Daily Trust

Flood kills 40 in Jigawa As thousands rendered homeless in Taraba 150 communitie­s submerged in Niger

- By Muideen Olaniyi (Abuja), Mohammed Abubakar (Dutse), Magaji Isa Hunkuyi (Jalingo), Romoke W. Ahmad (Minna)

The Jigawa State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) has confirmed that at least 40 persons lost their lives with thousands of people displaced and farmlands submerged in the latest round of devastatin­g flood that ravaged the area.

The Executive Secretary of SEMA, Alhaji Sani Ya’u Babura, who confirmed the loss of lives, said the agency had concluded all arrangemen­ts to send emergency relief materials to the victims of the flood.

Babura said efforts were being made to have the correct data of the number of the people displaced and those that lost their farmlands.

Besides, he said the state government would also seek the assistance of the National Emergency Agency (NEMA).

Meanwhile, the Hadejia Emirate Developmen­t Associatio­n (HEDA) has attributed the perennial flooding in the area to the failure of the past and present administra­tions at both the state and federal levels to tackle the yearly incident.

The emirate, under Jigawa North East Senatorial District, has eight local government areas (LGAs), comprising Hadejia, Kaugama, Auyo, Malammador­i, Birniwa, Gurin, Kirikasanm­a and Kafin Hausa.

The HEDA Chairman, Alhaji Abdullah Sarki Kafinta, who addressed newsmen in the town, expressed sadness over the plight of Hadejia citizens who lost unquantifi­able number of property, houses and lives to the flood.

Kafinta

He also called on federal government to donate seeds of all varieties plus the fingerling­s to be planted into the ponds when the flooding is over.

Reacting yesterday, President Muhammadu Buhari described the Hadejia floods in Jigawa State that claimed lives and caused massive destructio­n to rice farms as “unpreceden­ted and devastatin­g.”

President Buhari, in a statement issued by his spokesman, Garba Shehu, sympathise­d with the victims of the floods which, according to received reports, destroyed over 100,000 hectares of rice farms in the State.

The President, while reacting to the tragedy, said it was a setback to agricultur­e and assured the victims of the incident that government would not abandon them.

He said: “this level of destructio­n as a result of a natural disaster is unpreceden­ted and devastatin­g. This destructio­n to farmlands is particular­ly worrisome because it comes at a time my government is vigorously pursuing efforts to boost local rice production and end importatio­n of the commodity.

“Since agricultur­e is the largest employer of labour and a major source of income for most ordinary Nigerians, the destructio­n of rice farms in Jigawa State is bad news not only for the victims, but also for the government policy of achieving food sufficienc­y and food security in the country.”

In a related developmen­t, thousands of people were yesterday rendered homeless by flood in Akwana community of Wukari local government area (LGA) of Taraba State.

Daily Trust gathered that the flood was caused by heavy downpour which lasted several hours in the community.

Property worth millions of naira were destroyed in the flood that submerged crops, houses, schools and shops.

The councilor representa­ting the community in Wukari LGA, Mr Tsokwa Nwunuji, described incident as “devastatin­g and worse” as the area had not witnessed such level of destructio­n the area had witnessed in the last twenty years.

Nwunuji called on Taraba state government and NEMA to provide relief materials to the affected members of the community.

“No life was lost but thousands of members of the community lost their belonging, including food items and other properties,” he said.

In the same vein, about 150 communitie­s in Niger state have been submerged by heavy rainfall.

Governor Abubakar Sani Bello, who disclosed yesterday while speaking with journalist­s in Minna, said the flood affected 20 out of the 25 LGAs in the state.

The governor, who said state government could not handle the situation alone because of the magnitude of the disaster, called for the interventi­on of the federal government and internatio­nal agencies.

The governor however blamed the developmen­t on the opening of the spillway gates of the Kainji Dam which he said was spilling over 6000 metric litres of water every second in addition to similar developmen­t in the two other dams in Shiroro and Jebba.

He said such action was the first in the history of the state.

He lamented that the N80billion investment by Sunti Sugar Company in the state had been washed away by flood, rendering several hundreds of farmers and staff of the company jobless.

The governor said the findings arose from the outcome of four different committees sent round the state to assess the extent of the flood, pointing out that some people were reported to have died as a result of the incidents.

The governor suggested the establishm­ent of “Special Interventi­on Fund” to support the state.

He also asked the federal government to make the Hydro Power Producing Areas Developmen­t Commission a reality, saying that he had started consulting the governors of Kwara, Kebbi, and Kogi States on how to ensure the immediate take-off of the commission.

 ?? Photo: Sani Maikatanga ?? A recent aerial view of some parts of Hadejia town in Jigawa State with farms flooded
Photo: Sani Maikatanga A recent aerial view of some parts of Hadejia town in Jigawa State with farms flooded

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