One
of the houses flooded with water yesterday.
|
●NEMA says 27 states
already affected ●‘State emergency agencies
are unprepared’
The National Emergency Management
Agency (NEMA) has raised the alarm over impending flood in Anambra, Abia, Delta
and Bayelsa states.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
The
warning came barely 24 hours after the Niger Basin Authority (NBA) released an
alert on River Niger to the effect that further rise in water level in Niger
Republic would spread to Benin Republic, then Kainji Dam in Nigeria.
Prior
to the flood alert, major dams in the country, including Shiroro, Kainji and
Jebba, had reportedly been full and spilling water.
The
NEMA Director General, Mustapha Maihaja, during a stakeholders’ meeting on the
flood situation yesterday in Abuja noted that Nigeria was facing an imminent
disaster and there was the need for the state governments to be prepared for
any eventuality.
According
to him, about 27 states have been affected by flood while windstorm and
rainstorm have affected 10 states in the country, adding that over 40,161
people have been displaced.
The
DG expressed regret that the State Emergency Management Agencies (SEMAs) lack
adequate capacity and preparedness to address the disaster if it eventually
happens.
The
Director of Engineering Hydrology, Clem Onyeaso, explained that NBA issued the
alert on September 7, 2017 and it would take nine days for the water to come
into Nigeria.
Pointing
out that Abia, Anambra, Imo, Rivers and Bayelsa states are all part ways for
River Niger to pass before it empties into the Atlantic Ocean, Onyeaso said
those states were already confronted with coastal flooding and any additional
water would spell doom for the people.
On
the Benue River axis, he said that there was no cause for alarm yet as water
was still being impounded in Lagdo Dam in Cameroon, adding that if water was
released from the dam, the entire country would be engulfed in managing flood.
He
expressed regret that the country has only 200 dams, which are not enough to
dam all the rivers to curtail flood. “China alone has more than 1000 large
earth dams, even Ghana has well above 700 dams but Nigeria that is on the
downstream of a large river does not have adequate dams to checkmate flood.”
He
called on government to provide dams for all the rivers and move people away
from flood-prone areas.
The
Director General of the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET), Abubakar Mashi,
warned that there might be flash flood in Kebbi, Niger, Kwara, Kogi, Nassarawa,
Plateau and the entire south-south and south-east states.
He disclosed that there would be early cessation of rain in the far northern state of Sokoto, among others, warning that there would be extended rainfall in all the south-south and south-east regions.
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