Thursday, 11 October 2012

THE DOME: ANOTHER OF SUCH FAILED GOVERNOR MIMIKO’S PROJECTS


By Olarewaju Olaniyi Precious
It will be recalled that in 2009, Governor Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo State shortly after he retrieved his mandate made known his intention to build an International Cultural and Event Centre in Akure, the Ondo State capital. The event centre christened “DOME” will house a 2,500 capacity hall and other complimentary facilities such as a five star hotel, a massive car park and an head room of about five feet tall. The project according to him will be built on a large expanse of land totaling 34hectares. On the 18th of January, 2010, major national dailies in the country reported that Dr Mimiko has flagged of the construction of the said project and the contract was awarded to Messrs Dream Media Network Limited at a whooping cost of 1.5billon Naira, the project has a five calendar months completion period.
Dome: a typical abandoned project in Akure South
The Dome: a typical abandoned project in Akure South
In the words of Mr Governor, he said “following the completion of the project, Ondo State would rank among the state that can host any international conference without being fret about the venue”, the governor went further to describe the cultural and event centre as the first of such type in the country. He justified the need for the construction of the dome in his address as he further said the centre became imperative as a result of the unsuitability of the existing banquet hall which was small in size and too close to an office complex. With the foundation laying ceremony of the project, citizens of the state went on wild jubilation as they see this as a good step taken by the government believing when completed, it will up the stock of the state among comity of states. This to them further justified the long and tortuous struggle they faced in ensuring Dr Mimiko regained his mandate after close to two years of legal tussle.
Unfortunately , as the five months project completion period of the dome was about to lapse, the dear people of the Sunshine State who have eagerly been awaiting the commissioning of the said monumental project were greeted with an huge disappointment as the then commissioner for Lands and Housing, Alhaji Sikiru Basaru in a press conference announced to the dismay of all that the project will be completed in December 2010, he attributed this to the delay due to various processes involved in the execution of the project reminding the people that the project is the first of such in Africa coupled with the need to ensure structural stability and said the six additional month is a slight delay. He continued saying the State Governor while in Poland came up with a new idea of changing the initial material called Valmex to Glass in other to have a robust finishing materials. He claimed Valmex has a warranty period of 40 years but with glass, there is 100years warranty hence, the Governor directed the contractor right from Poland to make use of glass.
It was at this point that the citizens began to suspect foul plays, further enquiries on the capability of the contractor handling the project were made and it was at that point the people found out the company is owned by one Adetokunbo Modupe who owns a B. Sc degree in Sociology and his area of experience is Public relations, publishing and Events planning. A local online newspaper further revealed that the project’s award violated the public procurement act and failed the public service transparency creed when it was awarded via a fiat to Messrs Dream Media Network Limited, a new company that has never been involved in any construction work and who’s only known activity is to develop presentations using power-point. Dream Media Network Limited’s primary business is in fact media and public relations. Granted that the Nigeria’s Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) allows for the registration of ‘gbogbolese’ companies, a euphemism for companies that can do any job even when they have no such capability, the company is a gross aberration for the type of project handed it in Ondo State.
The suspicion of the people grew rife when in December 2010, the project still remained invisible in the State and government continued to assure that work is going on at the project site located along Igbatoro road shortly before you get to the House of Assembly’s Arcade. The people became more vociferous, the former Labour Party Chairman in the state, Dr Olaiya Oni in an interview granted Newswatch magazine in October, 2011 gave a well elaborated insight into the numerous shams being perpetuated by the Mimiko’s government and he talked extensively on the Dome project which he described as yet another monumental failure by the Mimiko’s government. Two years after the promise, the site of the proposed project can only compete with the thick forest described in Wole Soyinka’s Forest of a Thousand Demons. The project has become an albatross hanging loosely around the neck of the governor as it appears to have washed all credibility away from his government.
Concerns are being raised by citizens of the State over the rationale behind allegedly paying 75% of the contract total sum to Dream Media Network Limited, the contractors to whom the project was awarded, while nothing concrete has been done with tax payers’ money. With the growing vociferous voice of the critics and glut of petitions generated by the controversial project, Mr Governor in another display of confusion has come up with a rather unconvincing tale which is becoming more familiar of late on why the project has not been completed, he was reported to have said that the main reason why the Dome project has not been completed is majorly because of the problems encountered in importing materials needed for its completion just like he blamed the take off of the controversial 5.75billion naira Cement factory in Okeluse on Power.
Olarewaju Olaniyi Precious
Convener,
Ondo State Youth Coalition Front
LibertyReporter

