The Chairman, Kebbi State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), Alhaji Sani Dododo, on Friday said that five bridges located in different parts of the state had so far been washed away by flood.
Dododo stated this at a meeting with stakeholders held at the Cabinet Office in Birnin Kebbi, described the situation as worrisome.
He said that the incident had cut many communities off from the state capital.
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The meeting was organised by SEMA to deliberate and provide lasting solution to the envisaged flooding this year.
Earlier, Nigerian Meteorological Agency had forecasted that Kebbi would be among the states to be hit by flood this year, beginning from September 6.
Dododo also said that the essence of the meeting was to intimate the stakeholders on the impending flood threat facing the state.
He said: “Because of this, I invited the Commissioner for Works so that he can play his role in providing solution to bridge collapse.
“For example, people of Jabbeji have no access to the state capital, Bagudo and Dododo communities too cannot transport themselves to the state capital because five bridges have been washed away.
Dododo expressed joy that the agency had enough food and clothes in stock.
He said that the Federal Government had allocated 125 trailers of food to the state as COVID-19 palliative.
He said that so far the state had received over 70 trailers which, according to him, will be used to assist displaced flood victims.
Also, the General Manager, Kebbi State Urban Development Authority (KUDA), Alhaji Aliyu Umar, called for a permanent relocation of people living in flood prone areas instead of temporary solution.
Umar, who was represented by the Director, Town Planning, Alhaji Abubakar Abubakar, expressed concern that after every rainy season, flood victims usually returned to their initial settlement forgetting their past experience.
“Some years back, four villages on the way to Argungu were permanently relocated, government secured a piece of land, paid compensation and resettled the people there.
“As I am talking now, those villages have gradually expanded and nobody is willing to go back to their former settlement because they are safer and more comfortable,” Umar said.
He attributed the recurrence of flood in the state to government’s negligence concerning layout, adding that government allowed farmland owners to design and sell lands at will.
According to him, in both urban and rural areas nobody cares about who buys what land talk-less of how and where to build houses.
He advised SEMA to collaborate with the state Ministry of Lands and Housing and traditional rulers to do a survey of those living in flood prone areas so that they would be relocated to permanent locations.
A prominent Islamic scholar, Abdurrahman Isa-Jega, appealed to government to come to the aid of refugees.
Isa-Jega said that it was the duty of government to take care of those in need, especially the poor.
“As citizens of this country, poor people have rights to state’s resources, so government should be able to make life easy for the common man.
“Government has the power to relocate people in the event of disaster and it has the power to revoke lands for road and drainage purposes or anything that will benefit the society,” the Islamic cleric said.
Those in attendance at the meeting included the Chairman, House Committee on Disaster Management and Emergency, Kebbi State House of Assembly and General Manager, KUDA, among others.
Credit: NAN