Tag: flood

  • Three feared killed, 20 vehicles swept off in Ilorin

    At least three persons were feared dead due to the devastating flood in Ilorin, the Kwara state capital on Wednesday.

    The flood also swept away about 20 vehicles around Omosebi and Adisco area in the metropolis.

    Two of the victims of the flood were young children, identified simply as Basirat, aged four and half years and Garfa, aged three years.

    The flood, which occurred as a result of a two-hour rainfall that started at about 11pm on Wednesday, also affected a property being used as campaign office of the Interim Publicity Secretary of the All Progressive Congress (APC), Alhaji Lai Mohammed.

    A woman who deals in plastic tanks at the frontage of the property wailed uncontrollably as the flood had swept away several of her goods.

    The two children  were said to come to be on holiday with their grandmother in a building few metres from Royal Shekinah Grand Suites located along Offa Garage Road.

    The hotel is owned by Senator Smart Adeyemi.

    Eyewitness accounts said the kids got drowned when one of them opened the front door of their apartment in an attempt to escape the flood that had reached the window level of the building. The corpse of another victim, a male was discovered at the Coca-Cola area of the city early in the morning.

    It took the intervention of security agents to prevent irate youths from torching the popular hotel.

    The angry youths blamed a construction on a part of the property for  flood that killed three persons on Wednesday night.

    They were already hurling stones on the property before several teams of policemen arrived on the scene and succeeded in persuading the youths to sheathe their sword. Several policemen were later stationed to guard the property.

    About 1000 passengers on a train travelling from Lagos to the north were also stranded as a section of the rail track behind Kingdom Heritage Secondary school was also affected.

    The flood cut off  a large chunk of soil from beneath the rail track and cut the road into two thus making if impassable for the train.

    One of the passengers, Sofi Mufiu lamented that they had spent over nine hours stranded on the track without help from any official of the Nigeria Railway Corporation.

    At least 11 cars at the workshop of car painter, Mr Razaq Jimoh situated beside Omosebi Hospital were washed away by the flood. Few of the cars were seen about a kilometre away from the workshop site. Several buses and cars belonging to transport companies operating in the vicinity of the hotel were also washed away.

    A man who simply identified himself as ‘Israel’ volunteered to speak on behalf of the community he said: “We are angry because this hotel  just for the car park they want to build they put a slab there and now when the flood was coming last night the slab blocked the  flood and it began to wash back and spread all over the place. We tried hard last night to rescue a paralysed woman but we don’t want this to continue so we want government to come and break the slab because we don’t know when another rain will come and it will be worse than this.”

    Commissioner for Environment, Alhaji Abubakar Mora, who toured the affected areas early in the morning, agreed there was need for an urgent action on the situation about the drainage and the slab.

    He said, “We have seen the cause of the flood; the blockage of the drainage is the cause and we will send our experts here on time to come and see and tell us how to go about it. It started from Offa garage area and came down to this place but we will do something on time so that this type of tragedy will not happen again,” Mora stated.

  • Alaba-Okiri community seeks help to fight flood

    Alaba-Okiri community seeks help to fight flood

    Perhaps, just perhaps your relation, who has been living up with you, has decided to take up an accommodation at Satellite Town in Oriade Local Council Development Area of Lagos State, advice him against being fascinated by the posh residential buildings at Alaba-Okiri, a continuation of Community Road, Ijegun-Egba, otherwise known as lagoon bus stop. This is an acquired name to reflect the ocean-like stagnant mass of water that has taken over the road even in dry season.

    This is because the road has been taken over by dark, malodorous stagnant water which resulted from a poorly executed job by Messrs Lopek Engineering Construction Company-a firm which members of the community allegedly said is inexperienced and incompetent.

    The last rain that fell further rendered the area more desolate, as no vehicle could go out of or into the street. There is great fear of epidemic because the ocean-erosion that has taken over the street has made the area become a hazardous ecological unit where dangerous animals, reptiles and mosquitoes breed in their large numbers.

    Those who hazard walking through the foul-smelling and murky water had been infected with one skin disease or the other.

    According to members of the community, construction of the road was a World Bank-assisted project undertaken by the Lagos State government. Work on the road and drainage system, they said, was terminated “at a point that will be of disastrous consequences to us…Satellite Town, being a low land with perennial water logging needs special attention…”

    But for what could be perceived as neglect, Alaba-Okiri would have been a very exciting and lively community. Any wonder members of this forgotten area are gnashing their teeth.

    As one ambles from Abule-Ado on the Lagos Badagry Expressway into Alaba-Okiri Street via Community Road, one begins to understand why members of this community are angry. Their fury was perceptible. Men, women, youths and even infants bore hatred of their forlorn situation on their face. No pretence about it.

