Tag: erosion

  • Erosion: Oko residents plead

    Residents of Oko community in Orumba North Local Government Area of Anambra State have urged the Federal Government and the Anambra State Government over the erosion threatening the community.

    They said over 14 houses, including that of former Vice President Alex Ekwueme and his brother, Prof Laz Ekwueme, are in danger.

    The community’s spokesman, Caleb Ezeokeke, said: “I have never seen a thing like this all my life. We live in fear of losing our homes, even though we have handed our fate to God.

    “As you look at this my house, I have counted it out as a belonging of mine because it can go any day; we no longer sleep here.

    “You are lucky to meet me because I just came to pick up something. We are calling on the government to come to our aid because this is beyond us.”

    Another resident, Mrs Adaeze Okeke, said her children sleep with friends and relatives because the family house may cave in any day.

    She urged the Federal Government to award the Oko gully contract.

  • FG, World Bank to spend $659m on erosion

    The Federal Government and World Bank are to spend $659 million in tackling erosion in 11 states, including Cross River State, the leader of the Task Team of the World Bank for New Map Project handling the Nigeria Erosion and Water Shed Management Project, Mr. Steve Danyo, has said.

    Speaking during a courtesy call on Governor Liyel Imoke, Danyo said the initial amount of the project was $509 million, but the Federal Government increased its counterpart funding because of the enormity of the project and its impact on the citizenry.

    Danyo disclosed that the engineering designs for the identified project sites in the state have been approved by the World Bank to enable it tackle the menace.

    Governor Liyel Imoke said the state government was keen on the execution of the project as it would create relief for its people.

    He thanked the World Bank for helping the state to fight erosion after four sites have been identified and approved by it.

    The governor said the state would ensure the execution of the project.

    He tasked the Ministry of Environment to under one month to complete all documentation about the project.

     

  • Govt, World Bank to tackle erosion in Edo

    THE Federal Government may have found a way round the lingering problem of gully erosion in Edo State.

    In collaboration with Edo State and the World Bank, it has initiated the Nigeria Erosion and Watershed Management Project (NEWMAP) to tackle the problem.

    Officials of the World Bank, Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO), Federal Ministry of Environment and international and national consultants are in Edo State for Joint Technical Mission geared towards NEWMAP’s implementation.

    The World Bank team has visited some gully sites to determine the scope of work in each site in line with the engineering designs.

    The sites are in Queen Ede, Ekehuan in Benin City; Ewu in Esan Central Local Government Area and Auchi in Etsako West Local Government Area. The Auchi site is said to be one of the most devastating.

    The team was taken round the sites, by NEWMAP’s Edo State Project Coordinator, John Adisa.

    Declaring the mission open in Benin City, the Permanent Secretary, Edo State Ministry of Environment and Public Utilities, Major Lawrence Loye (rtd) said Governor Adams Oshiomhole was desirous of finding a lasting solution to gully erosion, which has destroyed lives and properties in Queen Ede, Ekehuan, Ewu, Ibore and Auchi.

    Loye, represented by the Director of Administration and Supplies, Mrs Patience Otoighile, expressed hope that the tripartite arrangement would restore life to the affected communities.

    World Bank representative and Task Team Leader for NEWMAP Dr Amos Abu said having gone round the gully sites, the team was touched by the people’s suffering.

    Abu said the mandate of the project was to ensure that residents of gully sites received intervention to enable them to live in comfort and safety, adding that the World Bank endorsed the project in May last year while the National Assembly approved it last December.

    According to him, the workshop was to finalise the Project Implementation Manual which would provide a guide to stakeholders and also finalise the engineering designs and convert same to bidding documents.

    The NEWMAP National Coordinator, Mr Chikelo Nwune, enjoined the participants to work assiduously to ensure a timely take-off of the project.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Ex-VP, Ekwueme, others to lose homes to erosion

    Ex-VP, Ekwueme, others to lose homes to erosion

    Except something is done promptly to avert the ugly situation, former Vice President of Nigeria, Dr Alex Ekwueme and at at least 50 other families may soon lose their homes to erosion.

    The gully erosion that have ravaged communities in Anambra  State have dealt a heavy blow on the sleepy community of Okoh in Orumba North Local Government Area, sacking residents and destroying buildings.

