
The officials made this known in separate interviews with correspondents of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday.
In Adamawa, the Executive
Secretary of State Emergency Management Agency (ADSEMA), Mr. Haruna
Furo, said the state government had set up three committees to manage
the threat posed by the flood.
Furo said that the committees were
those of monitoring and gauging dams, identification of safe zones, as
well as assessment and resettlement of victims of the flood disaster.
He
said that so far, two safe zones had been identified in the state for
possible relocation of communities living in flood-prone areas of the
state in case of flooding.
Furo said that the measure became
necessary as about 60 percent of the state population lived under the
threat of flood from Dadinkowa, Kiri and Lagdo dams.
He explained
that nine local government areas, comprising Fufore, Girei, Yola South,
Yola North, Demsa, Numan, Lamurde, Guyuk and Shelleng, had been
identified as more prone to flood disaster in the state due to their
location along river banks.
The official explained that so far
this year, four people had lost their lives while properties worth
millions of Naira were lost to a flood in the state.
Furo blamed
indiscriminate allocation of land, improper town planning and dumping of
refuse in wrong places, as some of the factors responsible for flooding
in major towns of the state.
In Borno, some residents of Maiduguri are expressing fears about the possibility of flood occurring in the town in 2016.
Malam
Bukar Wasala, a resident of Ruwan-Zafi, lamented that his house had
already been flooded with water, with just a few rainfalls in the
season.
He said that the problem of flooding had been a re-occurring event in the area.
“We
faced the problem of flooding every year in this area, sometimes we
have to evacuate our belongings to other places pending when the rains
will stop before coming back.
“Our basic problem is the lack of drainage system in the area,” Wasala said.
Another resident, Malam Garba Muhammad also noted that the problem had been the lack of water channels.
“The problem is that our area is not a government planned residential area; most people built their homes where they wanted.
“Some of these houses were built on water channels, thereby blocking water passage,” Muhammad said.
Reacting,
Malam Nasiru Surundi, the Sole Administrator of the Borno Environmental
Protection Agency (BOSEPA), said the government had put in place
machinery to address the problem.
Surundi pointed out that the agency had evacuated all drainage before the advent of the rainy season to prevent flooding.
He blamed the problem on residents whom he said were in the habit of dumping refuse in drains.
“We
took a precautionary step before the commencement of the rainy season
by clearing all drains, but people continued to dump refuse into the
channels,” Surundi said.
He said that the agency was working on a
collaboration with a Non- Governmental Organisation (NGO), Action
Against Flood, toward providing lasting solutions to the perennial
flooding.
However, in Jigawa, the State Emergency Management Agency said already, 1,706 persons had been displaced by flood in 2016.
The
Executive Secretary of the agency, Alhaji Yusuf Babubura said in Dutse
that the flood affected seven local government areas of the state.
Babubura
disclosed that Hadejia, Malammadori, Ringim, Babura, Kirikasama, Jahun
and Suletankarkar were the local government areas affected in the state.
He said that in the last few weeks, three lives had been lost to flood in Jahun, Ringim and Maigatari Local Government areas.
According
to him, heavy rainfall and the inability of some residents to clear
drains before the beginning of the season are responsible for flooding
in the state.
The Secretary stated that the effects would have
been more devastating but government relocated people that lived around
river banks to safe places in the state.
“Government cannot handle the situation alone; people need to assist in the clearance of drains in the state.
“Before
the commencement of rainfall this year, we used jingles on radio and
television to sensitise people on the need to evacuate their drains to
allow free-flow of water in order to prevent flood,” he said.
He,
therefore, appealed to the Federal Government and other donor agencies
to assist the state in alleviating the suffering of the victims.
Meanwhile,
some residents of Hadejia town in Jigawa have called on the state
government to construct drains to check the recurring problem of flood
in the area.
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