Some houses along the bank of
River Niger in Lokoja, Kogi State, have been flooded following excess
discharge of water from the river between Wednesday night and Thursday
morning.
A correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria who, on Thursday,
visited some of the affected houses at Kpata, Adankolo and Gadumo areas
of Lokoja, reports that no life was lost to the flooding.
NAN, however, learnt that property worth several millions of Naira were submerged by the flood.
Some affected residents said they woke up to discover that their houses
had been flooded, a development which they attributed to excess
discharge of water from the River Niger.
They said the water level increased tremendously, fearing that the
river might eventually overrun the entire houses on its bank in due
course.
A landlord in one of the affected houses in Adankolo area, Alhaji Mohammed Ibrahim, told NAN that he moved into his eight-room building in 2011.
He said he was living peacefully with his three wives and 11 children until the recent flooding.
Ibrahim, who was moving out his family and property out of the house when NAN visited, said the eight rooms were flooded.
He said he would not take the risk of sleeping in the house on Thursday night.
Mr. Musa Hayatu, who was a tenant in the area, said he had relocated
his wife and child to another house in the town as a result of the
flood.
Hayatu, who NAN correspondent met moving out his personal belongings from the house, said he had no intention of returning to the house.
Another landlord, Mr Hussein Bawa, who owns a two-bedroom apartment
located on Hausa Street, Adankolo, said a relation had offered him a
room as a temporary abode.
He said he would consider returning to the house when the water level dropped.
Sule Alli, who claimed to have been living in his house located on the
river bank since 1996, said the last time the area experienced flooding
was in 2008.
Alli, who stated that he was born and bred in the area, however, said
the high water level was not enough to send him packing out of his
house, saying that he had no where to run to.
Some tenants, who also spoke to NAN, said they had started moving out of the houses as they feared that the flooding might further spread inward.
The residents, who claimed to have heard the warnings from radio and
television programmes, claimed that no official from the State
Emergency Management Agency or the Lokoja Local Government had visited
them to give them any information.
Attempts to speak with the Executive Secretary of SEMA, Mrs Alice Ogedengbe, did not succeed as she was said to be busy. NAN reports that those who spoke to NAN confirmed that
they were aware of the several warnings from a Federal Government
agency, NIMET, urging some states to prepare for flooding in their areas
of authority.
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