    When The Nation visited the community yesterday, four buildings have caved in to the erosion while other buildings are hanging on the fringes of the Oko-Nanka gully erosion.

    We observed that one of the erosion sites in Oko is less than 300 metres away from the families of Dr. Ekwueme and his younger brother, the monarch of Oko town, Igwe Laz Ekwueme.

    The Ekwueme family was about concluding their fasting and prayer session which had lasted for days in a bid to seek divine protection from the gully erosion.

    However over 50 families had already fled from Oko to a neighbouring communities of Amaokpala, Awgbu and Ndikenonwu for safety.

    At the gully erosion site yesterday, scores of victims stood motionless.

    The victims were discussing their future, while many others where busy evacuating their personal belongings.

    Speaking with reporters at his palace in Oko, Igwe Laz Ekwueme said, “As you can see, the homes of people who are already evacuated have already been taken over by the new erosion and it has started encroaching on other houses, including the two Ekwueme houses there”.

    He added, “I had severally appealed to his Excellency Governor Peter Obi.

    Recently, I sent him another S.O.S and in a public function two days ago, he confirmed it and told me that he would try and do something before or during this yuletide season and we are hoping on God and man that something would be done fast. We are really threatened and it is not a happy Christmas for the people of Oko Community,” Ekwueme said

    The chairman of Ezi-Oko village sir Clement Udoye also lamented the development.

  • Reps to pass bill to  establish Commission for flood, erosion

    Reps to pass bill to establish Commission for flood, erosion

    •Dickson signs supplementary budget 

    A bill to establish a commission for flood and erosion yesterday passed the second reading at the House of Representatives.

    The bill, which was sponsored by a member, Uzoma Abonta, was referred to the Uche Ekwunife-led House Committee on Environment for further legislative input.

    “A bill for a Act to provide for the establishment of the Coastal Erosion and Flood Control Commission, and to vest it with the responsibility for the control and management of coastal erosion and flood and for other related matters” was supported by most of the members on the floor.

    Abonta, presenting the bill, said the commission has become imperative.

    He said: “Like the bill suggests, we should have the commission that will handle such disasters. The problem of flood cannot be overemphasised. We have seen the damaging effect of flood on our nation. States like Lagos, Delta, Edo, Anambra, Bayelsa, Nassrawa and others are under threat of flood.

    “Farms and animals are facing serious threat from flood. We face the threat of starvation. We should seek a permanent solution. It is not something we can deal with on a temporary basis.

    “Therefore, I think that the management of the total fund, which is very huge, is important. If you look at the budget, a lot of money is being voted for the threat and there is no agency to manage the fund. If we do not plan to mitigate the floods we might run into trouble in future.”

    The Deputy Leader, Leo Ogor and other members, such as Nkiruka Onyejeocha, Garuba Datti Mohammed and Abubarkar Momoh, threw their weight behind the bill.

    Ogor said: “As we speak, more than 18 to 19 states are submerged under flood. What are the solutions to it? This bill seeks to find a final solution. We should stop throwing money at a problem whenever it occurs. We should be proactive. The management of the Ecological funds is not transparent.”

    The lawmaker said the incursion of the floods have security implications. He added: “There is another major issue facing us which is the issue of hunger. If we have a commission or agency that will advise us on this issue, we will not have this kind of problems with management of the situation.”

    Onyejeocha said if the bill had come up two years ago, “it may not have succeeded as we have said we will no longer support the setting up of agencies and commissions. But the present realities show we need it”.

    He added: “As for the Ecological Funds, who are those managing it? Already we have funds meant for ecological problems but it is not well managed.

    If we have a specialised commission, the funds may be put under it and it will be well management. If we have a commission to manage erosion and floods, it will be more effective.”

    Betty Apiafi drew the attention of the members to the fact that the scope of the bill was narrow.

    She said: “ The Ministry of Environment is in charge of such matters. If an agency or ministry designated for a particular role is not working, we should ask why. If Nigeria Meteorological Agency had broadcasted that we will have flood, what did the Ministry of Environment do about it? Why have we not built buffer dams? Setting up another agency is not the solution. The funds meant for that could be used to make the existing ones effective.”

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has signed the 2012 State Supplementary Appropriation Bill into law.

