Daily Trust

Flood: 54 Rivers communitie­s risk being submerged …Experts, residents seek interventi­on

- From Victor Edozie, Port Harcourt

As the rainy season continues, an environmen­tal expert has expressed fear that over 54 communitie­s in Rivers State face the risk of being submerged if flooding prevails in the areas.

The expert, Sunny Okocha, who delivered a lecture in the state recently, said unless there was immediate interventi­on, the over 54 communitie­s in Obio Akpor Local Government Area of the state risk being submerged.

Our correspond­ent further visited some of the communitie­s in the state where the residents lamented the rampaging flood that has displaced some of them and destroyed properties worth millions of naira.

Flooding continues untamed

Records showed that in 2016 and 2017, the state government evacuated many residents from Old Ahoada province where several communitie­s were submerged. The government lodged them at various Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps in the state.

In Oyigbo community, many inhabitant­s of Mbano camp had to relocate to neighbouri­ng communitie­s as flood ravaged the area. Those that stayed behind had to engage canoe paddlers to ferry them to and from their houses.

Daily Trust reports that earlier this year, hundreds of people were affected by flood in Port Harcourt City, Obio Akpor, Oyigbo and old Ahoada as they were displaced and lost properties.

boss blames residents’

Council careless acts

Following the untamed flooding, the Chairman of Obio Akpor LGA, Solomon Ekeh, recently disaster.

While addressing residents of Rumuodumay­a community, Ekeh however blamed the residents for causing the flood through their careless attitude towards the environmen­t.

He frowned at a situation where people dumped waste in drains and water channels thereby obstructin­g free flow of water, only to turn around and cry over flooding.

The chairman also berated them for deliberate­ly selling land close to water channel which he said resulted in the flooding of the area. Mr Ekeh vowed to demolish any structure blocking water channels and sought the cooperatio­n vowed to contain the of the chiefs and community leaders to address the problem.

Environmen­talists, seek action

communitie­s

In his lecture on, ‘Obio Akpor Local Government: The Role of Flood Disaster Management’, the environmen­tal expert, Sunny Okocha, attributed the flood to the craze for urbanizati­on.

He said the excitement for urbanizati­on forced people who should not be in the towns to migrate to cities and add to the congestion of the environmen­t.

Okocha highlighte­d the negative impact of flooding to include breeding diseases and loss of lives. He therefore called for a concerted efforts to curb the menace through the planting of trees and imbibing good sanitation habits.

In his submission, another environmen­talist, Dr Jackson Omenazu, backed the council boss on the demolition of houses blocking natural water channels especially around the watersides in the state.

Omenazu charged the LGA leadership to create an Environmen­tal Impact Assessment (EIA) Committee to work with other environmen­t agencies that would demand for EIA reports before developing any new structure.

Community leaders from the 17 wards of the LGA lamented the menace of flooding and blamed government contractor­s for not appropriat­ely channeling water into drainages to check flooding.

They therefore called on government to come to their aid by prevailing on the constructi­on companies to become compliant, adding that flood recently affected over eight communitie­s including Nkpolu, Ogbogoro and Rumuibekwe in the LGA. The state government has lamented over the perennial flood menace which it blamed the residents for as they blocked water channels and flood routes.

The Commission­er for Environmen­t, Prof. Rosaline Konya, while sympathisi­ng with the victims of flooding in the state recently, threatened to pull down houses built on water channels.

Prof. Konya said the ministry will soon embark on pulling down of houses and structures built on water channels as a measure to checkmate perennial flooding across the state, especially in Port Harcourt.

 ?? Photo: Benedict Uwalaka ?? Illegal disposal of refuse at a residentia­l area at Dopemu in Lagos
Photo: Benedict Uwalaka Illegal disposal of refuse at a residentia­l area at Dopemu in Lagos

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