Dire impact from floods in South Sudan as new wet season looms 33 out of 79 counties have been badly affected by the flood waters, which have not significantly subsided since the last wet season GENEVA, Switzerland, March 30, 2022/APO Group/ -- Flooding and displacement in South Sudan are expected to worsen when the wet season begins in around a month, the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, warned on Tuesday. “Urgent action is needed to protect already vulnerable populations from its worst impacts,” Andrew Harper, UNHCR Special Advisor on Climate Action, told a regular press briefing in Geneva. Subsistence farming ‘decimated’ In 2021, the fragile country – struggling to overcome political and economic challenges since it gained independence in 2011 – had its worst recorded flooding ever, impacting more than 835,000 people, according to the UN humanitarian affairs office, OCHA. Record rainfall in the past three years and overflowing rivers, have flooded thousands of hectares of farmland in eight states – preventing people from planting crops – and leading to the killing of nearly 800,000 livestock, without anything to feed them. “This has decimated the subsistence farming that most communities depend upon to survive and substantially worsened food insecurity,” Mr. Harper said. Water refuses to recede Moreover, 33 out of 79 counties have been badly affected by the flood waters, which have not significantly subsided since the last wet season. The impacts are especially harsh in Jonglei, Unity and Upper Nile states, where thousands of people have been displaced or marooned in dike-ringed compounds, holding back floodwaters with mud, sticks and plastic sheeting. Meanwhile, the approaching wet season threatens to swamp extremely remote communities where residents are already surrounded by floodwater. “Such climate events will worsen in future, as extremes become the norm, not the exception,” the UNHCR spokesperson said. “Globally, floods and droughts are becoming more frequent and intense”. Though contributing least to carbon emissions, developing countries like South Sudan are being disproportionately affected.