    Speaking shortly after signing the bill at the Executive Council chambers of the Government House, Yenagoa, Dickson said the Bill was initiated to enable government tackle the challenges posed by the flood disaster.

    He said: “In accordance with the law, government secured an approval of two-third majority of the State House of Assembly to spend 1.5 billion naira from the State Compulsory Savings Account.

    “It is good to save. And because we have actually been saving…Outside this month alone, what we are going to put into that fund, the compulsory saving scheme is about 3.5billion naira.

    “I had to request the Bayelsa house of Assembly in accordance with the laws that the House should by Two-Third majority grant our request to spend 1.5 billion naira from our savings to address some of the immediate challenges posed by the crisis.”

    The Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Benson Kombowei, said the house passed the bill two days after its receipt.

    Kombowei said the timely passage of the Bill was to enable government immediately cushion the effects of the flood.

     

     

  • Lagos coastal erosion will threaten national security, FG told

    THE president of Nigerian Conservation Foundation (NCF), Philip Asiodu (CON), has warned the federal government that coastal erosion problem in Lagos State is the nation’s “most urgent environmental challenge.”

    He said this at the 4th annual Walk for Nature event, organised by the NCF in collaboration with the Lagos State Government to raise awareness about environmental issues through a short walk around Lagos Island.

    Though, “sustainable energy for all” was the theme of this year’s commemoration, the urgency of coastal erosion and the threat it portends imposed a detour on Asiodu, who called on the federal government to take “timely bold preventive action” to prevent “this extremely dangerous threat.”

    In recent weeks, flood has caused tremendous damage in some Nigerian states, raising fears of food scarcity as major link roads between the northern and southern parts of the country became inaccessible. But while the flooding still takes its toll on internally displaced people, Asiodu said the entire nation’s economy risks paralysis with the impending threat posed by coastal erosion.

  • SOS as Anambra community caves in to erosion

    SOS as Anambra community caves in to erosion

    RESIDENTS of Uruokpala village in Abagana, Njikoka Local Government Area of Anambra State yesterday sent a Save our Soul (SOS) message to the government over erosion menace threatening to swallow the community.

    They said the erosion has swallowed their buildings, submerged roads as well as farmlands after destroying lives and property.

    The community raised the alarm that the Girls Secondary School, Abagana could be cut off and swept away by the gully.

    A community leader Chief Ezike Okafor, said that the erosion has completely cut some roads linking them with neighboring communities like Nimo, Enugwu-ukwu, Idemmili among others.

    He maintained that the collapse of the culvert which has worsened the situation in Uruokpala and Umudunu villages would also affect agricultural production in the areas.

    Lamenting the effects of the gully erosion, Okafor warned that erosion could sweep-off Girls Secondary School, Abagana, unless something was urgently done.

    Another stakeholder in the community, Elder Pius Chukwumelu, described the gully as a great threat to socio-economic development of the area. He pointed out also that it has affected the implementation of ongoing electrification project in the community and as well reduced the agricultural potential of the town.

    Chukwumelu lamented that nothing has been done despite several visitations by government officials. He pleaded for government’s speedy intervention to save the situation.

    The gully which the community said has gone beyond their control was so devastating that most preventive measures earlier taken such as culverts and bamboo trees have been washed away.

     

  • Erosion threatens Bayelsa community

    Erosion threatens Bayelsa community

    Residents of Okpoama, an oil-rich kingdom in Bayelsa State, have cried out over the ravages of erosion.

    It is not the conventional kind. Located by the sea shore, salty waves constantly pound the coastline, washing land away. The people fear that, if not checked, their kingdom will disappear eventually.

    Their concerns are coming as the entire community warms up for the coronation of King Ebitimi Emmanuel Banigo, the Amayanabo of Okpoama Kingdom, Okpo XXI, in October.

    “Erosion has taken a major part of our town; our land has vanished; you know this is the last part of Nigeria,” Chief Emmanuel Beredugo-Elei, Secretary, Okpoama Council of Chiefs, said while taking journalists round parts of the eroded kingdom.

    Chief Beredugo called on the Federal Government to come to the community’s aid by building shoreline embankment in addition to sand-filling the affected areas.

    He noted that the remedy has become necessary considering the coming of the Liquefied Natural Gas project to the kingdom.

