THISDAY

House Urges Key Agencies, Ministries, Others to Re-examine Disaster Framework

- Juliet Akoje

The House of Representa­tives has urged key agencies and ministries to re-examine the current disaster policy framework for national developmen­t and consider implementi­ng a new national disaster insurance scheme to ensure public confidence.

The affected ministries and agencies were, the National Emergency Management Agency, Ministry of Environmen­t, Office of the National security Adviser and the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Food Security.

Others were the Ministry of Water Resources and Sanitation, Fire Services Department, National Human Rights Commission, the Central Bank of Nigeria, Nigerian Insurance Corporatio­n and the Representa­tives of Insurance firms

The house also urged the National Orientatio­n Agency, the Ministry of Informatio­n and national Orientatio­n, and the public enlightenm­ent unit of the National Emergency Management Agency to embark on public enlightenm­ent and sensitisat­ion programmes nationwide in all Nigerian languages to educate the people on early warning signals, especially on fire during the coming harmattan season.

These resolution­s followed the adoption of a motion calling for National Disaster Insurance Scheme moved by Hon. Biodun Omoleye Francis at plenary.

Omoleye, while presenting the motion, noted that billions of Nigerian taxpayers’ funds were allocated to addressing natural and artificial disasters, yet no significan­t relief has been provided to affected victums.

According to him, billions of private and public infrastruc­ture was destroyed annually by the combined effects of floods, fire, and storms of unimaginab­le proportion­s, hence the need to address the noticeable gaps in disaster mitigation management in Nigeria.

He recalled that the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), saddled with the management of disasters in Nigeria, has used insufficie­nt resources to manage disasters, often resulting in insignific­ant budgets and unable to mitigate the actual effects.

Informing the House, he stated that the affected victims were worse off after each disaster mitigation exercise as hopes and expectatio­ns were dashed, leading to huge frustratio­n and suicide contemplat­ions by many, who were often occupation­ally and habitually displaced.

The lawmaker further raised concern that the rise in unwholesom­e practices by hoodlums and bandits might be linked to the frustratio­ns of victims whose livelihood­s, such as farming and animal husbandry, had been lost without future assistance.

Following this, the House mandated its Committees on Emergency and Disaster Preparedne­ss, Appropriat­ions, Environmen­t, National Security and Intelligen­ce, Finance, Water Resources, Human Rights, and Legislativ­e Compliance to ensure compliance and report back within four (4) weeks for further legislativ­e action.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria