Creeping Dunes Threaten African Nation
Associated Press/AP Online
CHINGUETTI, Mauritania - On nights when the wind hisses
across the dunes, the old man sits on his straw mat, draws a blanket
around his shoulders and counts his money.
In the morning, Sidahmed Ould Magaya, 75, will be trapped
inside his concrete one-room house, the wooden door sealed shut by a
wall of sand accumulated overnight. In exchange for about $6,
workers will liberate him, hauling the yellow sand away in burlap
bags.
At that rate, he has to sell a goat a month to pay for
keeping the desert at bay in a country where the dunes are said to
be shifting at an estimated 4 to 6 miles per year, according to
government data.
Throughout Mauritania, a desolate, dune-enveloped country
twice the size of France, men and women wage a daily battle against
the sand.
With less rain falling now than in years past, the dunes
have become dry and unstable. Global climate change bears part of
the blame, as does the uprooting of the scraggly trees that once
dotted the landscape to use as camel feed, firewood or for
insulation, leaving nothing to bind the sand.
When the winds whip the land, the dunes advance like
fingers, overtaking walls, forcing their way into courtyards and
creeping under doors. Whole houses are swallowed. Entire cities have
been abandoned.
"When I built my house, I chose this spot because it
was flat. Now there's a mountain outside," says Magaya of his
house, currently free of sand but precariously positioned at the
edge of an advancing dune. His front door opens onto the face of the
dune, which rises sharply upward and crests just above the roof from
where it bears down on the old man like a yellow giant.
A wave of sand has crashed into his neighbor's home,
swallowing the front door, forcing the family to use the back
entrance. In the towns under the most sand, families go in and out
of their windows. Snow plows crisscross the national highway,
pushing sand aside to let cars through.
Europe and North America have hurricanes, floods and
snowstorms; the nations lying across the Sahara - Mauritania, Mali,
Niger, Chad and the southern edges of Libya, Algeria and Egypt -
have sand, and a warming planet is making it less predictable.
Surface temperatures have risen by a little over 1 degree
Fahrenheit in the last century, said Patrick Gonzalez, a climate
scientist on the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
The rise in the temperature of the Earth, as well as of the Atlantic
Ocean bordering Mauritania, has had an impact on rainfall: It's down
a fifth from the 1950s.
Without moisture to keep the sand in clumps, it moves
freely, dissipating in a yellow mist.
"It's a vicious cycle, brought on by the changes in our
climate and worsened by the actions of mankind," said Moustapha
Ould Mohamed, who heads the National Research Center on
Desertification in Nouakchott, the Mauritanian capital.
Although it is now illegal to cut much of the vegetation,
desert dwellers refuse to live without some plants - for example
"alfa," a shrub used as roof insulation. Those living here
say they often see donkeys coming into town laden with alfa.
"The battle against the dunes cannot be uncoupled from
the battle against poverty. If these people don't have an
alternative, they will continue to cut the trees," said Mohamed
Lemine Ould Cheikh El Hadrami, Mauritania's environment secretary.
In a 109-page national action plan written by the ministry
last year, the Mauritanian government proposed a series of measures
from the creation of a green belt around threatened cities to
planting sticks to in formations that halt the flow of sand.
Although commissioned by the government, the plan gets no
funding in Mauritania's current budget, underscoring an inability to
grasp the threat, said Mounkaila Goumandakoye, the acting director
of the U.N. Development Program's Drylands Development Center.
"What's happening in Mauritania is dramatic and
something needs to be done," he said. "Politicians are
used to doing things to improve their country's GDP. They haven't
yet understood the link between the advance of the dunes and their
economic health."
In the arid interior, where the dunes undulate like the
surface of the sea, that link is all too obvious.
Dates are the backbone of the desert economy, but cones of
sand now surround some of the oldest palm trees, and once the cone
reaches the fronds, the tree suffocates.
As recently as 1960, the town of Chinguetti had 18 square
miles of date-bearing palms.
"Now, not even 2 hectares (5 acres) remain," said
Mayor Mohamed Ould Amara.
The town, on an ancient caravan route, was Mauritania's most
populous with a population of 20,000 in the 19th century, and it's
now down to 3,000, he said, adding that over 300 of its 1,000 homes
have been abandoned.
"We're under an ocean of sand," the mayor said.
Among the palms still standing are a dozen or so owned by
Magaya. He's running out of goats to sell each time his door needs
digging out, and counts on the palms to finance his old age at the
foot of the yellow-colored dune.
He takes comfort in the fate he knows awaits him, whether or
not the dune gets to him first.
"When I die, I'll be put in a coffin and that coffin
will be buried in the sand," he said. "So I can't be
upset. Either way, I'll end up in the dirt."
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