    Members of Alaba-Okiri community were ready to tell their disgusting story.

    There used to be a road on which they walked, but now, they are seemingly living in an abyss caused by indescribable volume of erosion.

    During and after every rainfall; whether heavy or mild, babies are swept away as houses are submerged. For long, members of this community watched helplessly.

    But it is the resultant floods that made the people cry out most, because whatever pours down from the heavens finds no other outlet than the road to Alaba-Okiri. This is so because storm water from Union Bank sewage, the Central Bank sewage and all the adjoining streets in Satellite Town are channelled through Alaba-Okiri because it leads to the nearby lagoon.

    The community has resorted to self help by buying and pouring hard core on the road in an effort to get the appropriate level of the road.

    In a chat with our correspondent, the chairman of Alaba-Okiri Residents Association, Mr Nwakor Chukwudi said “the job Lopek Construction Company did on this our street helped in further messing it up. We were enjoying the road when construction work was not carried out on it than now.

    “When the firm was carrying out construction work on the road, instead of it to terminate the drainage system at the canal, it stopped it here. Our children are almost always hospitalised as a result of effects of mosquito bite.”

    On efforts his association has made to draw the attention of the authorities to the situation of the road and the suffering of the people, Mr Chukwudi disclosed that they had written several letters to both the local and state governments to draw their attention to the inhuman situation in which members of the community are living.

    “The inhabitants of this area are suffering horribly. We have written letters to Governor Babatunde Fashola, the Commissioner for Environment and chairman Oriade Local Council Development Area where we stated our problems about the road.

    “We are pleading that government should come and extend the drainage system to the canal so that the volume of water from all parts of Satellite Town that find its way here would find a free channel to the lagoon,” he said.

    Also speaking, Mr Anthony Ezenduka, a lawyer and secretary of the association said: “The Alaba-Okiri road has great economic importance. It is the second most important road in Satellite Town apart from Marwa Road which is the main service road in the area. The Alaba-Okiri Road is the only road capable of decongesting the over stretched Marwa Road.

    “Road is about development. Without roads, development would be a mirage. You may notice that because of the bad condition of this road, all properties in this area have been devalued as they are not as attractive to people as they should be. But for the bad condition of the road, economic activities would have been at their peak. Because of the incessant flood, people moved away from the area.

    “We have continued to do our best but the annoying part of it is after building the road through communal effort, the local government comes to collect what it called stacking permit. This is the same government that shows no concern to the plight of the people.”

    Mr Hyacinth A. Nwoye, Alfa Ajasa Tajudeen, Sebili Adigun, Navy Commodore Mufutau Ajibade (rtd) and Mr Ndubuisi G.O. Okocha and other members of the community stated the need for both the local and state governments to look into their suffering and rescue them.

    A letter Alaba-Okiri Axis/Otubu Estate/Kessington Residents’ Association wrote to Governor Babatunde Fashola which was copied to the Commissioner for Environment and chairman Oriade Local Council Development Area on September 28, 2012 was entitled: Urgent Appeal to Save Our Souls.

    The letter signed by Mr Nwakor Chukwudi and Barrister Anthony Ezenduka, chairman and secretary of the association respectively reads: “Your Excellency Sir, we wish to remind you of our cries to you for help concerning the flood disaster caused by Messrs Lopek Engineering Construction Company at the terminal point of the World Bank-assisted Community Road/Alaba-Okiri Street road construction in Satellite Town…We are totally helpless and hopeless.

    “For quite sometime now, the rains have been so magnanimous to us by ceasing to fall. We have been heaving a false sigh of relief. It was as if the extended break was especially for us. We wished it would remain so.

    “…Now, the dreaded period is back. The rains are here again. To whom do we run if not you, our father? You are the only one that can help us. We have no alternative. No amount of self effort will do. We have tried all we can (sic), to no avail.

    “Sir, please show us that you care, as we know you do. Please, visit this place; make a pronouncement; show us that we are your children, not orphans…”

    When contacted on phone, the chairman of Oriade Local Council Development Area Hon. Ibrahim Babatunde Sanusi said the local government is equally concerned about the plight of residents of the area, saying he had continually drawn the attention of Governor Fashola to Alaba-Okiri Road as one of the ecological problems facing the council. He promised to keep on reminding the state government of the need to fix the road.

    The inhabitants of this area maintained that they have been cut off from all neighbouring communities because Alaba-Okiri Road which is the only road that links them with the others has been taken over by flood, even as they called on the local and state governments to be of assistance.

