Tag: SEMA

  • Oyo SEMA warns flood-prone communities to prepare for heavy rainfall

    Oyo SEMA warns flood-prone communities to prepare for heavy rainfall

    The Oyo State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) has issued a warning to residents in flood-prone areas of the state, urging them to prepare for heavy rainfall and potential flooding.

    In a statement on Tuesday, the Administrative Secretary of SEMA, Mrs. Ojuolape Busari, said data from the Oyo State Flood Early Warning System indicates that communities to the east and northeast of Ibadan city centre are expected to experience the most intense rainfall.

    Areas highlighted for concern include parts of Lagelu Local Government Area, particularly Iyana Offa, eastern Moniya, and communities stretching further east toward Osun State. Parts of Egbeda LGA, especially the eastern edges and those bordering Lagelu LGA, are also expected to witness significant downpours.

    “Communities along the Ibadan-Ife Road (A5 highway) such as Egbeda and further east should prepare for heavy rainfall,” Busari said.

    She added that moderate to heavy rainfall is also forecast across many parts of Ibadan Metropolis, particularly the eastern and central zones.

    Read Also: Flood: SEMA issues alert to three Oyo LGAs, warns residents

    These include densely populated areas like IITA, Ibadan Airport, University of Ibadan, Ojoo, Akobo, Basorun, Gate, Challenge, and Ring Road. Parts of Akinyele and Oluyole LGAs are also expected to be affected.

    SEMA assured residents that the agency, alongside other government bodies, voluntary organisations, and civil society groups, is ready to respond to any emergency and support affected communities.

    “In simpler terms, if you are in or travelling through the eastern and northeastern parts of Ibadan today—especially along major roads heading east and north—you should expect heavy rainfall with possible flooding,” she warned.

    Busari urged residents to begin taking precautionary measures immediately to mitigate risks, stressing that “discretion is the better part of valour.”

  • SEMA distributes relief materials to victims of herders attack in Benue

    SEMA distributes relief materials to victims of herders attack in Benue

    Benue State Emergency Agency (SEMA) has distributed relief materials worth millions of Naira to victims of herdsmen killing in Gbagir community, Ukum Local Government Area in Benue State.

    Recall that suspected herdsmen launched a deadly attack on a town called Gbagir and killed 50 persons, while many houses were set ablaze.

    About 10, 000 families who were affected by the attack have fled the area and now living in Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps.

    Read Also: There is no missing N200bn in Benue – Deputy Governor

    Executive Secretary of SEMA, James Aondokaa Iorpuu, who led the staff of the Agency, said the gesture was on the directive of Governor Hyacinth Alia.

    Iorpuu told The Nation on the phone that the relief materials include food and non-food items.

    They include 200 bags of rice, ear bags of beans, Maggi, salt, garri, soaps, mattresses, wrappers and cooking utensils.

    The SEMA boss said a similar gesture will be extended to the Gwer East Local government area, where herdsmen killed 36 on Friday, and called on residents to be vigilant and report suspicious movement to security agencies.

  • Governor Otu suspends SEMA DG Odey

    Governor Otu suspends SEMA DG Odey

    Cross River State Governor, Bassey Otu, has ordered the immediate suspension of the Director General of the Cross River State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), Angela Odey from office.

    Odey is the first appointee of the present administration to be publicly disciplined by the governor in what appears to be a demonstration of zero tolerance for misconduct from government appointees.

    While no official reason was provided for the suspension, it could be recalled that the former DG, just last weekend, issued a press release in Calabar announcing various significant appointments within the agency.

    This move stirred controversy among prominent political figures in the state who questioned the source of her authority and funding for these crucial appointments, particularly in light of the state’s limited revenue.

    Read Also: Impeachment: Why Akeredolu rejected Aiyedatiwa’s apology – Sources

    There have also been some alleged misgivings about the handling of palliatives distributions under her care which appears to be at variance with the People’s First focus of Gov Otu’s policy agenda.

    The governor in an attempt to deluge the apparent growing tension and discourage further perceived abuse of officialdom by any of his aides ordered her immediate suspension from office.

