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The News Network Africa > Blog > News > ‘We have to rebuild’: Mozambique flood victims persevere in face of loss
News

‘We have to rebuild’: Mozambique flood victims persevere in face of loss

Hayley Sky
Last updated: 5 February 2026 17:40
Hayley Sky
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‘We have to rebuild’: Mozambique flood victims persevere in face of loss
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When Emilia Machel, 30, and her three children rushed to the Chiaquelane site for displaced people on the afternoon of January 17, much of her hometown of Chokwe in Mozambique’s Gaza Province was already flooded.

Contents
‘A lot of water’‘Nothing you can do’‘Rebuild and go back’

The Limpopo River, which begins in neighbouring South Africa and flows into Mozambique, had reached dangerously high levels after heavy rain fell on the Southern Africa region from late December to mid-January.

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“We knew there would be floods,” said Machel. “We watched on television that there would be flooding.”

Machel, who supports her family by selling tomatoes and onions, first came to Chiaquelane, a long-term settlement for displaced people, at age four in 2000 during one of the deadliest floods in Mozambique’s history. “The reason why we came this time is because we had been here in 2000 and again in 2013. It is a safer area,” she said.

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This season, heavy rains and overflowing rivers have resulted in floods, which authorities say are some of the worst in decades, killing more than 150 people and affecting an estimated 800,000 people in the southern and central provinces of Mozambique.

Although the rain has subsided and water levels in river basins have fallen, large swaths of land remain flooded, according to humanitarian workers.

“In some places it feels like you’re flying over the ocean because the water stretches are very long distances and you see many isolated homes,” said Guy Taylor, chief of communications with the United Nations children’s agency UNICEF.

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Mozambique’s weather agency, Instituto Nacional de Meteorologia (INAM), has warned that moderate rain is set to continue in the northern provinces.

The government says hundreds of millions of dollars have been lost in destroyed infrastructure, and in some parts of the country, the population is still stranded and needs rescuing.

Paula Fonseca, a businesswoman in the capital city of Gaza province, Xai-Xai, which is among the areas most affected by flooding, said it is still difficult to assess the real impact. Her restaurant building remains underwater.

The province is an agricultural heartland in Mozambique, but in recent weeks, hundreds of hectares of farming land and food storage barns have been washed out.

The Matola municipality in Maputo Province, which is the most populated city in Mozambique, had “the most severe” urban flooding in years, according to its mayor, Julio Parruque.

A high population density and unplanned construction that blocked water ways has resulted in a deluge that has forced thousands of households to move to accommodation centres installed in the city.

In the capital city, Maputo, there are still impassable areas and homes beneath water.

‘A lot of water’

After realising that water was entering her home at an increasingly faster speed, Machel, the Chokwe resident, took all the clothes and household items she could carry and fled with her children to a neighbour with a brick home whose roof they could use for storage.

“All families in my neighbourhood were affected, and I think the current floods were far more dangerous than the ones in 2013,” Machel said.

“There was a lot of water.”

In 2013, the Limpopo River overflowed, causing inundation in Chokwe and bringing back memories of the floods of 2000, when she also had to flee.

“It is tormenting to have to go to Chiaquelane every time it rains like this,” Machel lamented.

It is yet to be established whether the current floods are the worst in Mozambique, but existing data suggests, at least by some measures, that the disaster is worse than in 1977 and 2000, which are considered benchmarks for such events.

For months before the floods, INAM warned of heavy rainfall in the 2025-2026 rainy season.

In the aftermath of the devastation of Cyclone Idai in 2019, which killed at least 1,500 people, Mozambique improved its early warning systems with a combination of technological upgrades, including radars and satellite imagery, the issuing of alerts by local radio across the country and community groups, and closer coordination with the disaster management agency INGD.

However, critics say not enough has been done to adequately respond to extreme events.

Retired hydrologist Carmo Vaz, who has written about floods for decades, told local media outlets that it is not enough to issue alerts. He said the government has to help people leave and find places for them to stay before events unfold.

‘Nothing you can do’

Machel said she left her home only when it was clear that it was going to be submerged.

“I couldn’t take all my goods,” she lamented.

In Xai-Xai, despite the warnings, residents waited until the last minute to leave areas prone to flooding, fearing looting or because they did not know where to go, said Fonseca, the businesswoman.

“We had to wait until that moment you realise there is nothing you can do besides leaving.”

The government has had difficulty assisting everyone in need, the mayor of Matola admitted. “We are providing the assistance we can, and working with partners and friends to mobilise resources and respond,” he said.

UN agencies have said for months they don’t have the resources to respond to a crisis of this scale, as the country continues to battle an ISIL (ISIS)-backed rebellion in northern Mozambique, which has displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

But in many places, people are stepping up after the floods.

“What we have seen is that people are helping each other, even those with little are helping others,” said Fonseca of the support systems for people in need.

Countries in the region and elsewhere have also sent rescue teams and emergency food and shelter kits.

As Mozambique is among the most vulnerable countries in the world to extreme events and the impacts of the climate crisis, the government has, in recent years, appealed for richer countries to finance adaptation efforts. In the last climate conference, COP30 in Brazil, the government said it needs more than $30bn for climate adaptation initiatives until 2030.

‘Rebuild and go back’

Machel says life at Chiaquelane accommodation centre is hard and suffering is rife.

“The assistance at the centre is not adequate. We sleep in mats and rely entirely on them to have food.”

The centre, run by INGD, provides porridge in the morning and rice and beans late in the afternoon. Rarely do they have a third meal, and when it comes, it is too late for children who are already asleep.

Taylor from UNICEF said feeding children, who the agency estimates are half of those displaced by flooding, is a major concern.

“We are particularly worried about the dangers of waterborne diseases to children, particularly children that are suffering from malnutrition,” he said.

“Even before the flooding crisis, around four in 10 children in Mozambique were suffering from chronic malnutrition; a child with malnutrition, even a case of diarrhoea, can prove deadly.”

Sanitation services, which humanitarian agencies are prioritising, are also a concern in often overcrowded centres.

After almost three weeks at the accommodation centre, Machel spends the day waiting.

Her husband, an assistant to a truck driver, is stranded in a flooded area elsewhere in the Gaza Province, and she doesn’t know when they will be reunited.

She still plans to go back to her business and her home, which has been swept away.

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

Email Us on editorial@nnafrica.com

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