  •  Fresh hurdle for Imo flood victims

     Fresh hurdle for Imo flood victims

    Not again! That has been the general cry of residents of coastline communities in Imo State as they face another threat of ocean surge.

    Nearly two years after the devastating flood that swept across many states in the country, victims of the disaster in the state are still grappling with its challenges.

    But to worsen their ordeal, there are fresh concerns that what happened before could happen again if nothing urgent is done to avert it.

    Although the state government has consistently claimed to have put palliative measures in place to cushion the effects of the flood, the victims are still battling to pick up the fragments of their lives after losing everything to the rampaging flood.

    Some of the villages along the popular Oguta Lake in Oguta Local Government Area are in imminent danger as it gradually overflows its bank. The lake was once a tourist attraction, but now the residents view it as a potential source of anguish.

    Recall that the entire riverside communities of Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta local government areas were submerged by last year’s flood disaster which washed away their homes and farmlands.

    Findings revealed that the flood victims who had earlier returned to their dilapidated homes are currently experiencing fresh challenges as the water has risen to an alarming level and may flood the communities any moment.

    One of the victims, Nze Mathias Ahanna, who spoke with our reporter, lamented, saying: “We are yet to recover from last year’s disaster and it is obvious that we may suffer the same fate again this year. We don’t have any other place to go to. We will continue to wait until something is done to assist us.”

    The father of eight, who lost his house and crops in last year’s disaster, decried what he called government’s indifference to the plight of the victims.

    He said: “During last year’s flood disaster, it was turned into a political affair where politicians fought to outwit one another in scoring political points with the misfortunes of the people. They abandoned them thereafter.”

    He noted that the state government did not put anything in place to check a re-occurrence even after collecting the intervention fund from the Federal Government.

    “Our major problem now is that we don’t know where to relocate to,”Ahanna said. “We have raised the alarm several times but no response has come from any quarters.”

    Also bemoaning the situation, a petty trader, Mrs. Carolina Azubuike, a widow, said, “After we lost our means of livelihood, we were given paltry sums of money. Now we are experiencing another challenge.

    “We are appealing to the state and Federal Government to come to our aid. It is even necessary that they should dredge the lake or construct embankment along the bank of the river to stop it from running over the communities.”

    She noted that the relevant authorities had enough time and warning to have swung into action to forestall a re-occurrence of the flood disaster. Rather, they preferred to wait for the disaster to happen.

    She said: “This case is unlike when the flood occurred without prior warning. But even at that, the government has remained adamant to our complaints.”

    Meanwhile, controversy has continued to trail the disbursement of the N400 million Federal Government’s intervention fund for victims in the state. While the communities accuse the state government of misappropriating the funds, government agencies have continued to insist that the fund was put to use in the best and overall interest of the victims.

    The coastline communities in Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta local government areas which were areas affected by the flood disaster, accused the Imo State Flood Relief Management Committee of diverting the intervention fund to personal purposes after disbursing a paltry N67 million.

    Speaking on behalf of the victims from Oguta council area, a community leader, Mr. Ozor Chimuanya disclosed that the committee set up by the state government to manage the fund, did not consult with the affected communities to find out how best to assist in cushioning the effects of the flood.

    He observed that one year after the flood devastation that rendered most of the people homeless, with their means of livelihood submerged, “the government is yet to come up with a comprehensive action plan that will address the immediate challenges or proactive measures to forestall a possible re-occurrence.”

    The embittered community leader also lamented that the little money released to the communities through government officials have torn the communities apart. “Some of the communities, as we speak, are at war over how to share the little money given to them. The aides of senior government officials in whose names the cheques were issued have insisted on taking a certain percentage from the money. This is not what the money was meant for.”

    Giving a detailed account of how the money was disbursed in Oguta Local Government Area, Chimuanya listed the benefitting communities to include: Mgbele (N2m), Osuobodo (N3m), Oguta (5m), Osemoto (N2m), Eziogu (N3m) and Egwe (N3m).

    Others are Egbuoma (N3m), Mkpesi (N2m) while Mmekuku got N2 million.

    Corroborating Chimuanya’s claims, former chairman of Oguta Local Government Area, Hon. Emma Mazi, added said: “The money, as we were told, was meant to alleviate the sufferings of the flood victims. But the Imo State government diverted it to other uses which have not reflected on the well-being of the suffering victims.”

    Mazi noted that the proposal by the government to build town halls in the communities was not only amusing but a deliberate misuse of public funds. “How can they build town halls in the communities? How does that assist the flood victims? In all these communities, there are existing town halls. For instance, in Oguta community, we have two town halls already,” he said.

    However, the Chairman of the Committee, Dr. Obi Njoku, had dismissed the allegations as unfounded and frivolous.

