeding grounds for mosquitoes multiply.
As the city council scrambles to deploy pumps, residents demand a radical rethink of urban planning. Without it, Buea’s paradox will remain a punishing new normal: drowning under a clear sky.
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