    The suspension order which contained a press release issued in the early hours of Monday, October 30, and signed by the Chief Press Secretary to Governor Emmanuel Ogbeche directed the suspended DG to handover to the most senior Director in the Agency before the close of work today Monday 30th October 2023.

    It also ordered that during her period of suspension, she should not be engaged covertly or overtly in the administration of the agency except otherwise directed by the governor.

  • NGO, NEMA train stakeholders on contingency plan devt

    An NGO, Christian Aid in collaboration with the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has embarked on training of stakeholders in Plateau on development of contingency plan for disaster management.

     

    Mr Sendi Dauda, Programme Officer, Christian Aid at the opening of the exercise in Jos on Monday, said that contingency plans for disaster management became imperative as the one in Plateau had expired in 2017.

     

    According to Dauda, the training will ensure that before a hazard becomes a full blown disaster, there is a plan on how to tackle it. He said that the contingency plan would define who do what and at what time to avert disaster. “We realised that most states in Nigeria don’t have contingency plan for disaster management.

     

    “Some like Plateau have, but it is outdated and what we are doing is to develop a new one to help avert and quicken response to disaster.

    “When developed, the contingency plan will be useful for disaster mitigation partners, with State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) serving as the coordinating agency,” he said.

     

    He said that those participating in the training included the ministries working with SEMA, chairmen of Jos North, East and Shendam as well as staff of the three councils.

    Others are civil society organisations, security agencies, persons with disability and the media, adding that the organisation was working in Kaduna, Benue and Plateau states.

     

    Read Also: NEMA receives 174 Nigerians from Libya

     

    Mr Lugard Slaku, NEMA Zonal Coordinator, North Central said that following the prediction of 2018 flood, Federal Government activated the national contingency plan in preparedness for the eventualities.

    Slaku, who was represented by Mr Eugene Nyenlong, Assistant Chief Relief and Rehabilitation, said that this was the motive behind Christian Aid collaborations.

     

    “This is aimed at strengthening disaster preparedness in Nigeria – with focus on flooding by improving early warning and early response systems in the state.

    “It will build community resilience and preparedness to floods, design contingency plans, and strengthen coordination among agencies of government mandated to respond to such disasters.

    “It is in this regard that NEMA, through this partnership is providing technical support and assistance to lead through the process of developing a contingency plan.

     

    “I must acknowledge that this partnership between NEMA and Christian Aid is the first of its kind between both organisations and we appreciate the collaboration,” he added.  A  contingency plan would be developed at the end of the one week training.

    NAN

  • Osinbajo visits Bayelsa flood victims, says disaster is monumental

    The Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, on Friday described the flood that ravaged some communities in Bayelsa as a “monumental disaster.”

    Osinbajo who spoke at the Internally Displaced People’s (IDP) camp, Igbogene, on the outskirt of Yenagoa, said his visit was to assess the extent of damage caused by the flood.

    He said that he undertook an over-fly on a helicopter from the Port Harcourt International Airport through the flooded communities in Rivers and those within Yenagoa metropolis.

    The vice president observed that the exercise had made him realise the degree of suffering the flood had thrown many of the victims into.

    Osinbajo commended the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and its state counterpart, (SEMA) for their efforts in assisting the flood victims.

    He pledged the assistance of the Federal Government to resettle the victims and provide them means of livelihood to start life anew as soon as the flood was over.

    Read Also: Minimum Wage: FG urges organised labour to accept offer

    He said his visit along with with the Director-General of NEMA and the Minister of Environment was to demonstrate the seriousness the federal government attached to the welfare of flood victims.

    The vice president also assured the people that as soon as he returned to Abuja the federal government would “restrategise” and get back to the state.

    Osinbajo further said that government was working on how to ensure that such emergency did not occur in future, by embarking on dredging of water channels and constructing canals.

    He urged the people to avoid dumping solid wastes into water channels to aviod flooding.

    The vice president pledged government would ensure that the babies delivered in the IDP camps were “perfectly and well cared for.”

    Also speaking, Gov. Seriake Dickson, described Bayelsa as the most impacted state across the federation, saying the state is situated below sea level.

    “You saw personally the extent of the devastation. This is the state mostly affected whenever there is flooding. This state is below sea level,” he said.

    The governor said the state government was doing all it could to care for the displaced people.