    He said: “Every kobo of the intervention fund is accounted for. Apart from the N67 million earlier disbursed to the affected communities, which we are monitoring, the state government is currently building farm settlements in the 16 communities at the cost of N25 million each. This will serve as rehabilitation centres.”

    He further explained that before the receipt of the intervention fund, the state government had swung into action to assist the victims by resettling them and providing relief materials running into several millions of Naira. These included medications and food items.

    “The state government augmented the intervention fund with about N129 million. That is why we are able to build the farm settlements which will be delivered soon. I think the cause of these controversies is our blunt refusal to hand over the fund to certain individuals in these communities who had thought it was another windfall.

    “Our insistence that the money will be invested in the welfare of the victims did not go down well with some people, especially the community heads who are bent on appropriating the funds without giving the flood victims priority in their sharing plan,” he stated.

    However, when our correspondent visited one of the temporary camps in Oguta, the victims had deserted the decrepit camp as many of them were said to be forced out by poor living conditions occasioned by negligence by government.

    A victim, who pleaded anonymity, told our reporter that, “we were exposed to all forms of danger in that camp and the government abandoned us immediately they resettled us there. So, we were left with no alternative than to leave the place and continue with our lives.”

    But the chairman of the committee debunked the claim, explaining that “we provided medication, feeding and clothing for all the victims at the various camps. But you know our people; they are not used to staying in one place and waiting for help. So, they moved away voluntarily to join their kinsmen rather than be seen as refugees.”

  • Homes, schools submerged in Benin flood

    Homes, schools submerged in Benin flood

    The heavy rain, which fell on Monday, resulted in a massive flood, which submerged homes, schools and other buildings in Benin City, the Edo State capital.

    Businesses were paralysed, schools shut and residents remained indoors. Workers and pupils, who went to offices and schools, got there late.

    The downpour, which began about 4am and stopped about 10:30pm, caused frustration among residents as the resultant flood resulted in traffic jams with vehicles wading through water.

    At 8am, many government offices were yet to open, while workers, who came to work, arrived their offices about 9am.

    A visit to primary and secondary schools in the Benin City metropolis showed that many pupils were absent due to the rain.

    Roads that experienced heavy traffic included Sapele Road, Airport Road, Ekenwan Road, Ugbowo and Upper Sakpoba, while some adjoining streets were blocked following the heavy rain.

    Those who defied the downpour and went about their businesses had a hectic time as they were stranded in the traffic gridlock for hours. Some resorted to trekking to their destinations.

    Commercial motorists made brisk business, increasing their fares. Ring Road to Aduwawa, whose fare was between N70 and N100 was increased to N200, while Airport Road, which was N50, was increased to between N70 and N100.

    Some of the people, who spoke to our reporter, decried the sudden increase in fares. They said most commercial motorists even declined to convey people to long distances.

  • Celebrities flood Alex Okosi’s low-key party

    The catalogue of birthday shindigs so far held in honour of celebrities this year will not be complete without a mention of the one hosted by Ale Okosi, the Senior Vice President and Managing Director of MTV Network Africa, when he added another year. Although it was meant to be a low-key party, the presence of top celebrities revealed Okosi as a gold fish that has no hiding place.

    So, it was another moment of jollity and conviviality penultimate Friday at the Rhapsody Lounge, Victoria Island, Lagos. The occasion, which witnessed an influx of top celebrities, had both old and new friends of the brilliant young man. Top of the range drinks and assorted meals were served in their sumptuous best.

    Top entertainers like Banky W, Waje, Wizkid, Toke Makinwa, Maje Ayida, Tunde Demurin and others were in attendance.

  • One year after flood disaster:Victims  remain poor,  desperate

    One year after flood disaster:Victims remain poor, desperate

    ASIUWHU PRINCEWILL is not called a General for nothing. In the heady days of militancy in the Niger Delta he had led his “boys” on a revolution against major oil companies whom he accused of impoverishing his people. Meeting the “General” for the first time is an anti-climax. He was of average build and had none of the fierceness often associated with the dreaded militants, he spoke softly barely above a whisper and only raised his voice when angry.

    Now a repentant militant, he is on a new battle, a non-violent type to compel the government to rebuild and rehabilitate Patani Local Government Area of Delta State and the people who lost their livelihood in the 2012 flood that ravaged half of Nigeria.

