Tag: flood

  • Floods kill three persons in Ebonyi

    Three persons have been killed by floods in Izzi Local Government Area of Ebonyi State.

    Property worth millions of naira was destroyed in the floods, which ravaged many communities in the council.

    Executive Secretary of the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) Elder Igboke Umunna confirmed the deaths during an assessment tour of the affected areas with the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA).

    Thousands of people have been displaced, with farms and houses submerged.

    Over 30 villages, some of which share boundary with Cross River State, are affected by the floods.

    One of the communities, Nwolohzi, has been cut off from its neighbours. Children in the area were being conveyed to school with canoe.

    Some of the victims, Mr. Linus Ezeoru from Ndieze and the Coordinator of Izzi Development Centre, Apostle Charles Nwokpo, urged the government to assist them.

    NEMA Zonal Coordinator, Southeast, Dr. Onimode Bamidele, who was represented by the agency’s Relief Officer, Mr. Ifeanyi Nnaji, described the situation as “devastating” and urged people living in flood-prone areas to relocate to safer places.

    Umunna said the body of one of the three victims, who drowned in the flood, has been recovered.

    He said the bodies of the two others were yet to be found.

  • Flood ravages Edo communities

    Flood ravages Edo communities

    Udaba, Osomhegbe, Ofukpo, Agbazi and Udochi communities in Edo State have been flooded, following overflow of the River Niger.

    Farms, houses and property worth millions of naira were washed away.

    Residents have abandoned the communities for neighbouring villages.

    The lawmaker representing Estako Central in the House of Assembly, Mr. Johnson Oghuma, at plenary yesterday urged the government to assist his people.

    Commissioner for Commerce and Industry Osikhena-Boih Donald, who hails from the area, visited some of the affected villages.

    He assured the people that relevant agencies would be informed.

    Also yesterday, the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) handed over relief materials for flood victims to the Edo State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) in Benin, the state capital.

    NEMA Southsouth Disaster Risk Reduction Officer Eric Ebhodaghe said the effects of flooding on the people can be reduced through cooperation between the state government and the agency.

    Items donated to the victims included 300 bundles of roofing sheets, 600 bags of cement, 2,000 pieces of planks, 300 bags of rice, 300 blankets, 200 mattresses, mosquito nets, bags of garri, towels and clothing materials.

    Ebhodaghe said: “In recent times, we have experienced flooding across the country. That is why NEMA has been issuing warnings to ensure that Nigerians do not unduly suffer from climate change.

    “NEMA will continue to partner the state (Edo) to bring succour to the affected people. We cannot tame nature, but we can ameliorate its consequences.

    “Disaster is not only about relief materials, but also about preparing for it. A situation where people are forewarned and they refuse to relocate calls for more sensitisation.”

    Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Women’s Affairs and Social Developments Deaconess Florence Ebomoyi-Idundun assured NEMA that the materials will get to the victims.

  • Mark inspects flood ravaged communities in Benue

    Senate President David Mark yesterday sympathised with flood victims in Benue State.

    He urged the Federal Government to intervene in the disaster to save lives.

    A statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Paul Mumeh, said Senator Mark gave the advice when he and Benue State Governor Gabriel Suswam inspected flood-ravaged communities and resettlement camps where some of the victims are taking refuge.

    It quoted Mark as saying that the predicament of the victims required attention “because the situation is disturbing.”

    Mark said nobody anticipated the disaster, adding, “though we need rains, we don’t want torrential rains.”

    He said: “I share in your pains. We can only ask you to be patient until the rains begin to subside. This is beyond the state government. I urge the Federal Government to come to the aid of the state government.”

    Senator Mark enjoined Nigerians to take measures against the strange water that “has ravaged parts of the country this rainy season.”

    He hailed the government and medical team that have been assisting the flood victims and urged them to be hygienic.

    The Senate President donated N4 million to enable the victims purchase drugs and foodstuffs.

    Conducting him round some of the flooded communities, Governor Suswam thanked Senator Mark for the visit and enjoined the Federal Government to assist the state.

    He said the state government has provided four resettlement camps accommodating about 5,000 victims.

    Mark was accompanied by the Chairman, Senate Committee on National Planning, Senator Barnabas Gemade and the Minister of Interior, Comrade Abba Moro.

  • Floods: 12,000 people displaced in Cross River

    Floods: 12,000 people displaced in Cross River

    Over 12,000 people have been displaced by floods in Cross River State.

    The floods were caused by overflow of water from Lagdo Dam in Cameroon. Forty-nine communities in seven councils were affected.

