Radio Ergo - Somali Humanitarian News and Information
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Latest Stories
    • IDPS/Refugees
    • Natural Disasters
    • Health
    • Social
    • Food Security
    • Education
    • Agriculture & Livestock
  • Programmes
    • Locust Programme
    • Farming Programme
    • Radio Doctor Programme
    • Women Programme
    • Entertainment Programme
  • About Radio Ergo
  • Contact Us
  • blankSomali
  • blankEnglish
No Result
View All Result
Radio Ergo - Somali Humanitarian News and Information
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Latest Stories
    • IDPS/Refugees
    • Natural Disasters
    • Health
    • Social
    • Food Security
    • Education
    • Agriculture & Livestock
  • Programmes
    • Locust Programme
    • Farming Programme
    • Radio Doctor Programme
    • Women Programme
    • Entertainment Programme
  • About Radio Ergo
  • Contact Us
  • blankSomali
  • blankEnglish
No Result
View All Result
Radio Ergo - Somali Humanitarian News and Information
Home LATEST STORIES

Somali families moving back in to flooded homes in Beletweyne amid fears of disease outbreaks

Radio Ergo by Radio Ergo
June 14, 2018
in LATEST STORIES, NATURAL DISASTERS
0
blank

PhotolKeydka/Ergo

0
SHARES
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

(ERGO) – Abdullahi Ali, 39, and his family of 12 are camping out amid the debris of their house that was wrecked by the recent floods in Beletweyne, southern Somalia.

Abdullahi, a mechanic by trade, is determined that their new house will be more robust. He is digging foundations two metres down into the wet soil and hopes that he can get the house ready as soon as possible.

When the floods hit them, they moved to stay with relatives in Hawl-wadaag on higher ground.   They were offered a small room where they all slept.

“I preferred to return here than to be a scrounger on other people,” Abdullahi told Radio Ergo. “I am now working on the house so I can get proper shelter for the children and give them somewhere to sleep.”

They came back on 31 May. Since then he has been prioritizing constructing a temporary pit latrine as the toilet was destroyed and fixing water pipes that were damaged.  He cannot raise the $1,500 that he estimates it would cost to reconstruct the whole house.

Abdullahi makes a living repairing tuk-tuk taxis but he has not been able to make any money at all since the floods.  The family is down from their previous expectation of three meals a day to just one.

Abdillahi Abdi Magan, head of Save the Children office in Hiran region, said it would not be possible to make an overview of the extent of the damage until the flood water subsides. He said they do not advise people to return immediately to their houses, which need to be disinfected to prevent the spread of disease. Toilets also urgently need to be repaired. Sewage has overflowed into the flood water and contaminated most properties.

Sheikh Hussein Osman, the head of social affairs for Hiran region, estimated that 40,000 families were displaced from the region and are slowly returning back.

“The people don’t have houses in the areas they migrated to and so they are being forced to return to their houses regardless of how damaged they are,” Sheikh Hussein told Radio Ergo.

A major challenge is that the floods have made it difficult to identify the boundaries of people’s plots of land. The walls of some houses were found washed a few metres away from their previous positions, making it hard to tell where a piece of land started or ended. This may bring conflict among neighbours.

Hiran administration said an unknown number of people have returned to Bundaweyn, Koshin and Hawl-wadaag. Residents of Hawo-Tako are yet to return back.

 

Previous Post

Somali students volunteer to educate IDP children in Mogadishu

Next Post

Mentally ill patients roaming Burao streets as health centre runs out of money for drugs

Related Posts

Silent disease diabetes takes toll on families in Somaliland
FOOD SECURITY

Silent disease diabetes takes toll on families in Somaliland

June 3, 2026
Teachers jobless as Baidoa IDP schools close due to funding cuts
EDUCATION

Teachers jobless as Baidoa IDP schools close due to funding cuts

May 22, 2026
Somalia live news, Somalia latest news, Mogadishu live news, Somali news
FF Feedback

Radio Ergo audience feedback report 14-20 May 2026

May 21, 2026
Young Somali refugees in Dadaab invest in family-supporting businesses
FOOD SECURITY

Young Somali refugees in Dadaab invest in family-supporting businesses

May 20, 2026
blank
AGRICULTURE & LIVESTOCK

Livelihoods support aids displaced households in Middle Shabelle

May 18, 2026
Small family savings evaporate overnight as Somali 1,000 shilling notes rejected by businesses
LATEST STORIES

Small family savings evaporate overnight as Somali 1,000 shilling notes rejected by businesses

May 16, 2026
Next Post
Mental health centre in southern Somalia runs short of food

Mentally ill patients roaming Burao streets as health centre runs out of money for drugs

FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK

DAILY PROGRAMMES

IDAACADDA 02-JUN-2026

IDAACADDA 02-JUN-2026 by Radio Ergo

IDAACADDA 02-JUN-2026
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 02-JUN-2026
June 2, 2026
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 01-JUN-2026
June 1, 2026
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 31-MAY-2026
May 31, 2026
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 30-MAY-2026
May 30, 2026
Episode play icon
IDAACADDA 29-MAY-2026
May 29, 2026
Search Results placeholder
Radio Ergo Weekly Newsletter
We respect your privacy.
blank
blank
blank

© Copyright 2014 - 2024 Radio Ergo

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Latest Stories
    • IDPS/Refugees
    • Natural Disasters
    • Health
    • Social
    • Food Security
    • Education
    • Agriculture & Livestock
  • Programmes
    • Locust Programme
    • Farming Programme
    • Radio Doctor Programme
    • Women Programme
    • Entertainment Programme
  • About Radio Ergo
  • Contact Us
  • blankSomali
  • blankEnglish

© Copyright 2014 - 2024 Radio Ergo