    In September 2012, massive flood devastated 22 states in Nigeria displacing about two million people, costing 300 others their lives and destroying 597,476 houses. By November last year, about seven million Nigerians have been affected directly and indirectly with properties- both public and private- worth several billions destroyed. President Goodluck Jonathan granted N17.6 billion to all the states to cushion the effects of the damage, corporate organisations and kind-spirited Nigerians made donations in cash and kind. A Presidential Committee on Flood Relief and Rehabilitation (PCFRR) co-chaired by businessman, Aliko Dangote, and human rights activist, Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), at a dinner in Abuja also raked in N11.35 billion in pledges. Those who were affected across the country began to dream of the beautiful life they would live afterwards, that dream has since remained nothing but a dream.

    “We were promised a lot by the government but we received nothing. The people expected that by now their life would be better and if not, at least returned back to normal, but as you can see, many of them are still crawling,” General said.

    Walking through the streets of Patani, a community which borders the River Niger, the evidence of tragedy is all too familiar. Bello Awele, a 78-year-old man sat under a tree in front of what remained of his house where he lives with his invalid wife, Poere. He was emaciated and looked tired, his house which overlooks the Niger, was the first to get flooded in Patani. “We tried to block the water with sandbags but the flood came in, our house was submerged and we had to run away to Ugheli,” Awele said.

    When the couple returned, the flood had taken away all their life possessions. “The government has not done anything for us, they said they are coming, we are still expecting them, “Poere said.

    Dreams are not the only thing destroyed in Patani, the infrastructure too. Roads caved in and houses were pulled down. The general hospital is in shambles, it is also devoid of patients. Nowadays, only the desperate would patronise it as drugs are scarce and doctors mostly unavailable. In the male ward, a lone adult patient-who had an accident- laid in a foetal position, groaning. A huge bandage occupied where his right hand and leg used to be. All around him, there were cobwebs hanging from the beds, a strange smell pervaded the room.

    “How are you now? I believe the pain is going?” General asked but the man groaned the more. General then urged him to get well and get up. The words sounded flat, almost unkind, as the General made his way out leaving the invalid groaning.

    Chief Emmanuel Poubeni was one of the lucky ones in Patani, though his house was flooded and his belongings destroyed, through the help of his children he has been able to get back on his feet.

    But the General himself suffers. Since the flood submerged his house, destroying his properties, he has since tried to get his large family back on its feet. He has met with little success and while his family also suffers, he tries to engage the government to provide basic amenities that the community can benefit from.

    “We are all in the same boat, we are all victims but the government must move fast and cushion the effects of the flood so that the people can feel the impact of government,” General said.

    It was 7:00am in Adankolo layout, Lokoja Kogi State. Bashir Dan Musa came out of his makeshift one-room plank hut which he shares with his family. On his back, he strapped his last child named Precious who was born at the Adankolo Primary School camp for flood victims. Unable to find enough space for his properties inside the hut, most of his belongings are packed outside at the mercy of the elements. On sighting his visitor, he released the baby to his wife who immediately put her inside a basin which served as the bath tub.

    Musa and his family had known a prosperous past, before the flood which affected two-third of Kogi population; he had lived in a four-bedroom apartment by the banks of River Niger. He was a youth leader and community mobiliser and the youths in Adankolo looked to him for inspiration. Then the floods came and his house was its first port of call.

    “We ran helter-skelter, the flood did not submerge our house, it destroyed it. We were the first to be affected by the flood. When the water overran our house, we had to be moved into the camp at Adankolo,” Musa said.

    Every living day is a torture for the Musa family. When The Nation first visited the family, Musa’s wife was making dinner over a firewood stove. A child stubbornly held on to a small black pot as she battled to remove the burnt layer of spaghetti inside it, once she succeeded in her task, she transported her trophy to her mouth with a look of contentment.

    Musa was the Adankolo camp leader. He fought for the victims and attended to their needs, the government officials feared him for his painstaking and often demanding nature. When President Jonathan visited the camp, Musa was on hand to receive him and delivered a speech on behalf of the victims.

    “Because of what I did at the camp and how I managed the affairs of the victims at the camp, many people said I had made a lot of money. It is hard for them to believe that I live in this hut and I am this poor. After meeting with all the government officials and even President Jonathan, I don’t blame them if they think I am living in a mansion,” Musa said.

    But his realities are far from what his status as the camp leader conferred on him. Currently unemployed, he had begged the Kogi State government for employment and has been given plenty of promises but no action. “We live from hand to mouth, all these things that you see are donations, including the clothes we are wearing,” he said.

    Musa’s main earthly possession is a motorcycle which he acquired nine years ago, but age and persistent use are not friends to the engine and it took about five minutes to get it started only for it to break down after a few meters journey.

