From Okwe Obi, Abuja
The Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management, Sadiya Umar Farouq, has pushed for an integrated flood management approach to effectively manage flooding with the use ofa multi-sectoral and multi-stakeholder approach.
Umar Farouq made this yesterday in Abuja at the Technical Stakeholders Meeting for the Review of Draft National Multi-Sectoral Flood Emergency Preparedness and Response Plan.
In a statement by her Special Adviser on Media, Nneka Ikem Anibeze, the Minister reminder Nigerians on the importance of food waters, which among others things could be harnessed for the purposes of agriculture and electricity.
According to her, flooding affects many people, farms, homes and livelihood annually, hence the directive by President Muhammadu Buhari that the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs works with the Federal Ministry of Water Resources, relevant MDAs and stakeholders to develop a National Plan to coordinate various flood management responses and interventions across the country.
“Each year many people lose their lives, their homes and sources of livelihood due to flooding. For instance, in 2012, which is arguably the worst flood incident in the country, over seven million persons were affected,” she said.
While presenting the draft, the Deputy Director, Disaster Management, Dr Abubakar Suleiman, stated that the 75 paged document with eight chapters will guide stakeholders to systematically and sequentially prepare for, mitigate against, respond to and recover from flooding in Nigeria in a coordinated manner.
He said: “This will enhance Nigeria’s ability to manage all flood-related disasters using a comprehensive disaster management cycle approach. The purpose of the plan is to provide relevant information and outline the response arrangements in place for a coordinated inter-ministerial multi-agency response to major flooding incidents”.
The stakeholders resolved to review and add specific MDAs in the role and responsibilities table while issues of sourcing for funding were also discussed.
They also modified and developed Indicators to measure the four key phases which include Preparedness, Mitigation, Response and Recovery.
In his closing remarks, the Permanent Secretary Bashir Nura Alkal, represented by the Director, Humanitarian Affairs, Ali Grema thanked the stakeholders for completing a successful review of the Draft National Multi-Sectoral Flood Emergency Preparedness and Response Plan.
“This has been a rigorous and intense exercise given the timeframe to complete this task today. I would also like to highlight the importance of this Plan towards providing an institutional framework for managing floods in Nigeria.
“There are several plans and policy documents that cover Disaster Management and risk reduction in general, with little attention to flooding in particular.
“However, this plan provides a unique in-depth analysis of flood preparedness, mitigation and response at all levels and clarifies agency-specific mandates, roles and responsibilities. Hence, the need of such document for the country.”
The Technical Group which drafted the plan included the Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency (NIHSA), the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) and the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development (FMHADMSD).