    According to him, apart from the 13 IDP camps already set up, additional three would be established to contain the increasing number of people displaced by flood.

    He expressed readiness of the state government to collaborate with the federal government for long term solution to the problem of flooding in the state.

    The governor lamented the insufficient quantity of relief materials supplied by NEMA.

  • Flood displaces over 200 households in Plateau

    About 200 households have been displaced by flood in Rikkos community of Jos North Local Government Area of Plateau, following heavy downpour on Sunday afternoon.

    Mr Al’Amin Yakubu, Head, Emergency Response Team of the community disclosed this to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday in Jos.

    Yakubu said though no life was lost, the flood had destroyed properties and washed away valuables.

    “The flood didn’t claim lives, but because it was huge, it displaced over 200 households.

    “These households have lost all their properties and are left with nothing,” he said.

    He said that the displaced persons were currently staying with neighbours, as no camp had been put in place for them.

    Yakubu described the condition of the displaced persons as pathetic, adding that access to food, shelter and clothing is already becoming serious challenge for them.

    “As a community, we don’t have the capacity and resources to camp these people; we would have done that pending when government will intervene.

    Read Also: Borno attack: Survivors recount near-death experience

    “But we have contacted the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), and both have promised to respond soon,” he said.

    Efforts to reach Alhaji Alhassan Barde, SEMA Executive Director, proved abortive, but a senior staff of the agency who prefers anonymity confirmed the incident to NAN.

    He said that the agency had already sent its personnel to the affected community to assess the level of damage.

  • We live permanently in the rain

    Together with his two wives and eight children, Abubakar Salisu, a civil servant with the judiciary in Yobe State, is holed in a one-room apartment constructed with corrugated iron sheets that were blown off the roof of his house in Nayinawa, a suburb of Damaturu, the state capital, by a devastating flood on the night of July 25, 2018.

    While his entire household still live with the nightmare of the ill-fated downpou

    r, he is constantly tormented at the sight of every heavy cloud and rainfall. His despair is understandable as hope still looks far away despite his trust in God for a life-changing moment.

    Salisu told our reporter that he lost everything to the flood, including his three-room apartment which was submerged.

    He said: “I lost everything to the flood. Food, clothes, money, everything was destroyed. The house I suffered to build was completely submerged. I don’t know where to start from. With two wives and eight children, we are now sleeping in this one-room makeshift house. There is nowhere to go. We just have to keep managing here until the day Allah performs His wonders to change our condition.”

    Like Salisu, Zulai Yusuf, whose husband does menial jobs in the southern part of the country to keep the family going, was also hit by the flood, and they lost everything including the house which the husband managed to build after many years of struggle.

    Her cry is for the Yobe State Government to come to her aid. With four children in her care, Zulai battles to feed the children and struggles to shelter them as the house her sister rented for her is due to expire in the next one week.

    “We wake up every day with panic as the rain continues to fall,” she said. “It is unfortunate that we don’t know what government is doing about our plight. If the government cannot come to our aid, I wonder who will do so. Since they came here in their big cars and wrote our names, they have not come back to see how we are coping with life.

    “We thank you journalists for being there for us. We pray that through you, our cries would be heard by the government so that they would come to our rescue. I really don’t know where my hope lies now. I wake up every day struggling to feed the children and at the same time thinking of our shelter.

    “The rent for the place which my sister secured for me will expire by next week and I don’t know where to go to with my four children.”

    ENDLESS WAIT

    Many of the flood victims who spoke with our correspondent said they were tired of waiting for the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA). Some others wondered why SEMA had no immediate palliative measures for disaster victims.

    “How can this kind of thing happen to poor people like this and government has no immediate measure of cushioning their sufferings?” a resident queried.

    A resident of the affected area, Mohammed Lamin Bulama Wakili Mai Angwa Bula Bukar, said they had since collated the names of the affected people and sent it to SEMA. He, however, wondered why it is taking the government so long to help the people.

    He said: “I was here when SEMA came with local government officials. We went round our area and wrote the names of the people that were affected by the flood. We got a total of 109 people who were affected and submitted their names to SEMA. But up to this moment, we have heard nothing from them.