    Speaking with the Community Relations Officers (CRO) of the 18 local government areas yesterday, the Director-General of the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), Mr. Vincent Aquah, said: “We have a large volume of water coming in as a result of the discharge of water from Cameroon’s Lagdo Dam. It is the manifestation of the warning earlier given by the Nigeria Meteorology Agency (NIMET).”

    The affected communities are in Ikom, Yala, Ogoja, Obubra, Abi, Biase and Odukpani.

    Aquah regretted that many communities that had never experienced flooding before were submerged.

    He said: “The rivers are over charged. Farms and property worth millions were destroyed. We also recorded some deaths.”

    Aquah said reptiles, including crocodiles and snakes, have invaded many communities as a result of the floods.

    He said many farm settlements were affected and there may be poor harvest at the end of this farming season.

    Aquah said SEMA has received another alert that between now and November, more water would be released from the dam, adding that the government would design measures to reduce its effects.

    He said: “We have to sensitise our people on safety measures and the possible evacuation of residents.”

    Aquah said the Federal Government has not responded to the floods because it was not aware of the  communities situated on the path of the water coming from Cameroon.

    He said the agency would inform the Federal Government that Cross River was the worse hit by floods.

    Aquah said SEMA would collaborate with CROs, officials of the Ministry of Disaster Management, Red Cross, Police, Fire Service and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) to sensitise the communities.

    Urging the Federal Government to assist the victims, he said: “We are looking forward to an immediate response from the Federal Government, because what happened in Cross River is beyond the capacity of the state.”

  • Floods alert for Kogi, Abia, Benue, others

    Floods alert for Kogi, Abia, Benue, others

    The Federal Ministry of Environment Flood Early Warning Centre has  issued a forecast of possible heavy rainfall that may cause flooding in some parts of the country.

    The forecast entitled: ‘Flood status Report for Dissemination’, made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja, indicated that the rainfall was expected between now and September 24.

    “Please note and help to disseminate the forecast of possible heavy rainfall that may likely result in Flood (if adequate and necessary precautions are not taken),” it said.

    It identified the locations to include Abejukolo and Wara in Kogi; Afikpo in Abia, Egbema in Imo; Itigidi in Cross River  and Otukpo in Benue.

    Others are Patani in Delta; Sagbama in Bayelsa; Kisi in Oyo State;Jebba, Kosubosu, Lafiaji and New Bussa in Kwara as well as Nafada in Gombe State.

    The list also includes Shendam in Plateau; Demsa, Ganye, Jimeta, Mayo-Belwa, and Song in Adamawa and Donga, Gembu, Mutumbiyu, Yorro in Taraba.

    The alert also asked Jigawa, Kebbi, Bauchi, FCT, Katsina, Borno, Kano, Kaduna, Plateau, Zamfara, Yobe, Sokoto and Niger states to watch out for vulnerable areas, following earlier alerts issued.

  • One dead, hundreds displaced in Ebonyi floods

    One dead, hundreds displaced in Ebonyi floods

    One person has been killed by flood in Ebonyi State, following two days of heavy rainfall. Hundreds of people have been displaced and property worth millions of naira were destroyed in the floods, which ravaged 15 communities in Ikwo, Izzi, Abakaliki and Ohaozara local government areas.

    The communities include Ogbe Hausa, Umunaga Uburu, Igbagu, Alike, Achara, Inyimagu, Akunakuna, Igbudu, Ndieche, Ndinkoshi, Okwerike, Ekahufu, Obegu and Ekpomaka.

    Speaking with reporters in Ikwo Local Government Area during a tour of the affected areas, Commissioner for Environment Dr. Paul Okorie said the state government, through the World Bank, is putting measures in place to prevent further casualties.

    Dr. Okorie said: “The state government sympathises with the bereaved family on the loss of their loved one. We are here to see things for our selves and we have taken note of the houses, the household appliances, the livestock and the farm produce that were destroyed. The level of destruction is most unfortunate.

    “The state government is collaborating with the World Bank to put in place mitigating measures to prevent further casualties. The task of putting in place a permanent measure against flood in Ebonyi is beyond the state government, but the state government would do everything within its reach to alleviate the suffering of the people.”
    Dr. Okorie praised the Nigeria Meteorological Agency (NIMET) for its regular warning to flood-prone areas across the country.

    He said the warnings have greatly reduced the number of casualties. The commissioner said the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) would compile a list of the property destroyed and give relief materials to the victims.

    The victims urged the Federal Government to find a permanent solution to the floods, which have become an annual occurrence. Mr. Ifeanyi Mbam, a farmer, said he lost everything he had to the floods and is squatting with his relations.

  • Flood kills nine, destroys property in Bauchi

    Flood has killed seven people in Gamawa Council and two in Zaki Local Government Area of Bauchi State. It also destroyed property worth millions of naira.
    Governor Isa Yuguda, while on a condolence and assessment visit to the areas, said the solution to the flood is to complete the Kafin Zaki Dam started by the Shehu Shagari administration.