    Musa’s life is a reflection of the others who also lost their homes by the bank of the Niger. Many of them have been unable to move forward. A former neighbour of Musa now lives at the Adankolo market, sleeping out in the open under the starry stars. She was not alone, The Nation learnt about 10 families currently make the market their home while waiting for government’s intervention.

    Adankolo, one of the deeply affected communities in Lokoja, is struggling back on its wobbly feet. Though the water receded, those whose houses are still standing have moved back and the schools have re-opened. Life is crawling back to the devastated community as the people picked up where the flood ended their lives.

    But underneath the façade of happiness outwardly exhibited in Adankolo lay a deep anger and mistrust towards the government. The anger of the people manifested itself in Sawa Umar: “The government said we should not come back but where are we to go? They shared N3,000 to each building, is that what we need? Is that what has sustained us since November when we came back?” he vomited his words in anger and venom.

    Musa has a legion of queries against the Kogi State government. He alleged that all the promises of government to Adankolo have not been fulfilled. He blamed the government for providing little comfort for the people, while favouring other local governments.

    “They brought a shelter bus and claimed it has been distributed. I think if that claim is true, I should be one of the first to get one so that my family will not live in this terrible condition. But if you go to Shintaku which did not suffer half of what we suffered, there are shelter buses everywhere,” Musa said.

    “We are not happy, government used us to get what they want. Aliko Dangote gave us relief materials and loan for the women but they now say the money is not for the victims again,” he lamented.

    The people of Adankolo do not believe the government would fulfill its promises. Most of them lamented that the 250 unit housing estate under construction at the old polytechnic quarters would be shared by “government people.”

    There is disquiet about the money given to the victims. According to Musa, the government did not carry the victims along in determining what to give to them. “ We held a meeting with the deputy governor and agreed that the representatives of the people must be notified but the reverse is the case. I learnt they gave Ward A N4million. This is the largest ward and some people got N1, 000. I personally got N5,000 because my house was destroyed,” he said.

    In Ganaja, another heavily impacted community, Jerry Adejo, the manager of Ganaja Motel, didn’t want to talk about the flood. His motel-a thriving business before the flood- is now deserted, for two months it was shut down completely and when it opened, four buildings could not be used any longer.

    “Discussing this issue increases my pain, there is nothing to discuss about, this government has not been responsive. Imagine they gave us only N8,000 since the flood and that was all we received. What have they done to prevent a reoccurrence?”

    Victims resort to self-help

    The long and narrow Omiringi road which led to Otuoke, in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State, the home of President Goodluck Jonathan came to an abrupt end as a lone figure emerged from the shadows and flagged down the vehicle near the Akragba River in Otu-Asiga. He was a lean and haggard-looking man of about 50 years, dressed in blue jeans and red stripped shirt; he ordered the passengers to disembark and demanded a fee before the vehicle could pass the bridge.

    The bridge over the Akragba River collapsed in September 2012 during the flood and has remained in that state. On August 17, 2013, Wisdom Dick was standing on Akragba bridge, face beaming with pride mixed with some anxiety. Two months earlier, himself and three of his friends from Out-Asiga community had come together to rebuild the bridge and enable free flow of traffic. Using their skills as builders and buying planks on credit from local businessmen, they built the failed portion of the Akragba bridge and mounted a toll on it to recoup their investment.

    “We spent over N300,000 to construct this bridge, we took the materials on credit and have been paying back the debt from the toll we have collected. We have only N30,000 to pay now before we can start to make profit,” Dick said.

    His colleague, India Otuma, also mounted guard at the other end of the bridge using a long pole to cross the entrance. He released the pole only after the payment of N100 toll for vehicles and N50 for tricycles. As vehicles arrived, passengers came down and the driver would make a slow and painful journey across the plank bridge which creaked under the weight of the vehicles. The “bridge builders” said they suffered for a long time before the bridge could be opened again and even lost one of them, Samuel Avoh, during the construction.

    “Give me the money, you are wasting my time,” India shouted at a car owner who promptly parted with the required funds. He turned around and said; “We are not levying toll, this bridge is very important and the government has refused to fix it, so we borrowed materials to do the job and have to pay back. We have not even made any profit.”

    Omiringi community itself is in mourning, not only of the individual losses but also of the destroyed Omiringi bridge which connected them to the rest of the state. Children and youths in the community came out to begin the unenviable task of cutting the bridge into pieces and selling the parts as stones to house builders. A child about seven years of age sat on a stone and began to hammer away at a rock, after about 15 attempts the rock gave way and dissolved into small granite stones. The stones were then packed into a bag and taken to the road where a bag cost N300.

