Heavy rains kill 30 people in Kinshasa, DR Congo

The rainfall began late Friday and continued through Saturday morning, leaving major transport routes impassable.
Torrential downpours have claimed the lives of at least 30 people in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, following a night of relentless rain that caused widespread flooding and destruction across the megacity.
“There are many wounded who have been evacuated and for the moment we are in the 30s for the number of dead,” confirmed Patricien Gongo Abakazi, Kinshasa’s provincial minister of public health, in a statement to AFP on Sunday.
More To Read
- SADC begins phased withdrawal of peacekeeping force from eastern DR Congo
- DR Congo, M23 rebels pledge to work towards peace after Qatar talks amid prisoner disputes
- Active-duty Romanian soldiers worked as mercenaries in DR Congo, probe reveals
- Two Ugandan pilots kidnapped after ambush by gunmen in eastern DR Congo
- AU welcomes Doha talks on DRC crisis but reaffirms 'African solutions' mantra
- Uhuru appointed to co-facilitate merged Nairobi-Luanda peace processes on DRC conflict
The victims reportedly drowned or died after the walls of their homes collapsed amid the flooding. Entire neighbourhoods, particularly in the poorer, outlying areas of Kinshasa — a sprawling city home to more than 17 million people — have been submerged under rising water levels.
The rainfall began late Friday and continued through Saturday morning, leaving major transport routes impassable. The national road one, a key artery linking the city centre to the international airport, was severely affected, along with several nearby districts.
“The situation is dire,” said Abakazi. “These areas are vulnerable due to poor infrastructure and inadequate drainage systems.”
Kinshasa, which sits along the banks of the River Congo Africa’s second-largest river after the Nile is no stranger to seasonal flooding. However, Saturday’s deluge is one of the deadliest in recent memory.
Authorities are now working to assess the full scale of the damage, while emergency teams continue rescue and recovery operations in the worst-affected zones. Calls have been made for improved urban planning and investment in drainage systems to prevent further tragedies in a city where informal settlements are increasingly vulnerable to climate-related disasters.
Top Stories Today
- DCI arrests 28 suspects, recovers 22 stolen vehicles across 11 counties
- Kasipul MP Were murder case: Suspects to their know fate on Friday
- Over 5,000 number plates ready for collection - NTSA
- Storekeeper of notorious Malindi drug cartel arrested
- UN, IGAD and EU condemn drone strikes on Port Sudan
- Were murder probe: Detectives trace suspicious call to MP's bodyguard
- "Joel touched many lives," Family, friends pay tribute to MCA Munuve
- Kenyan elite security team kill Al-Shabaab terrorist in Garissa
- State pays Sh2.8 billion for wildlife attack claims
- Body of Kasipul MP Were arrives in Homa Bay ahead of burial
- Lawyers want politician Aroko produced in court as probe into MP Were's murder continues
- Construction of Sh464bn Nairobi–Mombasa expressway starts in 2026
- Mudavadi meets US top diplomat Marco Rubio in Washington, days after China visit
- Explainer: Details of Persons with Disabilities law signed by President Ruto
- Political Parties office gets Sh213 million boost in pre-election budget
- Treasury blocks MPs' bid for Sh7 billion budget increase
- Blow to Waititu as court dismisses second bail application pending appeal hearing
- Kenya launches public health institute to boost emergency response, centralise disease surveillance
- Bitange Ndemo appointed University of Nairobi's vice chancellor
- Tremor felt in Nairobi traced to 4.5 magnitude earthquake in Tanzania