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Africa: Africa's Floods and Droughts Messing With Our Minds. Researchers Try to Figure Out How

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When climate disasters strike Africa, the physical damage is obvious. But we’re only beginning to understand the psychological toll. Here’s why Western definitions of trauma can miss so much, and how one group of researchers are trying to get a better picture.
The parched earth opened in jagged cracks. But it was the dead cows on the side of the road that did it.
By October of 2014, the government had declared a state of emergency in KwaZulu-Natal. The prolonged drought left some 40,000 heads of cattle dead, with early losses of livestock and crops estimated at R400-million. Dam levels dropped, money was designated for borehole drilling, and water tankers rolled in.
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That’s when Collins Iwuji started making the connections.
A researcher and HIV doctor, Iwuji was in the northern part of the province, in rural Hlabisa, with a team from the Africa Health Research Institute. They were working on what was then pioneering research. Going door-to-door offering HIV testing, they were referring those who tested positive to clinics to immediately start antiretroviral (ARV) treatment — something that would only become standard practice in 2017.
Iwuji was stumped. Why weren’t people showing up at the clinic to take up treatment? Part of it had to be that they weren’t sick so they didn’t see the need. But there was something else.
Driving home from work one afternoon, he realised that the dead cows might have something to do with it. Could the drought be affecting how many people start on ARVs and how correctly those who are already taking the medicine take it?
His instincts proved right. A few years later, he and his co-researchers followed up with a  study tracking 40 000 patients  on treatment in Hlabisa spanning the period before, during and after the drought. In January 2014, when the driest years first kicked in, the odds of remaining in care dropped by nearly one-third. By December 2014, one in five patients struggled to consistently take their medication.
The related qualitative research — the whys and hows of how the drought was keeping people away from the clinics or off their ARVs — filled in some of the layered blanks.
In-depth interviews of 27 people living with HIV in the area allowed researchers to map the links. The cracked earth, dried-up river beds and dead livestock led to lost incomes, a lack of access to food and water for drinking and sanitation, and people being displaced from their homes. And that was on top of the existing poverty and unemployment.
“I’m an epidemiologist,” Iwuji says of his background and his research work tracking the patterns and causes of disease. “Earlier in my career, I didn’t care about the stories. I just wanted the numbers. I wanted to know: this is twice as likely to happen if those other things happen. But as I started to work more in interdisciplinary research and community engagement, I started to understand that it’s not just about the numbers, but the stories behind those numbers that give you a holistic picture.”
That study is what eventually took Iwuji, who is also a professor of global health and HIV medicine at the  UK-based Brighton and Sussex Medical School , off his HIV-focused research to lead an interdisciplinary study about the  impacts of extreme weather events on mental health .
Stretching 36 months and across communities in South Africa, Kenya, Burkina Faso and Mozambique, it will join epidemiology with the social sciences, community engagement, humanities and psychology, to gather the numbers as well as creative ways to capture the stories to help peel back some of the interconnected layers.
In sub-Saharan Africa, that’s where things can get complicated.
Little research, high risk
When the  World Bank  compared data from 1970-1979 to four decades later, in 2010-2019, it found the frequency of droughts in sub-Saharan Africa had nearly tripled. Storms quadrupled and floods increased more than tenfold. Because of that exposure risk, along with poverty, governance issues and stifled abilities to mitigate and bounce back from the damage caused, the  United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change  (IPCC) says the continent is among the most vulnerable and least resilient regions in the world.
As climate change intensifies, experts say our  health and healthcare systems  are going to suffer. But mental health often takes a back seat. Even the IPCC, which has spent decades warning about climate change, didn’t mention mental health in any significant way until 2022.
Global studies on the subject are growing, but the data on Africa remain slim.
In a May 2025 review of  21 studies , researchers found  depression anxiety  and post-traumatic stress disorder ( PTSD ) — which can develop after someone experiences or witnesses something deeply frightening, shocking or life-threatening — were the most common forms of mental health consequences from climate impacts in Africa.
Trauma was found among  flood survivors in Ghana , while anxiety disorders were linked to communities forced to relocate by  rising seas  and by rural Kenyans experiencing chronic  food and water insecurity .
Two months after catastrophic floods killed over 450 people in KwaZulu-Natal in April 2022, South African  researchers found  rates of PTSD, depression and anxiety spiked in the 69 women from low-income settlements that they spoke with both before and two to three months after the floods.