    The state government distributed 40 bags of cement to the affected communities to kick-start the rebuilding process but that has proved grossly inadequate. The Ondewari clan in Olodiama, Southern Ijaw Local Government hit upon a most brilliant idea. Instead of distributing the cement in measures to the victims, they decided to build a public toilet, some others simply sold the cements leaving the victims in ruins.

    In Otu-Aba, a community close to the home of President Goodluck Jonathan, in Otuoke, mud houses pulverised by the floods have yet to be rebuilt. Others that are still standing have their foundations washed off. While some of their owners who could not reconstruct them had relocated to squat with their relatives in other communities, others who perhaps had no place to go had continued to live there.

    Otuma Ediomolo, a 60-year-old man was defiant refusing to vacate his building with a wobbling foundation. “I cannot go anywhere again. I will continue to live here. We can’t rebuild our houses because we don’t have money. The government has not given us anything”.

    Also distraught is a 75-year-old Matilda. Her mud house was destroyed but she has no money to rebuild it. She relocated to a temporary structure made of roofing materials.

    “There is no money to rebuild it. My husband is late and we don’t have money. The government promised they will assist us but we have not seen anything. Even the 400 bags of cement did not get to me. Our CDC chairman ignored me. He didn’t give me even a bag. I want the government to assist me.”

    Victims living in squalor

    When the communities in Rikko Jos North Local Government Area of Plateau State returned to the houses by the river to rebuild it, the state government promptly declined permission citing the dangers of flood. But the community like the others in flood-prone areas resisted government’s attempt to stop the construction.

    One of the victims, Audu Abubakar, said: “We are not opposed to government’s appeal for us to move away from the water ways, we had expected the state government to assist us with building materials and a new land to build our houses. But the state government was not forth coming in this regard. And you know after the dry season, there will surely be rainy season, so instead of waiting to be beaten by rain, we had no option than to patch up our destroyed buildings and have a place to sleep and keep our children.”

    The community seems set on a path of collision with the government, especially as the government is yet to disburse the N500million grant it received from the Federal Government.

    Mallam Sani Yahaya said: “Plateau State government is so uncaring; we have families, we thought they will assist us to rebuild our homes, but we can’t allow our children to be roaming without a house to sleep. The only option available to us in the absence of no help was to return to where we were. It is not in our best interest to stay in water ways, but who will give us the land to relocate?” Yahaya asked.

    A farmer in Yala council, David Una said: “Since they announced that money from the Federal Government, we have not seen anything. We are only trying to recover from our losses on our own and I can tell you, it is not easy. We are not getting any assistance from anybody.”

    The Special Adviser to Plateau State Governor on Media, Ayuba Pam, however, defended government’s decision to hold on to the fund. “”It is true that the fund has not been disbursed up till now. In fact, the N500 million was not meant to be disbursed. It was meant to be used to alleviate the plight of the victims. The N500 million sent by the Federal Government is not up to one quarter of what the state government is planning to do. Governor Jonah Jang is planning a project that will cost over N3 billion because the infrastructural challenge posed by the flood is more than distributing relief materials to victims. The affected areas require solid bridges, culverts, expanded road network, wider drainage channels and reclaiming the soil of the affected areas.”

    In Cross River, the people of Afi community had more than collapsed buildings to contend with. The river which provides water for about 40 communities was destroyed by mudslides in the flood and with no alternative source of water; the villages are facing an epidemic of gigantic proportion.

    A clan head who did not want to be named said Afi River served as the only source of drinking water for more than 40 villages that lived along its banks. He begged for the sinking of boreholes and water purifying chemicals as an interim measure to meet the needs of the affected villages.

    More flood predicted

    The Nigeria Metrological Agency (NIMET) has predicted more flood this year, this time it will affect 31 states. Already Awele can testify that the water level in the Niger River has risen. Everyday, he hobbles to the river bank and measures the rising water using his eyes. “This water is rising every day,” he announced.

    The victims are not fooled that the next flood would not reverse any gain they have achieved. In Lokoja, the Commissioner for Environment and Natural Resources, Abdulrahman Wuya, said the victims would be relocated from the flood plains. Musa disagreed, saying the community does not trust the government to fulfill its promise.

    As it stands, the victims are locked in a battle of mistrust with their government; will it take another flood to break the jinx?

  • TUC to govt: prepare for flood

    THE Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC) has urged the government to put modalities in place to check the impending flood predicted by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency(NIMET).

    In a statement its President, Comrade Bobboi Bala Kaigama and Secretry-General Comrade Musa Lawal, said: ‘’It beats the imagination of the Congress that our politicians are busy quarreling, engaging in fisticuffs and casting aspersions on themselves in both electronic and print media just because of 2015 elections at a time when many Nigerians have died on our dilapidated roads and as a result of the Boko Haram insurgency, ocean surges and floods.