2013 Budget: Jonathan Proposes N4.9 trillion Expenditure


President Jonathan at the National Assembly
President Goodluck  Jonathan presented the proposed 2013 budget to the National Assembly yesterday. The N4.92 trillion budget is 5% more than the N4.7 trillion budget approved for 2012.
The proposed budget contains a lion-share of N1.1 trillion budgeted for education (N426.53 billion), defense (N348.9 billion) and police (N319.65 billion).
N279.23 billion is budgeted for health, N183.5 billion for Works,  N81.1 billion for Agriculture, and N74 billion for power.
The budget was based on a benchmark of $75/barrel, a Jonathan discarded the $80 proposed by the National Aseembly saying the $75/barrel was a more scientific figure.
He said the decision was “based on a well established econometric methodology of estimating oil price moving averages.”
The N4.92 trillion budget is divided as follows:
  1. Recurrent Expenditure: N 2.41 trillion
  2. Capital Expenditure: N1.5 trillion
  3. Statutory Transfers: N380.02 billion
  4. Debt Servicing: N591.76 billion
The budget has a deficit of N1.03 trillion.
Speaking on the macro-economic realities that saw the executive cut the GDP forecast to 6.5% from the 6.85% earlier proposed in the Fiscal Strategy Framework earlier sent to the National Assembly, President Jonathan said the revision was necessary due to the impacts of the flood on the economy.
“The revision is underpinned by the fact that the severe floods experienced over large parts of the country are expected to impact on economic activity in 2013, especially Agriculture. However, the growth prospects may improve with the plan to boost dry season farming.
“Non-oil revenue is projected to continue to grow in 2013 as the ongoing reforms in our revenue collecting agencies and the implementation of initiatives to further develop the non-oil sector continue to yield results.
“Based on the above, the fiscal deficit is projected to improve to about 2.17 per cent of GDP in the 2013 Budget compared to 2.85 per cent in 2012.  This is well within the threshold stipulated in the Fiscal Responsibility Act 2007 and clearly highlights our commitment to fiscal prudence.  “We are determined to further rein-in domestic borrowing, and this way, ensure that our debt stock remains at a sustainable level,” said the president.
The President said his administration would seek a $1 billion Eurobond that would help the government complete gas pipelines and other infrastructure projects.
Mr. President said he submitted the budget proposal earlier than usual this year in other to ensure that the level of implementation was improved by his cabinet.
He said, ” I have signed Performance Agreement Contracts with my ministers with a view to ensuring delivery of projects and programmes in their respective budgets.
“The ministers in turn, are signing similar agreements with their permanent secretaries, heads of parastatals and directors to cascade down the need for responsibility and accountability. Key government officials with responsibility for implementing different aspects of the budget will be appraised based on these performance agreements,” he added.
 BusinessNews

“Our leaders love to rule and die in office” – Former Speaker, Bankole


Mr. Oladimeji Bankole
Embattled former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr. Oladimeji Bankole had on Thursday, berated Nigerian leaders for not giving the youth the opportunity to lead, rather they prefer to ‘die in office.’
The ex lawmaker had expressed his frustration over the matter in Abeokuta, Ogun State capital at the commencement of a public lecture of the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta (FUNAB) in Alabata.
The Lecture was entitled : “Mentoring and the challenges of leadership in Africa.”
According to Bankole, “These leaders failed to mentor those who are to take over from them and what we have instead are sit-tight leaders, who decide to die in office. Nigeria will only be placed on the path
of progress, growth and development when we start to prepare our youths for leadership.
“Proper tutelage is indispensable for success in any vocation and Nigeria must urgently start the process of dis-allowing untutored and untested persons from been given the saddle of leadership.”
Bankole said: “I wish to propose that we give further thought to ensuring that the choice of deputies is underlined by the requirement of competence and a modicum of collective enlightened self-interest.
“Another is the development of the agricultural sector. Studies have shown that our farming population across the country is ageing fast.
We must seek to build a system that enables us make creative use of people, who have occupied leading positions in our national life to gain useful experience.”
The ex speaker was of the opinion that democracy would survive if mentoring of upcoming leaders was taken seriously.
Present during the lecture were: Mr. Gbenga Adefaye, Editor-in-Chief/GM, Publication, Vanguard newspaper, and President, Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE).
Others include: former Head of Service of the Federation, Prof. Oladapo Afolabi, who chaired the occasion, and the Vice Chancellor of FUNAB, Prof. Olusola Oyewole.
 DailyPost

