Humanitarian Response Challenges
The scale of humanitarian needs following Somalia's floods has overwhelmed existing response capacities. A Post Disaster Needs Assessment conducted by the Somali government, UN, World Bank, and European Union reveals the devastating scope: US$176 million in losses and damages across sixteen districts, with direct damages to agriculture, water, sanitation, education, and other key sectors surpassing US$126.6 million.
iMMAP Inc.'s series of Rapid Needs Assessments across Somalia's most affected districts has proved crucial in understanding the granular reality of these challenges. These assessments have enabled humanitarian organizations to identify precise gaps in assistance and access constraints across different regions. The assessments document specific challenges in each district: river breakages isolating communities in Balcad, damaged infrastructure hampering aid delivery in Afgooye, and disrupted market systems in Kismayo all creating unique obstacles to humanitarian response.
The detailed district-level data from iMMAP Inc.'s assessments complement the broader national picture. While river breakages isolate communities in Balcad and damaged infrastructure hampers aid delivery in Afgooye, the assessments show how these local challenges connect to wider systemic issues affecting the humanitarian response.
The Somali government estimates US$230 million is needed for recovery efforts. "The recent floods left significant destruction of property and loss of lives in Somalia, affecting millions of lives, and increasing vulnerabilities of an already vulnerable population," says Deputy Prime Minister Salah Ahmad Jama back in June 2024 in Mogadishu. While various donors including the World Bank have committed funds for emergency assistance, significant funding gaps remain.
The crisis has hit hardest among already vulnerable groups, including nomadic populations, rural communities, children, and female-headed households - many of whom were still recovering from the severe 2020-2023 drought when the floods struck.