Cameroon Says Seawater Is Swallowing West Coast Buildings, Villages and Plantations

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Encroaching waters from the Atlantic Ocean have destroyed several hundred homes and buildings along parts of Cameroon's 400-kilometer coast on the Atlantic Ocean. Officials in the central African state have temporarily suspended fishing and tourism in the coastal town of Kribi because of the damage. Affected civilians are begging for help from the government.

Waves pound crumbling walls, seaside shops and abandoned fishing boats in Kribi, a tourist and commercial city along Cameroon's Atlantic coast.

He says he was helpless on Tuesday when high waves swept through and destroyed coastal villages, plantations, hotels and residential areas including parts of his house. Nouhou says he has prohibited the construction of buildings within 200 meters from the ocean and ordered the police to stop tourists and their host community members from swimming in the Atlantic ocean until further notice. He says there is a high risk of civilians drowning in ocean waves which are increasing in volume, power and speed and threatening to destroy more houses, villages, plantations and fishing communities.

 

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Parts of Cameroon Hard Hit By Atlantic Ocean DestructionWater from the Atlantic Ocean has destroyed several hundred homes and buildings along parts of Cameroon's 400-kilometre coast. Officials have temporarily suspended fishing and tourism in the coastal town of Kribi because of the damage and affected civilians are begging for help from the government, writes Moki Edwin Kindzeka for Voice of America. Moroua, north of the country, is inhabited by the Choa Arab herders and Musgum fishers and farmers. These communities were once peaceful neighbours relying on the Logone and Chari rivers for their grazing, farming and fishing activities. They have since become bitter enemies, as climate change is causing the water bodies to recede. This has led to fish losses and the drowning of cattle in artificial ponds built to breed fish.
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