Absenteeism: Governor Oshiomhole fires 20 teachers


Edo state governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole has given a directive that about 20 teachers in the state-owned primary schools in Benin, the state capital be sacked.
Oshiomole declared that his administration would ensure discipline amongst staff of the State Public school system.
The governor disclosed this decision when he embarked on an emergency visit to some schools in the state capital, stating that the suitable learning environment provided by the state government would be useless
if teachers failed to make adequate use of the current atmosphere by stepping up their games in line with the vision of the state..
At Asoro primary school, the governor observed discrepancy in the teachers register as those signed in earlier in the day, were absent when he visited.
The Governor also visited Western Boys High School and Emokpae Primary School.
In his address at Western Boys High School, the Governor called for significant change in the attitude of teachers towards work.
He also expressed his displeasure at the rot in the education system.
However, at George Idah and Esonere primary schools, all the teachers were present at the time of the Governor’s visit. They conveyed their appreciation to the Governor for infrastructural development in the
school.
At another school visited, Payne Primary School, the Head Teacher, Mrs. Ojo pleaded with the Governor to provide more basic amenities for the school.
DailyPost

Tony Uranta Reveals That Police And JTF Watched Helplessly As ‘Aluu4′ Were Murdered


The revelation by Tony Uranta, a public affairs analyst, today, that two different patrol teams were on hand at the scene where the four UNIPORT undergraduate students were murdered, is a clear indication of complicity and dereliction of duty by Nigeria’s security forces. Mr Uranta confirmed that the location where the incident took place was within five different outposts of police and JTF.
He further said that the Police did not attempt to disperse the crowd before the boys were killed and left to him the DPO and others should be charged to court.
According to Mr. Uranta, who was a guest on Sunrise Daily, “the problem we have in this country is that no government official can be charged to court and if the issue is not properly taken up he will go on a one-man protest”.
Mr. Uranta said he was not pleased with President Goodluck Jonathan for not making a mention of the Mubi or Port Harcourt killings in his address yesterday and he felt the president lacked empathy as the issue of flood was not the biting issue as of the time he addressed the nation and he is sure the so-called fund being disbursed for flood disaster has been penned down for embezzlement.
MizSunshine Gist