Mental health measurements showed about one in five of the women crossed into what is considered clinical ranges for mental health conditions they hadn’t shown before — 20% for anxiety, 19% for PTSD and 17% for depression. But the researchers’ pre-flood data also revealed that these conditions weren’t necessarily new: they occurred on top of already high levels of childhood physical, sexual and emotional abuse, neglect and intimate partner violence, as well as food insecurity.
And that’s just one of the layers that don’t fit neatly into Western psychology’s definitions of conditions like PTSD.
Trauma with a small 
The World Health Organisation (WHO) says PTSD  can manifest through intrusive memories, nightmares or flashbacks in which someone re-experiences the event or by avoiding anything that reminds them of what happened.
Nothando Ngwenya , an Ahri researcher who was part of the Hlabisa qualitative study with Iwuji, says that’s where standard measurements of mental health can falter. “So there’s the trauma, because a lot of the time within psychiatry or psychology, you have the trauma, and the trauma is really something big. But there is a concept called trauma with a small t, and that basically means it’s chronic trauma.”
In environments embedded in ongoing trauma from high rates of  unemployment poverty and gender-based violence , the Western framework is more difficult to apply. The danger,  say researchers , is that it can skew diagnoses like PTSD. One reason is that people from different cultures explain their trauma differently, which in turn affects how they experience it.
The fifth edition of the  Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders  ( DSM-5 ) — the latest edition of the “bible” that psychiatrists around the world use to diagnose and treat mental health disorders — tries to address some cultural context.
It now includes cultural  concepts of distress, such as  kufungisisa  from the Shona in Zimbabwe, which translates as “thinking too much”. In a  2015 systematic review , researchers found the phrase appeared widely outside non-European and North American culture, including South Africa. Often it referred to ruminative, intrusive and anxious thoughts, overlapping with definitions of depression, anxiety and PTSD. It was also found to be less stigmatising than Western diagnoses.
Meanwhile  Ubuntu , a concept in many African cultures, is generally understood as a person being part of “a larger and more significant relational, communal, societal, environmental and spiritual world”.
“Western help is really centred around the individual, their inner thoughts and emotions, whereas in some collectivist cultures   it is about the people around me,” Ngwenya explains. “So if something is traumatic, you find that people would first look at the reaction of the people around them before they can say it is traumatic. So even if something was traumatic, if the people around me are not seeing it as traumatic, then you may invite me for treatment or counselling, but I will never admit that it is traumatic.”
The wider  cultural contexts in Africa  and  South Africa  also include other nuances, where researchers cite everything from apartheid intergenerational trauma to colonial influences and those less earthbound.
Researchers like Ngwenya worry that there’s a risk of diagnosing an illness that might not exist from a cultural standpoint, including among traditional healers like sangomas or inyangas who are regularly consulted for mental health concerns in South Africa and  other places on the continent .
“Is somebody really having a spiritual calling? Or is somebody having hallucinations and schizophrenia? When you [only] use Western medicine frameworks, you risk pathologising illnesses, which may not be a mental health illness.”
Collins and his co-researchers hope their research methods, including something called digital storytelling (DST), will help them look deeper into the cultural nuances.
Screen by screen
The walls were covered in neon sticky notes and posters and the tables scattered with magazines, watercolours, markers and coloured pencils. The brainstorms scribbled about “strengths of your community” and “extreme weather events” and what words like thinking too much, trauma, stress and depression mean to you and what makes a good story.
It was June in Hillcrest, about 55 kilometres west of Durban, and 10 men and women from the township of nearby Embo gathered for a five-day session to put together the first phase of their research. By Friday, they would complete a short video that tells their story about how recent extreme weather affected their mental health.
Bongeka Ngubane, who participated as a co-researcher on the project, told hers about  the 2022 floods  in Zulu, screen by screen, in images of fabric, bits of photographic images torn from magazines and so many tears made from coloured pencils.
In the first image, she is sitting in the morning sun after a week of rain when she hears the news about her uncle. She runs to his home and finds it has been swept away by the floods and learns her aunt and 10-year-old cousin are missing. Her other cousin, a 15-year-old boy, was dead.
Ngubane has drawn him pinned under a tree which had fallen on top of him. It took the whole night for the neighbours to cut the tree to free him, she tells us. The boy died on the way to the hospital. It took days and police dogs to find the bodies of her aunt and cousin, whose decomposed bodies were finally dug out of the mud in the ravine below the house with a bulldozer.
