This image taken on May 10, 2018 shows the damage caused by cascading
water after Patel Dam in Solai, Nakuru County, burst its banks. PHOTO |
AYUB MUIYURO | NATION MEDIA GROUP
Elija
Chege stepped out of his single-room house at Energy Village in Solai,
Nakuru, to check what was happening as the sky had been clear just a few
minutes earlier.
Then he heard the rumble; loud,
louder, and ominous. It did not sound like the usual cacophony of rain
drops on the greenhouses of Patel Coffee Estates behind the hills.
This was a strange rumble, and it was shaking the soft earth under his feet.
DAM BURSTS
The
village erupted in chaos as the 41-year-old mason and his neighbours
ran for their lives, some towards Solai Shopping Centre, others in the
opposite direction.
“We didn’t know what to do, or what we were running away from,” Chege told the Nation in the village on Thursday as the gravity of what he had escaped from started sinking in.
Energy Village, the small farming village he has called home for years, is no more.
Where houses stood, mud rests calmly, burying in its muted horror tens of men, women and children.
The
rumble Chege had run away from was 70 million litres of water cascading
towards him and his neighbours after a private dam used by Patel Coffee
Estates burst its retaining walls.
Some managed to escape, many others didn’t.
CASUALTIES
Officials from the Water Resources Management Authority told the Nation
only about 10 million litres of water was retained as 90 per cent of
the dam’s volume poured downstream towards Energy and Marigu
settlements.
A statement by the National Disaster
Management Unit Deputy Director Pius Masai puts the number of dead
locals at 44, 41 are admitted in hospital and 40 are missing.
The
village hosted about 60 homesteads on plots measuring an eighth of an
acre each, and was home to hundreds of casual labourers who earn a
living from the coffee estate irrigated by the dam, the flower farms
that dot Solai, and other plantations.
As the 70
million litres of water hurtled towards the residents, it formed a
powerful wave about a metre-and-a-half high which swept away everything
in its 500-metre-wide path.
TRAUMA
The destruction was buried by the eerie dark of the Wednesday night, but became evident when the sun shone its light on Solai Thursday morning.
The destruction was buried by the eerie dark of the Wednesday night, but became evident when the sun shone its light on Solai Thursday morning.
Cars had been swept away and slammed into buildings which were, in turn, washed away to their foundations.
“This will haunt me for a long time,” John Mbuthia, who ran a shop at Solai trading centre, said.
“I
saw it happen because I had just closed my shop and was heading home
when the dam burst its walls. I took off and watched from a distance as
the water swallowed my premises.”
RESCUE
Rongai
police boss Japhet Kioko said emergency workers had spent the night
combing through engulfed houses to rescue those trapped and retrieve the
bodies of the victims.
“We found 11 bodies buried in mud at a coffee plantation,” he said.
“We
suspect they were trying to escape from the deluge when they were swept
away. Most of them were women and children who probably could not run
fast enough, and the elderly.”
At least 200 Kenya Defence Forces soldiers also took part in the rescue mission.
About
47 people were rescued from the mud and taken to local health
facilities, including Bahati Sub-County and Nakuru Level Five hospitals,
where they are recuperating.
Nakuru Governor Lee
Kinyanjui, who camped at the scene since Wednesday night, condoled with
the victims’ families, saying the county government will do its best to
evacuate affected families and assist victims get medical attention.
****
MAJOR DAM DISASTERS
1.
The Banqiao hydroelectric dam in China tragedy of August 8, 1975: The
destruction, as a result of Typhoon Nina, killed 26,000 people, but the
figure rose to between 171,000 and 230,000 following disease outbreaks
and famine after the event.
More than 300,000 domestic animals and as many as 5.9 million buildings were destroyed.
2. St Francis dam disaster in USA of 1928 killed 600 people.
3.
Malpasset dam disaster in 1959 in France killed 423 people, with the
town of Frejus completely flooded and the damage estimated at Sh6.8
billion.
4. Vajont dam disaster, Italy, in 1961 killed over 2,000 people.
5.
Flooding in Serov, Russia, on June 14, 1993 displaced 6,500 people,
killed 15, and destroyed 1,772 houses, six bridges and hundreds of
meters of railway tracks.
6. Sayano-Shushenskaya
Hydropower Plant disaster in Russia on August 17, 2009 killed 75 people
and seriously damaged the largest power plant in Russia and the world’s
ninth-largest hydroelectric plant.
7. Fuhe River dam
disaster in China in June 2010 affected 29 million people, killed 199
and 123 were reported missing. Its damage was valued at Sh622 billion.
8.
A dam break on the Indus River in Pakistan on August 5, 2010 killed
1,700 people, destroyed 895,000 homes, and affected 20 million people.
Reporting by Magdalene Wanja, Eric Matara, Joseph Openda and John Ngirachu
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