    “The only help we got is from one man who sent two modules of grains and N500. We don’t even know the person because the person did not disclose his identity to us. Many people got help. Help came two days after the flood.”

    PERMANENT RAIN DWELLERS

    Speaking on how the residents are coping with life without homes, Mustapha said: “We live in the rain. The houses we are living in now are makeshift. Look at that old man (pointing to an aged man whose house was destroyed by flood), his own house is still in that shape.

    “I myself live in the rain with this shanty arrangement as my shelter. We get worried each time the cloud gathers even though we need the rains for our crops in the farms to grow.”

    Another victim, Goni Ali, said he had abandoned his farm trying to fix a place for himself and family members to live in.

    He said: “Since the flood occurred, I have not gone to my farm. I have been moving from one place to another trying to fix the house for my wife, my three children and my aged mother to live in. Since the day it rained, my food was destroyed. There is no food, nothing to sleep on. How then can you farm?

    “Some people’s food was swept away either to the road on to the gutters. The water scattered everything in people’s houses and left them with nothing. Government people came and collected our names and left us to suffer.

    “We are just on our own. Many people don’t have places to sleep. We have been separated from our families. Personally, my wife and my four children are sleeping in her brothers’ house. Sometimes I sleep in the mosque because I cannot fix my house up till now. Government should please come to our aid.”

    Musa Mohammed says he sleeps in a small kitchen with his wife while his children are distributed among his bothers and other relatives in the town, but all come back to the kitchen in the day time to fend for the family.

    With an aged mother, two wives and five children, Yahaya Mohammed, a tractor operator, has also gathered his disjointed roof to construct a shelter where his entire family now dwells. Yahaya believes that only Allah, not government, will take him out of his present predicament.

    “I cannot blame anybody. Neither do I believe that Government will help me. I look up to Allah because He is the one that has the solution to our problems. Whatever happens is designed by Allah and He has answers to everything. I thank God for the temporary house I have constructed so far for my family,” Yahaya said.

    HELP ON THE WAY?

    When contacted, the Permanent Secretary, Yobe State Emergency Management Agency, Idi Musa Jidawa, said that succor was on the way for the victims, calling on them to be patient.

    He said: “I understand what the people are going through. The state government is working very hard to bring succour to the victims of the flood. I am calling on the people to be patient. It won’t be too long before intervention will come.”

    The Chairman Tarmuwa Local Government, Mohammed Gidado Abubakar, whose people were also affected by another devastating flood in the last two months, said his people are also waiting for the intervention of SEMA.

    Alhaji Gidado however added that other victims of fire incident at Lantewa in the local government area had been settled by SEMA.

    “We have compiled the list of the people that were affected by the flood in my local government area and submitted same to SEMA. They have told us that they are working on it. They have assured us the victims will be reached very soon.

    “I want to also confirm to you that the victims of fire incident at Lantewa have been settled by SEMA. We are so grateful for that and we pray that the succour of the flood victims will also come so that the people will rebuild their homes,” Gidado said.

    There were also claims of other victims of rainstorm disaster in Gulani Local victims, calling on them to be patient.

    He said: “I understand what the people are going through. The state government is working very hard to bring succour to the victims of the flood. I am calling on the people to be patient. It won’t be too long before intervention will come.”

    The Chairman Tarmuwa Local Government, Mohammed Gidado Abubakar, whose people were also affected by another devastating flood in the last two months, said his people are also waiting for the intervention of SEMA.

    Alhaji Gidado however added that other victims of fire incident at Lantewa in the local government area had been settled by SEMA.

    “We have compiled the list of the people that were affected by the flood in my local government area and submitted same to SEMA. They have told us that they are working on it. They have assured us the victims will be reached very soon.

  • Katsina flood: ‘50% of IDPs have left camp’

    More that 50% of the internally displaced persons, IDP, of the recent flood disaster which hit Jibia town in Katsina state have left the Central Primary School camp Jibia where they were temporarily quartered in the aftermath of the disaster which occurred Sunday July 17

    The Executive Secretary of Katsina State Emergency management Agency, SEMA, Dr Aminu Waziri told newsmen on Monday in his office while giving an update on the incident that about 60% of the victims have received relief materials including cash supports. He said that a joint committee involving personnel of the local government, state government, SEMA and NEMA were supervising the distribution of relief materials.