    “The Federal Government should embark on shore protection and sand-filling to reclaim and get more land as most of our land has vanished, especially now that the LNG and other multinational companies are going to be here,” he said.

    Beredugo said the area could also be developed like Dubai, through sand-filling.

    He also believes that protecting the shoreline does not necessarily mean laying stones or sandbags but building permanent structures that can stand the test of time as it is done in Dubai and other places.

    “If Lagos can develop a city inside the ocean, we can do it too,” the kingdom’s secretary said.

    Beredugo also urged Governor Seriake Dickson to continue from where his predecessor Timipre Sylva stopped in the area of tourism development in the kingdom.

    “Governor Sylva started something in the area of developing the rich tourism potentials in the area; I advise that Governor Dickson should continue from where he stopped,” he noted.

    Governor Dickson, while receiving delegates from the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas, led by Dr. Jackson Gaius–Obaseki, had indicated the state government’s readiness to provide the enabling environment for the Brass LNG project to achieve its set objectives. Sylva had described the project as a centre of gravity for the development of the state.

    Okpoama has announced preparations for the coronation of the 21st ruler of the kingdom.

    Chief Ebi Johnson-Berebofa, Chairman of the Organising Committee, accompanied by other members of the Okpoama chiefs’ council, gave journalists a graphic account of how Banigo became the king.

    He said that in October 2010, the people of the kingdom came together and democratically elected him following the demise of King Justice Kesiye Sagbe, Okpo XX.

    Dr. Banigo, a business tycoon and banker, was presented with the Staff of Office last November by former Governor Timipre Sylva at a colourful ceremony that attracted the high and mighty in the country.

    Enumerating the qualities of Banigo which endeared him to the kingdom, Johnson-Berefabo said the former Minster of Science and Technology, was a worthy recipient of the crown.

    Banigo, he said, is a “man the kingdom believes can take it to greater heights”.

    The Committee also informed that the Okopama Kingdom had Sikaka, Ibelubelu, Nende, Tia, Kpekiya, Saikiri, Osungu, Onu, Akirigbo, Gboro, Bouyai, Orukari, Goli, Obasi, Obu, Okiringbo, Okparan Tubu, Eei Tamunobere and Kesiye Sagbe “as kings before the election of Ebitimi Emmanuel Banigo as king”.

    The coronation ceremonies will also be used to share the rich historical and cultural heritage of the kingdom, including its rich tourism potentials.

    “The Oil and Gas rich Okpoama Kingdom is the biggest tourism destination in the Niger Delta and an emerging investors’ hub in the Southernmost tip of the Niger Delta,” Johnson-Berebofa said.

