Dubai Telegraph - Floods threaten Niger's historic 'gateway to the desert'

EUR -
AED 3.848545
AFN 71.691579
ALL 98.249937
AMD 409.166575
ANG 1.893257
AOA 955.599003
ARS 1055.407782
AUD 1.618233
AWG 1.888671
AZN 1.775894
BAM 1.954208
BBD 2.120972
BDT 125.527709
BGN 1.956857
BHD 0.394942
BIF 3103.371102
BMD 1.047806
BND 1.414447
BOB 7.259119
BRL 6.089819
BSD 1.050444
BTN 88.546844
BWP 14.331322
BYN 3.437799
BYR 20537.000655
BZD 2.117474
CAD 1.474792
CDF 3008.251544
CHF 0.928047
CLF 0.037127
CLP 1024.438264
CNY 7.598742
CNH 7.61493
COP 4614.328749
CRC 536.767717
CUC 1.047806
CUP 27.766863
CVE 110.17522
CZK 25.275811
DJF 187.057569
DKK 7.459016
DOP 63.328998
DZD 140.370377
EGP 51.960297
ERN 15.717092
ETB 131.454579
FJD 2.383078
FKP 0.827051
GBP 0.833698
GEL 2.860493
GGP 0.827051
GHS 16.49256
GIP 0.827051
GMD 74.394534
GNF 9051.623945
GTQ 8.107393
GYD 219.770911
HKD 8.154148
HNL 26.56835
HRK 7.474273
HTG 137.868968
HUF 410.489547
IDR 16691.290111
ILS 3.822245
IMP 0.827051
INR 88.50661
IQD 1376.078651
IRR 44099.537966
ISK 145.100182
JEP 0.827051
JMD 165.874831
JOD 0.743211
JPY 159.611924
KES 135.848258
KGS 90.922635
KHR 4216.604184
KMF 491.368396
KPW 943.025143
KRW 1464.445266
KWD 0.322399
KYD 0.875387
KZT 524.512581
LAK 22987.267963
LBP 94069.543905
LKR 305.900725
LRD 188.556348
LSL 19.007811
LTL 3.093899
LVL 0.633807
LYD 5.139812
MAD 10.530419
MDL 19.197356
MGA 4905.002974
MKD 61.516555
MMK 3403.233522
MNT 3560.445261
MOP 8.420139
MRU 41.782351
MUR 49.068632
MVR 16.188295
MWK 1821.51567
MXN 21.697105
MYR 4.664829
MZN 66.954932
NAD 19.007811
NGN 1768.183741
NIO 38.658498
NOK 11.705582
NPR 141.674551
NZD 1.786084
OMR 0.403391
PAB 1.050449
PEN 3.96397
PGK 4.234549
PHP 61.708975
PKR 291.872856
PLN 4.30552
PYG 8197.320106
QAR 3.830079
RON 4.977184
RSD 117.018519
RUB 110.536685
RWF 1447.320597
SAR 3.93656
SBD 8.791712
SCR 13.771247
SDG 630.260568
SEK 11.521058
SGD 1.411735
SHP 0.827051
SLE 23.785235
SLL 21971.976148
SOS 600.310814
SRD 37.097566
STD 21687.471914
SVC 9.19151
SYP 2632.644252
SZL 19.013506
THB 36.390236
TJS 11.224253
TMT 3.6778
TND 3.319495
TOP 2.454066
TRY 36.318868
TTD 7.14218
TWD 34.115941
TZS 2771.447073
UAH 43.645933
UGX 3891.828598
USD 1.047806
UYU 44.763523
UZS 13461.030774
VES 48.927674
VND 26624.75442
VUV 124.397652
WST 2.925046
XAF 655.422904
XAG 0.034319
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.831748
XDR 0.803545
XOF 655.422904
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.872986
ZAR 19.022224
ZMK 9431.514109
ZMW 28.966396
ZWL 337.393155
  • RBGPF

    60.1000

    60.1

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.1800

    13.54

    -1.33%

  • NGG

    -0.4300

    62.83

    -0.68%

  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    24.57

    -0.65%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    24.43

    -0.61%

  • GSK

    -0.1300

    34.02

    -0.38%

  • RIO

    -0.9500

    62.03

    -1.53%

  • BCC

    -4.0900

    148.41

    -2.76%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    26.63

    -1.46%

  • RELX

    0.2400

    46.81

    +0.51%

  • BTI

    0.3800

    37.71

    +1.01%

  • BP

    -0.3600

    28.96

    -1.24%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    6.78

    -0.29%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    13.24

    -0.98%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.86

    -0.56%

  • AZN

    -0.0400

    66.36

    -0.06%

Floods threaten Niger's historic 'gateway to the desert'
Floods threaten Niger's historic 'gateway to the desert' / Photo: ISSOUF SANOGO - AFP/File

Floods threaten Niger's historic 'gateway to the desert'

Its winding allies, ancient mosque and ochre earthen houses helped bestow on Agadez its UNESCO World Heritage status, but the town in Niger is now under threat from flooding.