Wednesday, 10 October 2012

My Church Is Bigger than Yours

By Femi Aribisala
The popularity of a church is eloquent testimony of failure and not of success.
They contradict the counsel of the Lord without batting their eyelids.  They plant church parishes like supermarkets in every street-corner.  They build cathedrals and church monuments like World Trade Centres, each one striving to be the biggest and most splendiferous in the universe.  They gather thousands, even millions, of “worshippers” in front of television-cameras every so often on the mountains of Kilimanjaro.  They are the new spiritual superstars; the mega-pastors of the mega-churches.
In this conceit, my former church, Redeemed, takes the cake.  While Redeemed’s emphasis on branch-networking and exponential growth might be a wonderful policy for a fast-food chain, as a framework for a Christian organisation, it has tended to produce half-baked pastors who exhibit flagrant disregard for godly propriety.
Carnal growth
In the world today, success in “churchianity” is measured by the size of the congregation and not by changed lives.  Accordingly, highfalutin mega-pastors have fine-tuned church-growth strategies.  It’s all a question of numbers, numbers and more numbers.  Numbers determine how much money is fleeced from the flock.  Numbers determine the extent of pastoral control and captivity of men.  When pastors meet, the unspoken question is “how big is your church?”  The answer determines social status.  Like Mordecai to Haman, the mini-pastors are required to bow down to the mega-pastors.
Men like Pastor Sunday Adelaja of Embassy of God Church, Kiev, Ukraine even maintain God gave them the specific mandate to establish mega-churches.  Adelaja claims God told him: “I am about to raise up a mega-church in Europe, at this end time and I am calling people who will establish those churches. Some people have already responded to my call. Your destiny and that of millions of other people depend on whether or not you will obey me. The primary assignment is to raise up a mega-church.”
However, God does not raise up churches: he has only one church.  He does not ask men to build churches for him.  Jesus says: “I will build my church.” (Matthew 16:18).  Moreover, God despises what men esteem. (Luke 16:15).  Therefore, he generally prefers the mini to the mega.  He says: “Woe to the multitude of many people who make a noise like the roar of the seas.” (Isaiah 17:12).  Jesus identifies God’s flock as little, as opposed to large.  He says: “Do not fear, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.” (Luke 12:32).  Thus, Zechariah asks rhetorically: “Who has despised the day of small things?” (Zechariah 4:10).
Kingdom dynamics
Indeed, according to Jesus’ kingdom dynamics, the popularity of a church is eloquent testimony of failure and not of success.  Jesus told his disciples: “The world would love you if you belonged to it; but you don’t- for I chose you to come out of the world, and so it hates you.” (John 15:19).  However, the world loves today’s mega-pastors.  Nothing rubbished Pastor Adeboye’s ministry more than Newsweek’s declaration that he is one of the world’s most respected men.  Jesus says: “Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for so did their fathers to the false prophets.” (Luke 6:26).
The wisdom of God is contrarian, “she calls aloud in the street; she raises her voice in the public squares.” (Proverbs 1:20).  “No king is saved by the multitude of an army; a mighty man is not delivered by great strength.  A horse is a vain hope for safety; neither shall it deliver any by its great strength.” (Psalm 33:16-17).
When applied to our vainglorious mega-churches, this means no man is saved by the size of a church, neither are the wicked delivered by the great charisma of a pastor.  When we play the numbers game in churches, we are guilty of trusting in the multitude of our mighty men. (Hosea 10:13).  “This is the word of the LORD to Zerubbabel: ‘Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit,’ says the LORD of hosts.  Who are you, O great mountain? Before Zerubbabel you shall become a plain!’” (Zechariah 4:6-7).
One of the great mountains before Zerubbabel was Solomon’s temple.  Those charged with rebuilding it were intimidated that the new temple would not have the splendour and majesty of the old.  But God is not concerned with size and other externalities.  Through Haggai, he notes that, in spite of its physical shortcomings, “the glory of this latter temple shall be greater than the former.” (Haggai 2:9).  Before Zerubbabel, the great mountain of Solomon’s temple would become a plain.
When the disciples extolled the splendour of the Jerusalem temple to Jesus, he replied: “All these buildings will be knocked down, with not one stone left on top of another!” (Matthew 24:2).  The same fate awaits the magnificent cathedrals of today.  However, the real temple of God, the body of Jesus, remains impregnable.  Jesus said: “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.” (John 2:19).
God’s verdict
In the kingdom of God, it is the stone the builders reject that becomes the headstone. (Psalm 118:22).  This prophecy is bad news for mega-churches and their mega-pastors because it predicts they will ultimately be rejected.  According to Jesus, the first will become last and the last first. (Mark 10:31).  So today’s “first-class” pastors and their majestic churches will eventually be humbled.
Isaiah says: “every valley shall be exalted and every mountain and hill brought low.” (Isaiah 40:4).  This indicates that, in the day of the Lord, we are likely to discover that the big church is small in the sight of the Lord and the small church is big.  Mega-church “wanna-be’s” readily sacrifice the doctrine of Christ on the altar of the imperatives for a large following.  But we are not called to empire-building but to righteousness.  Indeed, Jesus says to popular mega-churches across the ages: “I know your works, that you have a name that you are alive, but you are dead.” (Revelation 3:1).
David got into trouble with God when he became preoccupied with size.  When pride moved him to conduct a census in Israel in order to glory in the size of his kingdom, God responded by decimating it with pestilence which killed seventy-thousand men. (2 Samuel 24:1-15).  Jesus himself was not the product of a big “church,” but of little Bethlehem Ephrathah. (Micah 5:2).
Why are Christians still so sinful?  Why is so little of the character of Christ evident in the churches?  One major reason is that too much emphasis is placed on numerical growth and too little on spiritual growth.  Indeed, the messages that promote numerical growth often impede spiritual growth.  Everywhere, pastors are engaged in church-planting, for the primary purpose of increasing their dominion and finances.  The outcome is the mushrooming of churches that are impressive to men, but contemptible to God.
Isaiah warns: “Because you have forgotten the God of your salvation, and have not been mindful of the Rock of your stronghold, therefore you will plant pleasant plants and set out foreign seedlings; in the day you will make your plant to grow, and in the morning you will make your seed to flourish; but the harvest will be a heap of ruins in the day of grief and desperate sorrow.” (Isaiah 17:10-11).
Vanguard

