This video is explaining how NATO is a huge problem to Africa's Sustainable Development. Libyans recently encountered devastating floods that swept their lives, infrastructure and ecosystem. The major contributor of the disaster is the 2011 war in Libya, that destroyed the manmade river, international sanctions and political instability. The Sahara desert is spreading southwards at a supersonic speed. NATO must rebuild, repair and compensate Africa for the damages. Enough is enough. Libya floods: how climate change, war and international sanctions intensified the death and devastation in Libya Hi. Today, I am talking about the impact of climate, war, international sanctions, floods, how they have impacted on the livelihoods and investments in Libya, possible remedial action and how Africa’s unity as a continent can exert its muscle to address this and future dilemma. This is a report by NEWS EXPLAINER dated15 September 2023 Climate change, civil war and international sanctiona all contributed to the devastation caused by some of Libya’s worst flooding ever, researchers say. There are fears that 20,000 people have died in Libya in devastating floods that began on 11 September 2023. The official death toll of more than 5,000 is likely to increase, at least another 10,000 people are missing. Two dams collapsed, releasing an estimated 30 million cubic metres of water into the city of Derna. Other towns and cities were also affected. The immediate cause was extreme rain: the equivalent of a year’s rainfall in 24 hours. Climate change combined with the effects of Libya’s six-year civil war and subsequent crisis of governance exacerbated the disaster. There is consensus from different scholars that the political and socio-economic situation in Libya has also contributed to the severity of the disaster. Libya was ruled by Muammar Gaddafi for decades until the Arab Spring. When he was deposed in 2011, through the NATO invasion, Libya was engulfed in a civil war, and was made subject to international sanctions the same year. The country is in disarray. It currently has two rival governments – one in the west and one in the east - and the economy is struggling. The literature on the impact of war on infrastructure shows that if sanctions are placed on a country, maintenance of critical infrastructure cannot be kept up. Sooner or later they will fail. Libya’s poor infrastructure was as important as the extreme weather in creating devastation. It is likely that the dams above Derna were not constructed to high standards and not regularly maintained. Lack of maintenance is certainly one of the reasons that contributed to the disaster. Now, if we are to face reality, the civil war and governance crisis in Libya were partly contributed by NATO. The man-made river was turning the desert into arable land, and restoring the continent’s ecosystem. But now, the exact opposite is happening. NATO has not shown any remorse for whatever they did,