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Full Length Research Paper
Urban sprawl development
and flooding at Yeumbeul suburb (Dakar-Senegal)
Cheikh Mbow1, 2*, Aminata Diop2,
Amadou Tahirou Diaw1and Cheikh Ibrahima Niang2
1Laboratoire
d’Enseignement et de Recherche en Géomatique
(LERG) Ecole Supérieure Polytechnique
(ESP), Université Cheikh Anta Diop de
Dakar-Senegal.
BP 25275 Dakar-Fann.
2Institut
des Sciences de l’Environnement (ISE),
Faculté des Sciences et Techniques (FST),
Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar-Senegal. BP 5005 Dakar-Fann.
*Corresponding
author.
E-mail:
cmbow@ucad.sn;
Tel: +221 338642317. Fax:
+221 338640814
Accepted 28
March, 2008 |
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Rapid
development of urban centers in Africa is becoming a serious
challenge for the coming decades with a wide range of
foreseen social, economical and environmental implications.
With the natural growth of the population, urban demography
has been boosted by rural exodus triggered by serious
droughts and increasing rural poverty. With the small
resources available for an adequate urban management and the
lack of efficient urban policy, Dakar capital of Senegal is
characterized by an out of control urbanization process.
Among the many impacts noted, flooding has appeared recently
as a major threat for poor population leaving in the suburbs
of Dakar. This study carried out at the outskirts of the
town, in Yeumbeul District (17°24’ North, 14°46’ West),
tries from rainfall variability, Digital Terrain Model and
land cover change analysis since 1954 to track the
interactions between natural and human causes of flooding
occurring regularly since 1989. This integrated approach
shows that the flooding process is not a mere climate
variability related issue, it is tightly bound with poor
urban management and occupation of irregular, unsuited land
devoted to natural process. Satisfaction of housing needs
was, for most poor rural dwellers, only possible through
informal land markets, forcing them to settle in cheap yet
risky lands. The recent extreme rainfall events reveal that
most of these urban sprawls are located in flood prone
areas. Environmental impacts of these flooded settlements
have been examined. Serious flooding of 2005 has been a
great momentum for the State and several other stakeholders
to initiate various strategies that are discussed in this
paper.
Key
words: Flooding, rural migration, irregular settlements,
Dakar, Senegal. |
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