She talks about how she felt “cold as if she were in a refrigerator” when she heard the news. How she wished she was there to help, how she thought she would wake up from this bad dream, about how the church came with clothes and food and how her uncle waited until his wife and daughter’s bodies were finally found so he could bury his wife, son and daughter together. She talks about how she can’t stop thinking about it, about how her life changed forever.
Astrid Treffry-Goatley and Gillian Black are leading the community engagement part of the project, in which the community members are integral. In addition to creating the storytelling videos, the co-researchers will also help with analysing the study’s results.
As a  scientific research method , researchers say DST, which results in videos like Ngubane’s, can help draw out nuances in health research that wouldn’t otherwise be captured. They say it is particularly useful in honing in on local and cultural knowledge.
Treffry-Goatley, who has a PhD in film studies,  has been working in public health and social justice since 2010. She’s worked   with the method   often, saying it is also a powerful policy tool — something the project has built into its outputs — and helps “humanise” scientific evidence.
Because the process of storytelling can bring back the trauma of the event, a psychologist or social worker is in the room throughout recordings for mental health support, as well as to explain some of the mental health issues introduced.
“We never say, we want to hear about your anxiety and we want to hear about your depression, and we want to hear about your stress or your trauma,” explains Black, who has  worked with and studied   the ethics and outputs of the method . “The psychologist or the social worker that is in the room does a session to say, ‘So if I say the word stress to you, what does that mean to you? And can you tell us about a time when you think you’ve experienced stress? Or when I say depression, what does that word mean to you?'”
Healing with hair and friendship benches
Religion and spirituality   are cited   as a way for people to cope , including the support by the community.
For the KZN flood survivors, researchers who spoke with 50 survivors said  those elements  did play a role in mental health and healing. One in 9 interviewed believed that the cause of the flood disaster was an act of punishment from God and 39% felt that prayer would help them with their problems.
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But what seemed of most value to people, was talking to others in their community: almost half said it had a positive effect on their healing process.
“You don’t need an expert,” Iwuji says. “You don’t need someone with a PhD in psychiatry. Having people, just at the community level, providing counselling and support makes such a big difference.”
In September, mental health, for the first time, was officially addressed at the  United Nations General Assembly  during its  session on noncommunicable diseases and mental health . For the occasion, WHO  reported that one billion people  — one in eight of the world population — have a mental health disorder. But just 9% of those with depression receive support. In Africa,  the investment in mental health  is well below what the WHO recommends, leaving many without any care at all.
But there are some initiatives that offer community-based solutions.
The often-mentioned Zimbabwe’s  Friendship Bench , where community health workers (CHWs) — health workers who live in the community and are trained in basic healthcare — are given basic cognitive behavioural therapy training. People who need mental health support meet the workers on benches in their community to talk about their problem. And it’s a model researchers have said  could work well in South Africa , where CHWs already exist. Wits RHI has, for instance,  rolled out friendship benches among teen girls and young women  using HIV prevention medication in 2023 in a study.
Moreover, the Bluemind Foundation, which is based at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, started up a  Heal by Hair  programme. It offers free, three-day training in basic mental health skills for hairdressers in French-speaking African countries, including Togo and Cameroon.
Iwuji points out, mental health support is far less costly than the other policy intervention he knows will help — stable housing. As the researchers found, it wasn’t always the flood moments that damaged  mental health the most  — it was the aftermath with no clean water, electricity and food, lost income and homes and no way to reach loved ones.
A new life
For Ngubane, the pain endures.
Her uncle, Kweza Ngubane, talks about his wife and two children. There aren’t many photos of them, though. Everything was washed away with the house. But the remnants of the damage wrecked five years ago still stand. The property is littered with concrete, and some of the walls stand as artefacts from another life.
Mr Ngubane is still there in Embo, with his eldest daughter, who survived. The local counsellor told them to move, that his property isn’t safe. That his home stands in the water’s pathway. That the floods will come again. But he isn’t going anywhere.
Because over there, where the clothesline stretches and its bright coloured laundry waves in the breeze, are the three graves of his wife, son and daughter. He’s rebuilding his house and has even built two rooms he can rent out for income. Chickens here are free range. He has a new wife — no lobola yet, he laughs. Next year, he says.