Text size:

Overflowing rivers are no longer a rarity in the vast arid nation on the edge of the Sahara Desert.

But the rainy season this year has been particularly devastating, killing at least 270 people and affecting hundreds of thousands.

In Agadez -- known as the gateway to the desert -- forecasters say it's "regularly" raining, even in areas where normally "rain never falls".

Former mayor Abdourahamane Tourawa called the downpours "particularly aggressive".

"The old town in Agadez is suffering a lot of damage. Ponds are overflowing, many houses collapsed. Even the Grand Mosque wasn't spared," he told AFP.

- Collapsing -

The town, nearly 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) northeast of the capital, Niamey, was an important crossroads on the trans-Saharan caravan trade.

Atop the 16th-century mosque stands an imposing mud-brick minaret 27 metres (89 feet) tall.

The Sultan's Palace from a century earlier is testament to the past glory of the Tuaregs, known as the Blue Men due to the indigo dye of their robes and turbans.

Agadez means "to visit" in the Tuareg language, Tamashek.

Once a tourist magnet and legendary staging post on the Paris-Dakar rally when the race crossed the Sahara, jihadist attacks plaguing the region have scared visitors away.

Other gems include the house where influential German explorer Heinrich Barth stayed in 1850.

The baker's house, richly decorated with shells and arabesques, provided the backdrop for the 1990 film "The Sheltering Sky" by Bernardo Bertolucci.

"Climate change causing heavy rains represents a danger for the old town... Around a hundred houses and walls have already collapsed," town curator Ali Salifou warned.

Scientists have long warned that climate change driven by manmade fossil fuel emissions is increasing the likelihood, intensity and length of extreme weather events such as torrential rains.

- 'Under attack' -

Symbolic monuments are still "in an acceptable state" but "homes and other monuments of historic and religious value are under threat", Salifou said.

Agadez governor General Ibra Boulama Issa saw flooding for himself early this month in the grounds of the mosque, which he said would require the "reinforcement" of the building.

Recent photographs received by AFP showed its pillars eaten away by the water and houses gutted or reduced to piles of rubble.

The military-led Sahelian nation is one of several Central and West African countries hit by heavy flooding during the unusually intense rainy season.

The European Union this week released 5.4 million euros ($6 million) to help six countries affected by this year's heavy rains, of which 1.35 million euros was for Niger.

Mahamat Souleymane, the muezzin at the mosque, said the old town was at risk from the lack, or poor maintenance of, "runoff water drainage systems".

"All the jewels of our heritage are under attack from the onslaught of more violent and abundant rainy seasons," another former mayor, Rhissa Feltou, told AFP.

- Loss of authenticity -

Agadez has 20,000 residents and many hoped the 2013 UNESCO World Heritage designation would bring tourists back.

But regular upkeep and conservation requires money and the town's coffers depend on tourism revenue.

"With the little money you get here and there, you can't maintain the buildings and leave your family with empty stomachs," said Alhassane Manou, who used to sell souvenirs.

Former mayor Tourawa said Agadez's UNESCO recognition had not had "the desired effect".

"The population must benefit from projects allowing them to safeguard and maintain this architectural jewel," he said.

Beyond the climate, Agadez also faces overcrowding as a key transit hub for migrants trying to reach Europe.

Architect Abdel Rachid Idrissa Massi said overpopulation caused "exponential waste production".

He was involved in rehabilitating scores of houses and the mosque with European Union funding.

But some owners demolish the old houses to build concrete ones instead, which "distorts" the town's originality, Massi said.

The United Nations' cultural agency has also noted the trend.

Residents complain, however, that they need practical solutions.

"Those who don't want us to use modern materials in the old town must commit to come and save the town," implored Akanfaya district leader Abou Said Ahmed.

"The sealing on the houses is no longer good enough."

H.Sasidharan--DT