Nairobi Governor Orders 48-Hour Flood Crisis Plan After Heavy Rains Wreak Havoc
Nairobi Governor Johnson Sakaja has demanded an urgent 48-hour action plan to tackle severe flooding, drainage failures, and infrastructure damage across Kenya’s capital. The directive follows emergency talks with top government officials as relentless downpours continue to disrupt the city.
The governor, who chairs the Implementation Committee on the Cooperation Agreement, convened an urgent meeting at City Hall with Principal Secretaries and representatives from key national agencies. The discussions centered on escalating flood risks, with blocked drains and damaged roads leaving many neighborhoods submerged.
Immediate Interventions Needed
Sakaja instructed officials to produce a detailed report mapping critical drainage hotspots, assessing road damage, and estimating repair costs. The plan must outline immediate steps to restore normalcy in hard-hit areas.
“We need swift, coordinated action to protect residents and prevent further damage,” Sakaja said. “This report will guide our emergency response.”
Among the priorities are repairing flood-damaged roads, recarpeting key routes, and installing new streetlights in informal settlements, highways, and residential estates—areas where poor infrastructure has worsened the crisis.
Deadline for Action
The committee will reconvene on Thursday to review the report and approve emergency measures. The tight deadline underscores the severity of the situation, with forecasts predicting more rain in the coming days.
Nairobi’s drainage systems, long plagued by poor maintenance and illegal dumping, have struggled to cope with the seasonal rains. Flooding has disrupted transport, damaged businesses, and displaced families in low-income areas.
Residents have criticized past responses as sluggish, but Sakaja’s latest move signals a push for faster solutions. Experts warn that without sustained upgrades, the city will remain vulnerable to future floods.
— Reported by Nexio News