Danger looms at Kainji Dam

. Worse floods loom as Kainji dam’s water channels have not been cleared in five years
. Flood victims now drink from untreated water
A disaster that is worse than what has been witnessed in North-Central states could occur if, as the Nigerian Metorological Agency (NIMET) predicted, torrential rains persist. The reason may not necessary be an act of God, but the byproduct of the neglect of the Kainji Dam in Niger State for upward of five years, Sunday Trust can reveal.
Already, more than 200 persons have been killed and property worth billions of naira have been destroyed in massive floods in Kogi, Benue, Nasarawa, Niger, Kaduna, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), down to several South-South states, where the River Niger flows.
A reliable source at Kainji Dam told Sunday Trust at the weekend that the dam is facing a protracted problem, which is capable of causing more harm than has been witnessed in the last few weeks. The reason is that in the last five years, the natural water drainage channels have been neglected.
Our source, who is a top official at the dam, told our reporter that, “Kainji dam is originally designed to generate power. However, it has some natural drainages that have been blocked and require routine river treatment, to enable it discharge water from the dam as at when due. Without this, excess water would accumulate and overflow its channels, thereby destroying communities and farmlands around it. For over five years now, the natural channels have been blocked. We have always reported the blockage to the Ministry of Power because Kainji is under the power ministry, but no action has been taken.”
The official said further, “As I am talking to you now, not even one naira has been earmarked for the river treatment of Kainji dam in the 2012 budget and I am not sure government has made any provision for the river treatment of this dam in the 2013 budget. Government is only interested in the ability of the dam to generate electricity. It is  not interested in maintaining it.”
He added that, “There are two incontrovertible facts about Kainji dam. One, the natural channels are blocked and that is affecting its ability to discharge excess water, thereby threatening the safety and security of the dam. The earlier we commence river treatment for the dam the better. River treatment is very expensive, as much as it is unavoidable. Two, the excess water discharged from this dam account for over 80 percent of the flood being experienced today at the lower River Niger. The blockage of the natural channel is making the situation critical. There is nothing we can do to control the situation. In fact, should the dam receive any additional water within this rainy season, worse disaster will be recorded. The pressure on the dam is at its peak now. Anything could happen.”
When asked if the dam management had sought for expert advice in addition to the reports made to the Ministry of Power, the source said, “We contacted the Ministry of Water Resources, which has all the experts, and a team came here, saw what we were saying and went back to report to government, but nothing has been done so far. The National Assembly committees that could have listened to us and initiate action are not willing to come here because we have nothing to give them. The only remedy for now is, all the riverside communities should be immediately evacuated. With just two more heavy rainfalls or should another dam discharge its water into Kainji dam, what is happening now will be a child’s play,” the source said.
However, in an interview, the Deputy Director in charge of Dams and Reservoir operations in the Federal Ministry of Water Resources, Kabir Moyi, said Kainji dam is structurally in good shape.
The director, who gave the dam a clean bill of health, said he led a team of engineers to the dam at the instance of the federal Ministry of Power that owns the dam.
He added, however, that for Nigeria to avert flood in the future, there is need to open up the blocked natural water channels across the country so that water will stop moving in to farms and houses.
He also said there is need for the construction of more dams for the country, to be able to contain the torrential volume of water that climate change may continue, to generate in order to avert future occurrence of the flood.
Checks in the recent federal budgets proved that government has not spent any money on clearing the natural water channels in Kainji dam since 2008. In the 2008 budget of the Ministry of Power, there was a budget of N340 million for Kainji Auxillary Rehabilitation by Alsthon. This contract is related to power. Other allocations to Kainji Dam were for the extension of Kanji 330 KVA Subs-Station and 132KV DC to New Busa at the rate of N720 million. No other item referred to the rehabilitation of the natural water channel.
Also, in 2009, the only item about Kainji Dam was the “completion of the rehabilitation and repairs of power plants,” which was supposed to cost government N850 million. In the 2012 budget, the neglect continued as of the two items related to Kainji Dam were a World Bank rehabilitation of units of IG5, G6 and IG12 Station counterpart funding to the tune of N350 million. The second was tagged as “plant auxillary spares and annual maintenance,” for which N402,983,150 was set aside.  It is not clear whether these funds were released.
A former military governor of Kano and Benue States, Colonel Aminu Isa Kontagora (rtd), associated the floods in North-Central States with the neglect of Kainji dam. According to him, “Annual floods devastating farmlands with progressive aggression occurs in at least five local government areas of Niger State. They are so common place that people are now used to their yearly losses. Unless steps are taken to conduct routine maintenance of Kainji Dam, it is uncertain when the perennial flooding would end.
However, Engineer Reuben Akinwumi, the Chief Executive Officer of Kainji Power Station, told Sunday Trust that the flooding cannot be blamed on whether or not the water channels were cleared, asking rhetorically, “Would you blame the overflooding in the Upper River Niger from Cameroon on Kainji channels, too? You can come and see things for yourself. You can also seek further clarifications from the Ministry of Water Resources.”