A new wife, he says. A new life
This is the second in a series of articles about the impact of climate change on mental health. Here is the first. Bhekisisa is a collaborator on the Wellcome Trust-funded  project , which the Africa Health Research Institute (Ahri) at the University of KwaZulu-Natal is leading. Bhekisisa, however, operates editorially independent of the project.
This story was produced by the Bhekisisa Centre for Health Journalism. Sign up for the newsletter.
Read the original article on Bhekisisa.
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Africa: Land Is Africa's Best Hope for Climate Adaptation – It Must Be the Focus At COP30

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Agriculture, forestry and other land uses together account for about 62% of Africa’s greenhouse gas emissions. At the same time, land degradation, deforestation and biodiversity loss are eroding Africa’s resilience.
But land – especially agriculture – has been on the margins of climate change initiatives. Even at the annual global climate change conference, land hasn’t featured much.
This is changing. In September 2025, Africa’s climate community met in Ethiopia, to agree on the continent’s climate priorities ahead of this year’s global climate conference, COP30. They agreed that land could be Africa’s most powerful tool in tackling climate change.
Much will depend on securing finance at COP30 for agroforestry, forest management and soil carbon restoration projects.
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Read more: Climate crisis is a daily reality for many African communities: how to try and protect them
I’ve been researching land for over 20 years. My research focuses on how to sustainably regenerate land, how community forest enterprises can combat deforestation, and how to rebuild forests as a way of combating climate change.
For this reason, I argue that COP30 must place land restoration and sustainable land management at the heart of the climate agenda. It should recognise that healthy soils, forests and ecosystems are not side issues to climate change. They are the very foundation of economic growth and making the world resilient to climate disasters.
Read more: Climate disasters are escalating: 6 ways South Africa’s G20 presidency can lead urgent action
This is especially critical for Africa, whose people and economies depend so heavily on the land. Agriculture alone, which is intrinsically tied to land, employs over two thirds of Africa’s labour force and typically accounts for 30%-40% of gross domestic product. Yet climate change disasters like prolonged droughts, rising temperatures and destructive floods are steadily eroding the land.
Millions of people in Africa could lose their farms, income, food, and future chances if COP30 does not recognise how land, nature, and climate change are all connected.
Why Africa must prioritise land and nature at COP30
Africa’s agriculture, the backbone of most economies on the continent, has been badly affected by more frequent droughts, floods and unpredictable rainfall. As a result, African countries sometimes lose an estimated 1%-2% of their gross domestic product in a year.
Over half of Africa’s population depends on crops that are fed only by rain. Therefore, extreme weather events hit the majority of Africans directly. At the same time, nearly half of the continent’s land area is degraded.
Read more: Indigenous knowledge systems can be useful tools in the G20’s climate change kit
This affects agricultural productivity and the livelihoods of around 500 million people.
Forest ecosystems such as the Congo Basin, the Guinean forests and Africa’s dryland forests are disappearing rapidly. This is already having devastating consequences for communities that rely on them for food, fuel and income.
Africa must negotiate climate finance with one voice
Adapting to climate change remains Africa’s most urgent priority. The good news is that African countries are already deploying land based actions (adaptation and using land to sequester carbon and reduce emissions) as a weapon against climate change. They are achieving this by expanding agroforestry, restoring wetlands and managing grasslands more sustainably.
This boosts soil health and increases the carbon stored in the ground. These projects are very useful in cutting greenhouse gas emissions, protecting livelihoods and building resilience.
The September 2025 second Africa Climate Summit made the continental emphasis on land official. Its Addis Ababa declaration placed land and nature-based solutions at the centre of Africa’s climate agenda. This was a step forward from Africa’s 2023 climate summit declaration, which made only passing references to land.
Read more: African countries shouldn’t have to borrow money to fix climate damage they never caused – economist
What’s needed now is for Africa to unite and focus on three key climate change areas:
What Africa needs to do at COP30
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Read more: African countries gear up for major push on climate innovation, climate financing and climate change laws
Peter Akong Minang, Director Africa, CIFOR-ICRAF, Center for International Forestry Research – World Agroforestry (CIFOR-ICRAF)
This article is republished from The Conversation Africa under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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Africa: African Union Commission Welcomes and Congratulates the Republic of South Africa As G20 Chair and Host

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1. The African Union Commission (AUC) warmly expresses its support for the Republic of South Africa as G20 Chair and welcomes the country for hosting the G20 Summit in Africa for the first time. This milestone reflects South Africa’s growing role in global governance.
