BORNO STATE, Nigeria
At least 414,000 people have been displaced and another 30 killed by the devastating flood in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital on Tuesday.
National Emergency Management
Agency said the flood began after the Alau Dam overflowed following heavy rains
leading to the town’s worst flooding in 30 years, according to the United
Nations Human Rights Refugee Council and Maiduguri Metropolitan Council
residents.
NEMA spokesman Manzo Ezekiel
told our reporter on Wednesday that the death toll had hit 30 and displaced
persons close to half a million.
“It’s 30 people that have been
recorded dead so far, around 414,000 people were displaced and are in nine IDP
camps across the state,” Manzo said.
According to NEMA, more than
23,000 households have been hit by the rapid rise of waters following the
weekend rupture of the Alau dam on the Ngadda River, 20km south of Maiduguri.
Reports indicate the water had
receded as of Wednesday after 70 per cent of Maiduguri was submerged by the
fast-moving waters, according to NEMA, which ravaged major city locations,
including the palace of the Shehu of Borno, Umar Ibn Garbai El-Kanemi; the
state secretariat, post office, cemetery, and the University of Maiduguri
Teaching Hospital.
The flood also washed away 80
per cent of animals at the Sanda Kyarimi Park zoo, and damaged houses, schools,
as well as commercial and worship centres.
President Bola Tinubu
expressed deep concerns over the flooding and tasked relevant government
agencies to expedite rescue efforts while Vice President Kashim Shettima
arrived in the Borno capital Tuesday to conduct an on-the-ground assessment of
the devastating floods.
Tinubu also called for the
immediate evacuation of residents in communities overtaken by floods.
The Governor of Borno State,
Babagana Zulum, told journalists that a preliminary assessment conducted by the
government showed that more than a third of Maiduguri was flooded, which
affected an estimated one million people following the heavy flooding.
“The floods covered one-third
of the city, affecting over one million people. It is very devastating,” Zulum
said while distributing cash and food to thousands of displaced persons at a
camp.
Zulu added that the Federal
Government allocated N3bn for rehabilitation of the victims, adding that the
funds would be used to provide food and other essential supplies, as well as
support long-term strategies, including health monitoring to prevent disease
outbreaks.
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