Effects of floods in Niger State
About 50 persons were reported to have lost their lives in 493 coastal communities located along River Niger and Kaduna that were sacked by floods that wreaked havoc on them as a result of high volume of water released from Kaiji, Jebba and Shiroro hydro dams in Niger state.
Speaking to Sunday Trust, the Director-General of the Niger State Emergency Management Agency (NSEMA), Mohammed Shaba, who spoke through his Director of Relief and Rehabilitation, Garba Salihu, said  statistics of provisional assessment put the amount of losses incurred in the floods  at N 2.5 billion.
He said that the affected communities cut across 15 out of the 25 Local Government Areas of the state, adding that provisional assessment also indicated that a landmass of 2. 7 million hectares was also washed away by the flood. Out of the sacked communities, it was reported that 41,125 people were displaced and now taking shelter in 18 Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps spread in eight LGAs, including five camps each, in Mokwa and Lapai, two each in Lavun and Bargu, while Wushishi, Edati, Shiroro and Munya each, has one IDP camp.
However, the DG said two IDP camps had been shut following the receding of water volume in Shiroro and Munya LGAs. He added that when the three hydro dams a warning alert of an imminent danger of  flood along the coastal areas in the state, SEMA went round all the communities considered under serious threat for sensitization with a call on them to relocate to safer areas.
The DG emphasized that his agency embarked on the sensitization with the call for relocation because the flooding disaster along the coastal areas of the state had became a yearly affair, hence the decision of the government to resettle them with a view to having a permanent solution to the problem. But the good news, according to him, is that about 80 communities along the river banks of river Kaduna and Niger have agreed to be relocated to plain lands that are free from flood threat.
Giving the breakdown of statistics of the damages incurred as a result of the flood in the state, the SEMA boss said, Mokwa recorded the highest death toll with 29 lives lost. Borgu and Bosso recorded the death of four persons each, Chanchaga and Wushishi recorded three deaths each while Lavun and Lapai had two cases of death each and one case from Kontogora LGA.
He added that in respective order, Borgu, Lavun, Mokwa 52, 34, 25 communities were affected. In Bosso, Munya and Shiroro LGAs 10 communities in each were equally affected.  Wushishi recorded 13 cases, Chanchaga seven, Edati four, five each in Kontagora and two communities each in Katcha and Agaie.
Niger State started experiencing its own share of the devastating effect of the flood  on September, 4th  and  the situation went out of hand when on the 8th of the same month Kainji and Jebba hydro dams started releasing water and two weeks later the situation further deteriorated when Shiroro hydro dam also followed suit.