    “The Congress and other Nigerians are certainly tired of all the drama and laxity in governance which we consider disgraceful, unhealthy distraction, and a ploy from some quarters to continually deny Nigerians good governance and dividends of our hard-earned democracy.”

    Recently, it was reported that it would take the North over 20 years to recover the farmlands and livestock it lost to floods .

    “Unfortunately, our leaders are apparently oblivious of the boldly-written handwriting on the wall. We wonder what the fate of the economy would be in the next few years if this unpalatable trend continues. And what about the adverse effects of the flight of multinational companies and mass importation of foreign goods and services?”TUC said.

    It warned that if the prediction of the meterology agency that floods may affect about 90 local government areas this year is taken serious by the government, it would not augur well for the nation.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • ‘South-South lost N2.51trn to floods’

    ‘South-South lost N2.51trn to floods’

    The Director General, National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) Alhaji Muhammed Sidi on Tuesday said the South-South region lost about N2.51 trillion to the 2012 flood disaster.

    Sidi gave the figure in Asaba, Delta State , at the South-South Zonal Flood Awareness Campaign for Non-Governmental, Community and Faith-based Organisations and government agencies organised by NEMA and Delta State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA).

    He said that the amount was the “estimated combined value” of the damage and losses suffered by people, communities and organisations in the region during the period the flooding lasted.

    According to the D-G, who was represented by Mr Emenike Umesi, NEMA Zonal Coordinator, South-South, the total value of losses on economic activities economy alone is estimated at N1.1 trillion.

    He said that 363 deaths were recorded while seven million people were affected with 2.3 million people displaced and 597,476 houses damaged.

    He said that the flood marked a watershed in the nation’s disaster management apparatus as it tested the country’s contingency plans “at every front’’.

    He said that though the impact of the flooding was enormous, it brought all stakeholders together “as never before to address the consequences of the flood’’.

    “If experiences of last year flooding are anything to go by, then the 2013 seasonal rainfall predictions by Nigeria Metrological Agency (NIMET) must be taken seriously

    “In addition, the National Flood Outlook for Nigeria by Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency must be taken seriously,’’ he said.

    Earlier, Mr Kingsley Osawaru, NIMET Manager in Delta, while reviewing the rainfall predictions of the zone, said that there would be lots of rainfall in the area with possibilities of flooding.

    According to him, the volume of water expected this year in the region will rise more than that of last year.

    He said that the region would experience an average about 260 days of rainfall and 2,000 millimeters of rainfall, this year.

    He advised all stakeholders to rise to the challenge and do all within their reach to avert a repeat of 2012 experience by clearing all water channels

  • Flood: Fed Govt to build resettlement camps

    Flood: Fed Govt to build resettlement camps

    The Federal Government is to build resettlement camps in the local governments affected by last year’s flood.

    A lawmaker representing Etsako Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives, Alhaji Abubakar Momoh, said this yesterday in Auchi, Edo State, when he addressed reporters.

    He said the land for the proposed resettlement camps was being sought by the Federal Government in conjunction with some of the states affected by last year’s flood.

    Momoh, who said he was pleased with the plan, explained that if this becomes a reality, it will ease a lot of problems associated with the relocation of flood victims.

    He said considering the warning of another flood in some states, the people should no longer nurse any fear.

    The lawmaker, however, urged that this must not be allowed to be another political statement, adding that making it a reality would not only be beneficial to the people, but also to the government.

    He said: “I’ve been informed about this plan. I have even been requested to provide land for the camps in the affected local governments in Edo State.

    “I have, however, directed this to the appropriate authority to provide the land.

    “I see this as a noble idea, which will take care of a lot of problems.”

     

  • Flood ravages five Katsina local govts

    Flood has displaced scores of people and destroyed property worth millions of naira in five local government areas in Katsina State.

    Alhaji Hassan Rawayau, the Executive Director of the state’s Rehabilitation and Emergency Relief Agency (RERA), told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Katsina yesterday that the incident followed last week’s downpour in the affected areas.

    The flood, he said, affected Kankia, Charanchi, Mashi, Daura and Zango local government areas, where homes, household items and farms were damaged.

    But no life was lost, the Agency chief added.

    According to him, officials of RERA and NEMA Northwest zone have visited the affected areas to sympathise with the victims and assess the extent of the damage.

    Rawayau said the assessment of the situation was to provide assistance to the victims.

    He urged the victims to consider the flood as an act of God and prayed against future recurrence.

    NAN reports that in Kankia Local Government Area, the flood also caused the collapse of Kankia Dam and washed away several farmlands.