Flood submerges 300 Nasarawa farms, kills one person 

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Over 300 farms and crops worth millions of naira have been submerged as a result of heavy flooding that in the Kokona and Doma local government areas of Nasarawa State.

Also, one person was reported dead due to the flooding.

The Director General of Nasarawa State Emergency Management Agency, Benjamin Akwash, stated this in Lafia after an assessment of the affected areas.

He explained that the agency has been carrying out sensitisation campaigns in flood-prone communities and engaging stakeholders on the need to adopt safety measures and comply with weather forecasts issued by relevant authorities.

The DG decried the nonchalant attitude of people living in high-risk areas towards relocating to higher ground despite repeated warnings.

He said, “People are finding it difficult to move to safer grounds. They prefer to remain on their ancestral lands despite repeated alerts from authorities. This is unacceptable. We cannot continue to play laxity with human lives, there must be a way out.

“The state government has been working on sustainable flood prevention strategies to curb the annual disasters, rather than focusing solely on post-disaster relief efforts.

“We have embarked on full assessment of the devastation in Nasarawa, Kokona, and Doma Local Government Areas, where the disaster destroyed hundreds of hectares of farmlands and claimed one life.

“This is a major setback in our drive to achieve food security and sufficiency. Preliminary reports show that more than 300 farmlands with crops have been completely washed away” .

Akwash enjoined residents in riverine areas, particularly those in the five most vulnerable Local Government Areas of Doma, Nasarawa, Toto, Awe, and Kokona, to relocate to safer grounds in order to protect their lives and property as the rainy season continues to intensify.

He equally intimated that the state government had concluded plans to distribute food and non-food relief materials to flood victims and other disaster-affected communities.

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