Flooding in eastern Congo kills 62 people with 50 missing

Heavy flooding following torrential rains in eastern Congo washed away several villages along the shores of Lake Tanganyika, leaving at least 62 dead and 50 missing, authorities said Saturday. (X/@MwandoKatempa)
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Updated 10 May 2025
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Flooding in eastern Congo kills 62 people with 50 missing

  • Witnesses described the floods surging at around 5 a.m. Friday
  • The rescue operation was hampered by a lack of servicescongo

BUKAVU, Congo: Heavy flooding following torrential rains in eastern Congo washed away several villages along the shores of Lake Tanganyika, leaving at least 62 dead and 50 missing, authorities said Saturday.

Witnesses described the floods surging at around 5 a.m. Friday and sweeping away the village of Kasaba on the edge of the lake in the Ngandja sector.

The South Kivu provincial health minister, Théophile Walulika Muzaliwa, said by phone that the rescue operation was hampered by a lack of services and a shutdown of telephone lines due to the flooding.

“Sector chiefs, village chiefs and locality chiefs, who are also members of the local government, are on site. The only humanitarian organization currently present is the Red Cross. It is not possible to give an assessment as body searches are continuing,” he said.

Last month, flooding in the capital, Kinshasa, killed 33 people.

Decades of fighting between government troops and rebels in eastern Congo escalated in February, worsening what is already one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises.


Nuclear power summit to open in France

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Nuclear power summit to open in France

  • The United States and China will be present, but Russia, another key nuclear power, will be missing because of its invasion of Ukraine

PARIS, France: A summit aiming to boost the use of civilian nuclear power opens in Paris on Tuesday, as the US-Israeli conflict against Iran highlights the dangers of reliance on fossil fuels.
Representatives from about 40 countries and international organizations are expected at the meeting to be opened by President Emmanuel Macron.
The United States and China will be present, but Russia, another key nuclear power, will be missing because of its invasion of Ukraine.
Nuclear energy fell into crisis after the Fukushima disaster in Japan in 2011, which reinforced fears highlighted by the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.
But interest has been reignited by the growing international focus on energy sovereignty and the search for clean energies to counter global warming.
Nuclear power accounts for about nine percent of electricity produced in the world, and there are some 440 reactors in about 30 countries, according to the World Nuclear Association.
The UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), a co-sponsor of the conference with the International Energy Agency (IEA), has said that nuclear power generation could double by 2050.
It says that China is building 29 reactors to add to its 57 already in operation.
IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said Monday that about 40 countries had started building or were interested in building reactors.
IEA chief Fatih Birol said it was particularly in the interest of European countries to strengthen their energy sovereignty by producing more renewable sources — including solar and wind — and “making a strong comeback for the nuclear power.”