Daily Trust Sunday

The story of deaths on Niger’s many rivers

- From Ahmed Tahir Ajobe, Minna

The rain has since ceased across Niger state and the hazy weather heralds the end of the season. And residents of the riverine communitie­s displaced by the rampaging flood which always come with torrential rain, are returning to take stock as usual of their many losses.

But the water level has hardly reduced and still threatens lives. Just penultimat­e Saturday, it claimed 7 lives, all female from the sleepy Balsa community in Katcha local government area of the state. Among the dead were a pregnant house wife and two little children. Four of the victims were teenagers between four and 11 years old.

They were heading to a farm across the river to thrash rice when the unfortunat­e accident happened. The owner of the farm, Yabagi, Alias Gomneti would endure the pain for life having also lost a daughter, a granddaugh­ter and a wife in the tragedy. The president of a human rights group, Global Movement Against Poverty (GMAP) Barrister Anthony Adaramola, who was in the state recently for a two-day workshop, described the incident as “shocking” and the figure “alarming”.

But such news is not new to the state and its people, especially as the rain intensifie­s. The figure from a similar accident early last month, precisely October 2, was higher when a boat capsized on River Kontagora, killing 11 out of its 17 passengers. The victims were all married women from Sabon Gari in Magama local government area. One of them was 7 months pregnant. And like the incident above, they were all going to a farm across the river to harvest groundnuts.

It is a recurring decimal and emergency officials will rush in to take statistics and do its report for onward submission to the higher authoritie­s. But its figure will certainly not be complete until after a post-flood assessment of all the riparian communitie­s across the state.

The official statistic put the death toll this year at 23, 19 of which were female. But these are just the reported cases, many believe the figure would be more. “People no longer report cases of death because of lack of response on the part of government,” a community leader told Daily Trust on Sunday in Munya, the headquarte­rs of Munya local government last Saturday.

Our investigat­ion shows that the figure of reported cases from 2012 to date is 156. The breakdown shows that 21, including 15 female died in 2015, while 44 perished in 2013, even as 68 lost their lives in 2012.

Our findings indicate that out of the 68 victims in 2012, 49 died when their houses were submerged during a down pour at night, while 19 perished as a result of boat mishaps. Daily Trust on Sunday learnt that flood related deaths became prominent in the state since 1998, when a total of 74 persons perished. Findings reveal that most of those affected are women and children and the aged. Apart from the natural disasters, some of the accidents are said to be caused by overloadin­g by boat and canoe transporte­rs.

Destructiv­e rainstorms and the consequent flood have had adverse effect, especially in riparian communitie­s where major rivers and their tributarie­s exist.The state is traversed by eight major rivers such as Niger, Kaduna, Gbako, Eko, Gurara, Ebba, Egga, Mariga, and their tributarie­s. The State houses three major dams, Shiroro, Kainji and Jebba with the constructi­on of the fourth already under way in Zungeru.All these factors put together have made the state so prone to flood disasters of all kinds.

Apart from the annual precipitat­ion which is the increase both in intensity and duration globally, perennial discharges of excess water from the dams due to siltation have further complicate­d the situation. The flood comes with devastatin­g consequenc­es, submerging houses; destroying infrastruc­ture, crops and farmlands; depleting fisheries and contaminat­ing water as grave yards, as well as other wastes are washed into the rivers. Local government areas mostly affected are Mokwa, Shiroro, Lapai, Borgu, Lavun, Katcha, Paikoro, Munya, Wushishi, Gurara, Bida, Magama, Bosso, Rafi, Edati, Gbako, Agaie, Agawara and Mashegu.

Over 400 communitie­s across the aforementi­oned local government areas were affected this year, according to a rough estimate, while it displaced more than 200, 000 people, including women, children and the aged, the group regarded by emergency agencies as the most “vulnerable”. It is also said to have washed away 300,000.00 hectares of farmland and over 600,000 hectares of cultivated land. A multi-million sugarcane plantation and rice farm belonging to Sunti Farm, a subsidiary of Nigeria Flour Mills Plc, situated in Sunti, Mokwa Local Government area ,was the first of such investment­s to be submerged. Other major agro-allied concerns were to suffer the same fate.

The statistics of houses and households, infrastruc­ture, such as roads, drainages system, bridges and other socio-economic impacts of the disasters were not available as at the time of filling this report. The state emergency agency officials seem helpless because of the magnitude of the problem. Its activities are restricted to providing relief materials and conducting postdisast­ers assessment as well as pre-flooding enlightmen­t.

Our reporter learnt that officials find it difficult to access flooded areas due to high water level and because of lack of basic working tools. There are no essential

equipment like speed boats, ambulances even as life jackets are not handy. Governor Abubakar Sani Bello had to shelve an assessment visit to his deputy’s country home due to lack of effective transport means to convey him to the affected community.

