Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Sad News from Maga












In July, while back in Ireland, I got very sad news from Maga. Pouss, the biggest village in the county, was hit by a violent storm. I spoke subsequently to the mayor who said that 15 people were killed, 10 were still critical, 75 were seriously injured, a few thousand were rendered homeless and the millet crop was devastated. The Red Cross has been helping those affected and the Government of Cameroon has provided relief funds. The rainy season has been very bad this year and cholera has broken out in some of the remoter villages of the county. Access to these villages is extremely difficult in the rainy season, which compounds their problems. With widespread flooding there is a serious risk that the cholera will spread.

I have visited Pouss, which is 12 kilometers from Maga, on several (and happier) occasions, the most recent being in May. Doubla, the national volunteer with whom I work, invited a number of us to his family home, which is north of Pouss. Doubla comes from a family of 22 children, many of whom were present. His home is in what looks like an ideal setting on the banks of the Logone river, which separates Cameroon from Chad, but he told us that in the rainy season it regularly gets cut off from Pouss by floods. After eating a traditional meal we took a trip on the Logone in a pirogue. The Muslims among us visited the "mosque" on the river bank to pray.

Afterwards with Misha, a VSO volunteer who works in Maga's schools, and Mamat, a colleague in the Maga council and a good friend, we called to the sultan's palace in Pouss. I wanted to bid him farewell but he was away. Mamat, who is related to him, brought us into the living quarters to meet the sultan's four wives. I was surprised and gratified since normally the wives are only evidenced by the food which they cook for the sultan and his guests.

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