‘We Have to Rebuild’: Mozambique Flood Survivors Press On After Deadly Disaster

February 5, 2026

4 minutes read


Maputo, Mozambique
— Survivors of devastating floods across southern and central Mozambique are struggling to rebuild their lives after weeks of relentless rainfall left more than 150 people dead and about 800,000 displaced or affected, according to authorities.

Among them is Emilia Machel, a 30-year-old mother of three from Chokwe in Gaza Province, who fled her home on January 17 as floodwaters from the Limpopo River surged through her community. Heavy rains across Southern Africa had pushed the river to dangerous levels, submerging entire neighbourhoods.

“I had to leave everything behind,” said Machel, who earns a living selling tomatoes and onions. She and her children sought refuge at Chiaquelane, a long-established displacement centre that has sheltered flood victims for decades.

For Machel, this is a painful recurrence. She first arrived at Chiaquelane as a child during Mozambique’s catastrophic floods in 2000, and again during floods in 2013. “We came here because we know it is safer,” she said. “But it is tormenting to have to return every time it rains like this.”

Worst Flooding in Decades

Authorities say the current flooding ranks among the worst in decades. Although rainfall has eased and river levels have begun to fall, vast areas remain underwater, leaving communities isolated and infrastructure destroyed.

“In some places, it feels like flying over the ocean,” said Guy Taylor, UNICEF’s chief of communications. “Water stretches for long distances, with homes completely cut off.”

Mozambique’s meteorological agency, INAM, has warned that moderate rainfall is expected to continue in northern provinces, raising fears of further flooding.

The government estimates that hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of infrastructure have been damaged. In several areas, residents remain stranded and require rescue.

Economic and Urban Impact

The floods have hit Gaza Province, one of Mozambique’s key agricultural regions, particularly hard. Hundreds of hectares of farmland and food storage facilities have been washed away, deepening food insecurity.

In Xai-Xai, the provincial capital, businesses remain submerged. “It is still difficult to measure the full impact,” said Paula Fonseca, a local business owner whose restaurant remains underwater.

Urban flooding has also devastated Matola, Mozambique’s most populated city. Mayor Julio Parruque described it as the city’s most severe flooding in years, worsened by overcrowding and unplanned construction that blocked drainage systems. Thousands of residents have been forced into temporary shelters.

Even in the capital, Maputo, several neighbourhoods remain inaccessible, with homes still submerged.

Warnings Issued, But Evacuations Lagged

INAM had warned for months of heavy rainfall during the 2025–2026 rainy season, but many residents delayed evacuating, fearing looting or uncertain about where to go.

“We waited until there was nothing else to do but leave,” Fonseca said.

Critics argue that warnings alone are not enough. Carmo Vaz, a retired hydrologist, said authorities must do more to actively relocate communities before floods strike, rather than relying solely on alerts.

Strain on Aid and Rising Health Risks

Displacement centres like Chiaquelane are overstretched. Machel says conditions are harsh, with families sleeping on mats and relying entirely on aid for food.

“We eat porridge in the morning and rice and beans later in the day,” she said. “Sometimes there is no third meal.”

UNICEF estimates that children make up nearly half of those displaced, raising alarm over malnutrition and disease outbreaks. “Waterborne diseases are a major concern, especially for malnourished children,” Taylor said, noting that four in 10 children in Mozambique were already chronically malnourished before the floods.

Sanitation remains a major challenge in overcrowded shelters, increasing health risks.

Communities Show Resilience Amid Crisis

Despite limited resources, communities have stepped up to support one another. “Even people with very little are helping others,” Fonseca said.

International support has also arrived, with neighbouring countries and global partners sending rescue teams, food supplies, and emergency shelter kits. However, UN agencies warn that funding gaps remain significant, as Mozambique also grapples with an ISIL-linked insurgency in the north that has displaced hundreds of thousands.

‘We Must Rebuild’

Mozambique is among the countries most vulnerable to climate-related disasters. At the recent COP30 climate summit in Brazil, the government said it needs more than $30 billion by 2030 to fund climate adaptation efforts.

For Machel, the focus remains on survival and recovery. Her husband is stranded in another flooded area, and her home has been swept away. Still, she remains determined.

“It is very sad what is happening,” she said. “But we have to rebuild and go back home.”

 

Share:
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Related Links

African Union, West Africa Welcome UN Resolution Declaring Slave Trade Crime Against Humanity

The African Union has welcomed a landmark resolution by the United Nations General Assembly formally ...

Nigeria, Others Move to Launch ECOVISA to Ease Travel Across West Africa

Nigeria has joined Ghana, Senegal, Gambia, Sierra Leone, Côte d’Ivoire, Liberia, Togo and other West ...

Global Energy Shock: How Iran’s ‘Tollbooth’ Strategy Is Reshaping the Strait of Hormuz

Iran has tightened its grip on the strategic Strait of Hormuz, introducing a controversial system ...

Senegal Vows Legal Battle After CAF Strips AFCON Title, Hands Victory to Morocco

Senegal has vowed to challenge a controversial ruling by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) ...

Features

African Union, West Africa Welcome UN Resolution Declaring Slave Trade Crime Against Humanity

The African Union has welcomed a landmark resolution by the United Nations General Assembly formally ...

Nigeria, Others Move to Launch ECOVISA to Ease Travel Across West Africa

Nigeria has joined Ghana, Senegal, Gambia, Sierra Leone, Côte d’Ivoire, Liberia, Togo and other West ...

Namibia Rejects Starlink Licence, Deepening Southern Africa Setback

Starlink, the satellite internet venture backed by Elon Musk, has suffered another setback in southern ...

ECOWAS, African Union Deepen Partnership on Infrastructure, Regional Integration

The President of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Commission, Omar Alieu Touray, ...

Fayemi Pushes for Fairer Africa-West Deals, Urges Industrialisation and Tech Transfer

Former Ekiti State governor, Kayode Fayemi, has called for a major reset in Africa’s economic ...

ECOWAS Moves to Establish Regional Open Data Framework to Strengthen Digital Governance

The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has taken a major step toward improving ...

Youth in Oil-Rich Congo Struggle With Poverty, Seek Economic Change

  Despite being one of Africa’s major oil producers, the Republic of the Congo continues ...

World Bank Approves $137m Programme to Expand Broadband, Digital Jobs in West Africa

The World Bank Group has approved a $137 million regional programme aimed at expanding broadband ...

Latest News

Today in History

In 1984, a Canadian farmer began renting advertising space on his cows.

Exchange Rate Per Dollar

AM Armenian Dram377.1837
GH Ghana Cedi10.9643
GM Gambian Dalasi73.8371
GN Guinea Franc8,782.48
NG Nigerian Naira₦1,383.68
CF CFA Franc BEAC569.7478
27 Mar · CurrencyRate · USD
CurrencyRate.Today
Check: 27 Mar 2026 19:45 UTC
Latest change: 27 Mar 2026 19:39 UTC
API: CurrencyRate
Disclaimers. This plugin or website cannot guarantee the accuracy of the exchange rates displayed. You should confirm current rates before making any transactions that could be affected by changes in the exchange rates.
You can install this WP plugin on your website from the WordPress official website: Exchange Rates🚀

YOUR THOUGHTS

Let us know what you think

Contact the People’s Paper with feedback on stories and how we could make wapress.africa even better!

newsletter image

Stay up to date with the latest from West Africa Press

Editorial feedback and complaints

Contact the public editor with feedback for our journalists, complaints, queries or suggestions about articles on WApress.

Subscribe Newsletter!

Be the first to receive our latest contents and more...

Need help?