By Reuters
In Summary
Tourists staring in wonder at the full force of the Zambezi
River cascading over Victoria Falls struggle to believe the region is
suffering one of its worst ever droughts, but local guide Patrick Sakala
knows all is not well.
Flows have dropped to 30-year lows at the waterfall straddling
Zambia and Zimbabwe's shared border, as poor rains and soaring
temperatures take their toll across southern Africa.
"At this time of year you usually wouldn't be able to hear me
over the thunderous roar," Sakala told Reuters, pointing at rocks
piercing through a vast sheet of water dropping 100 metres, twice the
height of Niagara Falls.
"You wouldn't see those rocks. You might not see anything
because of the smoke all around you," he added, referring to the clouds
of mist thrown up from the swells in the chasm beneath the falls, known
locally as "The Smoke That Thunders".
Downstream, Kariba Lake - the world's largest manmade reservoir -
is only 12 per cent full, compared with 53 per cent at the same time
last year, according to the Zambezi River Authority (ZRA).
Kariba is the water source for a hydro plant which provides
Zimbabwe and Zambia with much of their electricity and power cuts have
become a daily occurrence this year.
Economic pain
The plant could stop producing power completely in six months if
water levels continue to fall, deepening economic pain and increasing
poverty, an official said last month.
"It's been terrible," said Gloria Masheka, who runs a guesthouse in nearby Livingstone.
"The price of everything has gone up, we don't have electricity
for sometimes eight hours a day. All people talk about is how the don't
have power and can't afford food."
Southern Africa's drought has been blamed on a severe El Nino weather pattern unsettling climates across the world.
On the continent, it is expected to hit 49 million people from
Malawi to Namibia, South Africa and Botswana, leaving about 14 million
going hungry, the UN World Food Programme says.
African governments are requesting billions of dollars in aid as
the unusually dry period ruins farmland, kills cattle and cuts off
water supplies.
South Africa, home to Africa's most developed economy and a key
source of food for the wider region, is suffering its worst drought in a
century, likely to push 50,000 people below the poverty line, the World
Bank estimates.
South Africa's dams have dropped 16 per cent since October and are expected to take three years to recover.
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