2. As the current Chair of the G20, South Africa has shown exceptional leadership in promoting the priorities of the Global South, advancing sustainable development, and strengthening inclusive global governance.
3. The Republic of South Africa is a vibrant democracy that upholds equality, human rights, and the rule of law. Its Constitution and policies reflect values aligned with the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights.
4. South Africa is a nation rich in diversity, home to people of many races, cultures, languages, and faiths living together in unity. This inclusivity is a source of national strength and global admiration.
5. The African Union encourages all international partners to engage with South Africa and the wider African continent on the basis of mutual respect, truth, and constructive cooperation, supporting Africa’s continued contribution to global peace, development, and prosperity.
Read the original article on African Union.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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Africa: Governance Failures, Not Just Guns, Driving W/Africa's Growing Crises – Experts Warn

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Abuja — Experts and peacebuilding stakeholders have raised the alarm that governance failures, weak state institutions, and exclusionary politics, not armed violence alone, are fuelling the wave of instability sweeping across West Africa.
They stressed that restoring lasting peace and security in the region will depend on inclusive governance, stronger regional collaboration, and community-driven solutions.
The warning came at the second edition of the West Africa Peace and Security Dialogue (WaPSED 2025), held in Abuja.
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The event was jointly organised by the Building Blocks for Peace (BBFORPEACE) Foundation, the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR), the LAC-LAC Network of Niger Republic, the Global Partnership for the Prevention of Armed Conflicts (GPPAC) West Africa, and the Society for Peace and Practice.
Speaking at the opening session, Dr. Joseph Ochogwu, Director-General of the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR), said the region’s lingering challenges; from violent extremism and political instability to climate-induced conflicts, highlight the urgent need for inclusive dialogue and homegrown approaches.
“Sustainable peace in West Africa requires strong regional cooperation and locally driven strategies. We must strengthen our institutions, empower communities, and integrate peace education into national development frameworks,” Ochogwu said.
He urged participants to move beyond mere discussions and focus on practical strategies capable of transforming the region’s security and governance landscape.
Also speaking, Mr. Rafiu Adeniran Lawal, Executive Director of the Building Blocks for Peace Foundation and Regional Coordinator of GPPAC West Africa, said the dialogue was convened to explore solutions to the diverse threats undermining stability across the sub-region, ranging from banditry and insurgency to democratic decline and economic hardship.
“Across West Africa, we face persistent herder-farmer clashes, banditry, and insurgency which have disrupted livelihoods and deepened food insecurity.
“Beyond Nigeria, the resurgence of military takeovers in Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Guinea reflects a troubling democratic retreat and growing disillusionment with governance,” Lawal noted.
He explained that the 2025 Dialogue, themed ‘Reimagining Peace and Security in West Africa: Local Solutions, Regional Solidarity and Global Partnerships,’ was designed to promote community ownership of peace processes and strengthen collaboration among stakeholders.
“Our goal is to centre real actors and lived experiences. By harnessing local knowledge and regional solidarity, we can chart a new course that places people, not power, at the heart of peacebuilding,” he said.
Delivering the keynote address, Prof. Isaac Olawale Albert of the Institute for Peace and Strategic Studies and the TETFund Centre of Excellence in Security Management, University of Ibadan, said the region’s insecurity is deeply rooted in poor governance, weak leadership, and the failure of states to meet citizens’ expectations.
“The problem is not just a lack of weapons to fight insurgents; it is the weakness of our governance systems. Corruption, poor coordination, and elite competition over state resources have created governance vacuums that non-state actors now exploit,” Prof. Albert said.
He argued that lasting solutions require a balanced approach that combines local innovation, regional solidarity, and international support to tackle governance gaps, inequality, and institutional decay.
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“Peace and security cannot be sustained by governments alone. They must be co-owned by citizens, institutions, and regional partners who share a common vision for stability,” he warned.
Prof. Albert also called on governments to prioritise institution-building, promote accountability, and invest in effective local governance structures capable of addressing community-level grievances.
The dialogue brought together policymakers, security experts, civil society organisations, academics, ECOWAS representatives, and members of the diplomatic community.
Participants agreed that rebuilding trust between governments and citizens, strengthening democracy, and promoting transparent governance are essential for lasting peace in the region.
Read the original article on Vanguard.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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