    He said 466 houses have been verified as lost in the disaster while about 5o % of the IDPs have left either to joined their relations, seek refuge or rent apartments in areas they considered more comfortable with the cash refunds they have collected from us’’

    ‘’we also solicited and received medical supports, mobile medical laboratory, and sanitary facilities. We have received donations including cash and food stuffs from Philanthropists’’.

    Read Also: Polio Immunization: Kano takes campaign to IDPs camp

    ‘’The Executive Secretary of Tertiary Education Trust Fund, TETFUND, Dr Abdullahi Bichi Bappa was in Jibia on Monday and donated 100 bags of rice,100 bags of spaghetti and 23 bags of millet’’.

    ‘’I just received a call that the catholic Bishop of Sokoto, Bishop Mathew Hassan Kukah is on his way to Jibia to donate relief item to the IDPs and I hope to be there to receive him’’

    The SEMA boss further provided a breakdown of the total number of displaced persons to include 2604 persons made up of 65 adult males, 559 adult females, 1804 male children, and 908 female children

    He said the agency had to carry out a head count of the victims to specifically categorize them according to their special needs, nutrition, diets and education

    He said that so far N5m have been received as cash donations outside other relief materials

  • Suicide bombers kill three in Borno

    At least three persons were killed by female suicide bombers in Borno State on Sunday.

    The Chief Security Officer of the Borno State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), Bello Danbatta, said on Monday the incident occurred in Mashamari area of Konduga, near Maiduguri, the state capital.

    He said: “Three people were killed in two attacks and seven others injured in a suicide bomb attack on Sunday evening.

    “One of the bombs was detonated near a mosque while residents were preparing for the evening prayers and moments later the second one detonated inside a house.”

     

  • Video: Six killed, others wounded in Maiduguri attack -Police

    The Police in Borno said six persons were killed in an attack coordinated by Boko Haram insurgents at Jidari Polo area of Maiduguri on Thursday.

    Mr Edet Okon, the Public Relations Officer (PPRO), said in a statement on Friday that the victims included three civilians, a member of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) and two female suicide bombers.

    Okon disclosed that two men of the Special Anti Robbery Squad (SARS) and seven other persons sustained injuries from gunshots and explosions in the attack.

    He added that a Police Personnel Carrier (APC) vehicle was damaged in the attack.

    Okon said: “on Thursday April 26; at about 17: 00 pm, Boko Haram Terrorists launched a surprise attack at Jidari Polo area of Maiduguri near the Federal High court.

    “The terrorists fired sporadically and detonated Improvise Explosive Devices (IEDs). The Borno State Police Command promptly deployed combat teams of SARS, PMF and EOD to support the Military and the Divisional Police Officer of GRA division who were already at the scene.

    “The insurgents were successfully repelled by the security forces after fierce gun battle with profuse tear smoke application.

    “There was no casualty on the side of the police apart from two SARS personnel that were injured in the battle. A police Amoured Personnel Carrier (APC) was also damaged by IED explosions. Seven other persons were severely injured.

    “Four persons including a member of the CJTF and two female suicide bombers were killed in crossfire and IED explosions.

    “The victims and corpses were evacuated to the Specialist Hospital, Maiduguri. Normalcy has been restored in the area”.

    Okon added that preemptive deployments were being put in place to forestall further surprise attack.

    He quoted the Police Commissioner, Mr Damian Chukwu, as calling on members of the public to go about their lawful activities without fear.

    (Boko Haram suicide vehicle destroyed by the Nigerian Air Force)

    However, the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and Borno State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), in a joint press briefing said nine persons were killed in the attack.

    NEMA’s Northeast Zonal Director, Mr Bashir Garga, said that five suicide bombers detonated IEDs and killed themselves while four civilians lost their lives in the attack.

    Garga disclosed that a number of persons also sustained injuries in the attack, adding that: “people panicked, fled their homes to escape the attack and in the process got injured.

    “We conducted evacuation exercise in the affected areas and normalcy has been restored”.

    Garga called on people to desist from going to the scene of attacks, noting that the trend was obstructing rescue services and expose workers to dangers.