Kogi flood and victims’ tales of agony
Kogi flood victims who are camped in Enugu State are lamenting. They are at St. Theresa’s Catholic Church, Igga in Uzo-Uwani Local Government Area of Enugu State. At the time of filing thus report, the premise are accommodating 119 families, 517 females and 497 males.  They were among the thousands of victims of the ravaging and killing flood that submerged some Ibaji communities of Kogi State. Now, they are being camped as refugees in Uzo-Uwani local government area of Enugu State. And they have all made passionate appeal to the Federal Government and Governor Idris Wada of Kogi State to urgently come to their assistance.
Their living condition is sad to write home about. They are squatting in primary school buildings at Iggah and Ogrugu, two boundary communities in Enugu State. Specifically, they are camped at Iggah, Ojjor and Ogrugu. The people are in pitiable condition. Worse still, the refugees now drink from the flooded Mabolo River, said to be very dangerous for human consumption because of its toxic nature.
However, four persons - a man, his wife and two children reportedly drowned when their canoe capsized as they paddled on their way to the refugee camp in Iggah after their home in Odeke community of Kogi state was overtaken by the massive flood.  Sunday Trust learned that the victims were paddling in a canoe when the goats they were taking along in the canoe began to disturb their movement on the flood. In an attempt to calm the goat down, the canoe capsized while all the occupants got drowned.
Many of the refugees who spoke to our reporter bemoaned the hunger and sufferings which they have had to battle since they fled their Kogi communities to Uzo-Uwani in Enugu state. Mr. Paul Agwuja, from Odeke in Ibaji community of Kogi State, said he was totally wrecked by their misfortune occasioned by the flood. “I am really confused; so confused that I don’t know what to say. But whichever way you can help us, please do. It is something that happened to us accidentally, and we never expected it,” he said.
Another victim, a polygamist, who said he had 10 children, told our reporter that, “I came here five days ago now. The problem is that the flood, which we have never experienced since we were born, came to our place suddenly. It covered all our land and houses. The force of the flood pulled down our houses, and we could not even recover any of our household effects.”
Mrs. Caroline Onoh, also from Odeke community, is a mother of four children. She told our reporter, “We are suffering too much since the flood ravaged our homeland, and turned the entire people of the community into refugees. Since we came here about six days, the natives of Iggah have been giving us shelter, food and water. But we don’t have anything left for us. The flood took all we have laboured for throughout our lives.” She said she came to the camp with only one of her children, while the rest are camped in other places. She said, “I want government to provide for us food, clothes, money.”
Interestingly, the Chairman of Uzo-Uwani Local Government Area of Enugu State, Chief Cornel Onwubuya had donated relief materials worth about N5million to the flood victims who fled their state and are currently camping in communities within Enugu state. The materials donated to the refugees at the three camps on Wednesday included 100 bags of rice, 4 beans, drugs, 500 treated nets, 100 cartons of toilet rolls, 20 gallons of 25 kg groundnut oil, 75 flash-lights with batteries, cartons of disinfectants, sacs of onions, cartons of maggi cubes, 30 bags of salt, cartons of bathing and washing soaps, mats and blankets, trailer load of satchet water, bottled water, among other essential items.
When contacted on why the National Assembly has not insisted on a better funding of Kainji Dam, the chairman of the House Committee on Media and Publicity Rep. Zakari Mohammed (PDP, Kwara), said he was not in Abuja at the moment and as such he can’t confirm or deny the issue.
“When I come back I will interact with the chairman of the Committee on Appropriations, John Enoh, to ascertain the true position of things as far the issue of funding of the Kainji Dam and other dams across the country is concerned. The flooding is affecting everybody, including those in my constituency,” the House spokesman said.
DailyTrust