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Floods in Nairobi kill 23 and disrupt flights at a major airport

Authorities said that aid workers pulled bodies from the floodwaters in Nairobi after flash floods began over night. The floods killed 23 people and swept away cars, disrupting flights at East Africa’s largest airport.

William Ruto, Kenyan president, said that he has deployed a team to coordinate rescue efforts. This includes soldiers. He also offered condolences for the communities affected.

In a statement on social media, he added: "I've also ordered that food relief from our?national strategically reserves be released immediately and distributed to the families affected by floods."

John Lomayan (34), a security guard in the industrial area of Grogan, saw the body of a man trapped under a car washed away when the Nairobi River burst its banks.

He pointed up the road and said: "I saw him getting carried by the water up there." "We didn’t know where he was. We only just now see him underneath the car.

John Mwai, a bus driver in Kenya, described how he converted his bus to a rescue vehicle so that he could move people up to higher ground.

Kenya Airways reported that rains disrupted some flights to Nairobi, forcing them to divert.

Scientists claim that global warming is causing droughts and floods to worsen in East Africa, by concentrating rain into short bursts of 'intense rainfall. A 2024 World Weather Attribution Study found that climate change made the likelihood of devastating rains twice as high as it was before.

The reporter saw three bodies pulled from underneath cars. A reporter saw three dead bodies being pulled out from under cars. Some of the dead were electrocuted due to damaged power lines. Kenya Power, the national provider of electricity, said that water had damaged equipment in a substation. It listed 14 affected neighbourhoods.

"I don't even know how many cars there are, or what all the stuff is. All washed away. "All of the water came from that river," said Cedric Mwanza, an astonished resident, referring the Nairobi River. Humphrey Malalo contributed additional reporting from Nairobi. Tim Cocks is the writer. Mark Potter (editing)

(source: Reuters)