UN team arrives Borno to assess impact of Maiduguri flood 

The team, comprised of international and local NGOs, arrived in Maiduguri, Borno, on Saturday to assess the impact caused by the Alau Dam flood disaster.

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A team comprising various organisations under the United Nations have arrived in Maiduguri on an assessment visit over the Alau Dam flood disaster.

The team which also comprised international and national NGOs led by UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria, Mr Mohamed Fall, arrived in Maiduguri on Saturday.

The team which visited camps to interact with victims also paid solidarity visits to Governor Babagana Zulum and interacted with the press.

Speaking, Mr Fall assured the government and people of Borno of the UN support in addressing the challenges.

“We are all with you in sympathy and solidarity and we will translate it into action. I want to tell you that we will not spare any of our resources in this response.

“We will refocus resources designed for some other interventions to see how we can bring them towards scaling up this response,” Mr Fall said.

He said the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) would do a comprehensive post disaster assessment looking at setting up a recovery plan.

Responding, Governor Zulum thanked the UN delegation for its interventions in the state, assuring the government’s commitment to collaborate with them.

Mr Zulum, who spoke on the magnitude of destruction caused by the flood, urged the UN to first focus on the immediate needs of the victims such as food, health, shelter, water, sanitation and hygiene.

“We need to immediately start fumigation of areas identified as safe to guard against outbreaks and to make them ready for people to go back to their homes,” he said. 

He said some people using schools as camps need to be supported to go back to their homes within the shortest possible time to enable children go back to school.

“Our children have suffered from lack of education for a long time due to insurgency and we cannot afford to miss this session completely,” he added. 

The governor said that with support from reliable partners, his administration would not allow the flood incident to deter it from pursuing  its development plan.

The UN had estimated more than 414,000 people were displaced by Tuesday’s devastating flood in Maiduguri.

The Head of Public Information, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) Abuja, Ann Weru, stated this in a media advisory.

Ms Weru said that the data was collected by the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) as of September 11.

“NEMA’s records also show that 37 people died, and about 58 people sustained injuries,” she said, adding that access to hospitals, schools and markets had been hampered.

“Damages to infrastructure, including bridges, were recorded. Evacuation of people in high-risk areas to safer ground is ongoing, amid concerns about the risk of disease outbreaks,” she said.

(NAN)