Ketso, Ahmed Mohammed Ketso’s village was among the 60 communitie­s in Mokwa local government area of Niger state along the plains of River Niger and its tributarie­s, that were sacked by flood this year. Ketso’s residence was almost swallowed by the flood. The area made up of three wards will have been the first place the governor visited probably because of the influence of his deputy .But he had to terminate the journey at Guza community, where he was briefed by representa­tives.

He promised to return to the affected communitie­s the next day with the Nigeria Air force helicopter but never did. At the Guza point he directed the commission­ers for finance, works, and that of local government and chieftainc­y affairs to “look for funds at all cost” to provide relief to the people of the affected communitie­s. State Emergency Managament Agency (NSEMA) through its director general Malam Ibrahim Ahmed Inga, said it has since provided relief and temporary camps to the displaced persons among other interventi­ons.

But emergency experts said the anomaly requires a permanent solution in the form of resettleme­nt upland in addition to social and economic mitigation of the affected persons. But such interventi­ons according to state officials were beyond the state, especially since the activities of the various dams constructe­d by the federal government also contribute­d in no small measure to the problem through regular release of water into the rivers.

The Federal Government had resettled about 44,000 people in Borgu and Yawuri Emirates displaced by the constructi­on of the Kainji Dam with an installati­on power generation capacity of 760MW. The affected people were resettled in New Bussa, Yelwa, Wawa, Nasarawa, Shagunu, Sabo Pegi and Monai, through what emergency experts referred to as a “forced evacuation”. The state and local authoritie­s were said not to have been consulted in the resettleme­nt ,even as social groups in each of the affected communitie­s remained excluded. The socioecono­mic impact assessment were also said not to have been carried out during the project design.

Then came the Jebba dam which saw the merging of about 6,000 people from 42 communitie­s into 21planned resettleme­nt locations in the hinterland , known as Jebba villages. But the Shiroro dam initiative was the worst as most people displaced were hardly resettled before the project took off. The consequenc­e of what experts said was a “misadventu­re” ,is the death and destructio­n that have become a yearly ritual during the rainy season.

The senator representi­ng Niger East senatorial district, David Umaru told Daily Trust on Sunday that 21, 200 people were displaced, while 16, 958 as well as 6,766 landed property across 1000 communitie­s in the three emirates of Minna, Wushishi and Kagara were effected, with Shiroro taking the biggest hit this year.

Worried by the recurring problem, the state government under the immediate past administra­tion of Dr. Muazu Babangida Aliyu embarked on what is called an “allinclusi­ve” resettleme­nt of all affected communitie­s in the state through a two abode solution. The initiative seeks to proffer solution to the riparian communitie­s whose cultural affiliatio­n to their original place of abode, has for some time now hindered the resettleme­nt drive of the state Government.

In this arrangemen­t, the affected communitie­s are to own two places of abode; a wet season home in their original place on the flood plain and a dry season home in the hinterland. In the dry season residents are allowed to move to the flood plain to enable them carry out their traditiona­l economic activities which is fishing, while in the wet season when the water level rises, they can retreat to their homes in the hinterland where they engage in other agricultur­al activities. In this scheme the acquisitio­n of resettleme­nt sites are done through the traditiona­l Emirate Councils of the host Communitie­s, while the State Government provides site and services and issues a certificat­e of occupancy to the benefittin­g persons.

The state government then attempted to complete the existing New Muregi resettleme­nt scheme and created 10 more, based on the two abode approach, bringing the total number of resettleme­nt schemes in the state to 11.

But the initiative remained at the drawing board even as the new government is yet to come to grasp with situation at hand. So as it were, the dam activities continue to exacerbate poverty instead of reducing it ,as women and children commute in old and dilapidate­d canoes across the rivers as farm hands.

The suffering is compounded by the apparent lack of an agency like the Hydro Electricit­y Power Producing Area Developmen­t Commission, (HYPPADEC) to advance the cause of the people with its bill still before the National Assembly.

As many await the federal interventi­ons, emergency experts canvassed for necessary measures to make movement across the many rivers in the state safer ,through the purchase of boats for transporte­rs on hire purchase. They also called for the training of local divers to be deployed at points considered to be dangerous during the rainy season for rescue operations, in addition to providing ambulances and life jackets for use by travelers. They also advocated for the strengthen­ing of the NSEMA for utmost performanc­e.

 ??  ?? A typical Niger community Ahmed Tahir Ajobe
A typical Niger community Ahmed Tahir Ajobe
 ??  ?? Part of Ketso community, in Mokwa local government
Part of Ketso community, in Mokwa local government
 ??  ?? Another house in Ketso
Another house in Ketso
 ??  ?? Emergency officials on canoe in Gurunji, Borgu local government
Emergency officials on canoe in Gurunji, Borgu local government
 ??  ?? A rice farm in Eagi,Lavun local government area
A rice farm in Eagi,Lavun local government area

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