    The governor was accompanied by a delegation from the Federal Ministry of the Environment. He appealed to the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) to assist the affected communities with essential items.

    The NEMA Director Mohammed Sani Sidi commiserated with the victims. He advised people not to build houses on water ways, to avoid disaster.  He said the Federal Government delegation was in the areas to assess the extent of damage.

    About 5,627 hectares of farmlands and 6,120 houses in nine villages of the 11 in Zaki Local Government have been destroyed by the flood.  The Caretaker Chairman of the local government, Muhammad Babayo Katagum, told Governor Yuguda that the flood destroyed farm produce, primary school buildings, health facilities, houses, domestic animals and birds.

    He said the Ministry of Special Duties has provided 14 canoes to ease transportation, and the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) has donated essential commodities.

    Areas most hit by the flood include, Burshi, Gadai, Katagum, Mumur, Kafin Larabawa, Gumai, Mainako, Sakwa, Maiwa, Madufa, Kadabdu, Bajuwa, Gauya and Kwayamri.

  • Floods: 40,000 sacked in Kano, Benue

    Floods: 40,000 sacked in Kano, Benue

    49 Cross River communities threatened 

    ABOUT 40,000 people in Kano and Benue States, many of them women and children, have been displaced from their homes by floods in the last one week.
    Their property, including farms and livestock estimated at millions of naira, are also under water or washed away.
    Forty-nine communities in Cross River State may be next to be affected, according to a report yesterday.
    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) estimates that 25,000 from 14 communities are now homeless in Makurdi and environs in the aftermath of the overflowing of River Benue.
    The authorities in Cameroun were said to have released massive water from the Lagdo Dam into the river precipitating the overflow.
    The other 15,000 people were displaced from five villages in Warawa Local Government Area of Kano State by water from Tiga Dam.
    Submerged are Laraba Jigawa, Katarkawa, Garundau, Wambanto and Litau villages.
    Farms and livestock of the residents have also been submerged or washed away.
    Five camps have been created for the victims at Token Primary School, NALDA Secretariat, Emawa Primary School, Laraba Jigawa and Dan Hawan Giwa Primary School,according to the  Director of Personnel of  Warawa Local Government, Alhaji Ahmed Haruna Bichi.
    However, the displaced people have cried out about inadequate shelter, food and medication.
    One of them, Hajiya Amina Yusuf, a mother of eight said government officials are hardly available to cater for the needs of the displaced people.
     She said: “It was only this afternoon that they brought us gari and sugar. I have about eight children with me, what can we do with three cups of gari? This is pathetic and I call on those in authority to do something urgently to alleviate our plight.
    “We did not cause the flood. We are victims of  a natural disaster and that does not mean that we should not be treated as human beings. In everything, we give Allah the glory that all of us survived the flood.”
    Alhaji Bichi has pledged that efforts are being made to make the victims as comfortable as possible.
    He said the situation could have been worse if the people had failed to heed the warning by NEMA to leave their villages.
     “We have started making plans for their resettlement. As you can see, some relief materials have just arrived the camp and more efforts are being put in place to get them more provisions, particularly, food items,” he said.
    Relief materials already distributed to them included 60 bags of gari, 30 bags of sugar, 1,300 loaves of bread and 500 bags of sachet water.
    Nineteen people were reportedly killed by earlier flooding in 30 Local Government Areas of the state.
    In Makurdi, the raging River Benue submerged farms and houses up to five kilometres away from its banks.
    NEMA says although it has set up three camps for the displaced people, many of the victims are reluctant to relocate.
     It was gathered that many of them find the cost of transporting their property beyond their means.
    The Cross River State Emergency Management Agency  said yesterday that over 49  coastal communities across   seven Local Government Areas of the state are  at the risk  of severe flooding from  water from  Lagdo Dam in Cameroon.
    The affected local government areas are Yala, Ogoja, Ikom, Obubra, Abi, Biase and Odukpani.
     The  Assistant Director of Information of the agency, Mr David Akate, said in a statement  that farmland in some  communities have already been submerged, destroying yams, cassava, vegetable cocoyam, melons and other cash crops worth millions of naira.
    He said 11 persons have been reported killed by flood in the state this year while hundreds of houses have been submerged and pulled down, displacing thousands.
     Also hundreds of houses have been flooded while over 10,000 livestock have been affected, the statement indicated.
     Speaking in Isejah, one of the affected communities in Obubra Local Government Area, Director General of SEMA, Mr. Vincent Aquah, o expressed fears that the magnitude and severity of damage to lives and property would increase as the level of flood rises.