  • Panic in Anambra community as landslide, erosion ruin 50 buildings

    Panic in Anambra community as landslide, erosion ruin 50 buildings

    •Residents flee in droves, send SOS to govt
    The inhabitants of Oko,  Local Government Area, Anambra State, are living in fear following a continuous landslide which has been ravaging a part of the community since February 18 this year. Already, many indigenes of the town whose houses have been ‘swallowed’ in the landslide have abandoned their ancestral homes to seek refuge elsewhere.
    When our reporter visited the area on Wednesday, many of the residents were busy moving out of the area for fear of being consumed in another landslide that may occur at any time. Some of them told our reporter that they needed to leave the community because it had experienced the ugly development about five times since it first occurred in February, adding that no fewer than 50 houses had been consumed already.
    The villagers, some of who embarked on a peaceful demonstration with placards bearing various inscriptions, appealed to the state and federal governments to come to their aid.  One of the victims, Ezeokeke Josiah, said he lost money and property worth more than N7.5 million to landslide, calling on the authorities to come to the community’s aid.
    The Chairman, Erosion Ecological Committee in the town, Mr. Barnabas Nwafor, described the situation as hopeless, saying there appeared to be no help in sight. He recalled that the first landslide which took place on February 18, 2012 had jolted everyone. He recalled that as at that time, residents of the area believed it was a one-off incident that would not occur again. But in six months, more than 800 metres of land had been consumed by landslide.
    He attributed the phenomenon to the washing away by erosion of a big water channel constructed by the Shehu Shagari administration, which resulted in heavy flooding of the gully in the area. Nwafor also blamed sand excavation around the local government for the gully erosion that has ravaged the community for a long time.
    He said: “We have written the government to send a task force to stop further excavation of sand, especially from the base around Amaokpala and Awgbu communities, but nothing has been done as sand excavators still operate between 11 pm and 4 am.”
    He noted that the most ravaged part of the community was his Ezioko village, which has tried to no avail to contain the menace by forming several groups whose mission was to stop further encroachment of erosion before the last landslide occurred.
    He said: “Every last Saturday of the month, the group plants trees along the erosion areas. Every family has been mandated to dig catchment pits around their compounds to trap rain water (flood). When we noticed that the water channel was being cut off by erosion, we bought about 200 bags of cement to salvage it. But our efforts yielded little or no result as the water channel was eventually cut off. Since then, the landslide has been occurring.”
    He lamented that apart from the now cut off water channel constructed by the Shagari/Ekwueme regime, no other government has tried to contain the erosion menace, adding that even when the first landslide occurred, there was no government presence apart from the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) which brought in some relief materials like blankets, bags of rice and beans, among others.
    He, therefore, appealed to the governments to come to the community’s aid. “What we want the government to do now is just a palliative measure to stop the flood from entering the gully by channelling it elsewhere. After the first landslide, the state government came and made promises of awarding the contract. But up till now, nothing has been seen,” he said.
    Nwafor recalled also that the member representing the area in the House of Representatives, Hon. Ben Nwankwo, who visited after the first landslide, expressed sympathy and promised to take it up on the floors of the House, but nothing had been heard from him.
    “We have no option but to turn to the media to, at least, make our plights known to the world, especially the Federal Government and the World Bank. We feel the menace is beyond the state government, though the state can still do something to prevent further encroachment,” he stated.
    Another leader in the village, Hon. Martin Ezeofor, said his prayer was for the government to come to their aid. Ezeofor added: “As things stand, our houses have been swallowed by landslide. We are sending a save-our-soul signal to the government. We have been turned into refugees in our land. Some of my kids have stopped schooling.”
    He commended NEMA for the relief materials it gave to landslide victims in February. But he said that such materials were not really needed, adding that what the community needed most was the control of the flood that has caused them pains.
    In his own contribution, the secretary of the village and member of the community’s Erosion Vanguard Committee, Paulinus Ezenwizube, said: “I want to appeal to the Federal Government via the state government to come to our rescue. The inhabitants of this area have become refugees in their ancestral homes. Erosion has overtaken their residence. About 50 buildings have been consumed by both erosion and landslide and many more are endangered.
    “Many people have come here in the past promising that the situation would be controlled in no distant time, but nothing has been done. We are appealing through this medium for government’s intervention. We need positive action from the government.
    “The village has tried on its own. Even our brothers overseas have sent in some money for more catchment pits around the area. The Federal Government should intervene. The menace is beyond the ability of the community and the state government.”
    It will be recalled that the traditional ruler of Oko, Prof. Laz Ekwueme, while calling for assistance from the Federal Government and the World Bank after the first landslide in February, warned that if nothing was done before the rainy season, the problem would get worse.
    He had also disclosed that the contract for the control of the erosion that probably triggered the landslide had been awarded for a long time but was abandoned for no known reasons. He decried a situation where government played politics with such an important project that affects the lives of the people directly.
    He had warned that if the menace was not checked before the rainy season, many buildings would be eroded, including his ancestral home, because the abandoned drainage project that had been checking the erosion had been cut off by the landslide. The monarch’s palace sits only a few metres away from the site of the landslide.
     In a related development, the Federal Polytechnic Oko, Anambra State, called for the intervention of the Federal Government to tackle the menace of erosion, which it said was threatening to wash away its extension site. The Rector, Prof. Godwin Onu, who made the appeal when Hon. Ben Nwankwo, who represents the area in the House of Representatives undertook a tour of the area, said the polytechnic did not have the wherewithal to tackle the menace.
    He said the menace of erosion, which was rocking the host community, was gradually ravaging the extension site of the polytechnic. He called for government’s assistance in tackling it. Nwankwo said he would raise the issue at the House of Representatives. He commended the Rector for the judicious use of resources and his ingenuity in turning the polytechnic around.