Scenes of floods in Bayelsa
Tempers
rose at various flood relief camps in Bayelsa State following an
eviction order issued to the victims by the state Emergency Flood
Management Committee.
The committee, headed by the deputy
governor of the state, Rear Admiral John Jonah (retd.), had ordered the
victims to leave the camps and go back to their communities.
But the displaced persons, who spoke to us on Saturday, accused the committee members of working at variance with the promises of the government to resettle them.
Most of them insisted that they would not leave their camps because they had no place to go.
They asked the committee to account for
the N2bn budgeted by the government and the relief materials donated by
people and companies for the management of the disaster.
They insisted that members of the
committee had exploited their plight to enrich themselves, recalling
that Governor Seriake Dickson had once passed a vote of no confidence in
the committee.
Most of the victims, who decried the
development, wondered why the committee should ask them to go home
without any financial assistance.
They claimed that the method adopted by
the committee lacked a human face, accusing the committee members of
sending security operatives after them.
When we visited one
of the camps at BDGS, security was tight in the area as operatives of
the Joint Task Force, riot police officers and operatives of
paramilitary agencies had surrounded the facility.
The flood victims said the security
officials were deployed in the area to enforce the eviction order and
wondered what would happen to all the relief materials stockpiled by the
committee in various warehouses.
The coordinator of victims from Southern
Ijaw Local Government Area, Mr. Boro Friday, said members of the
committee had withdrawn cooking materials and other facilities from the
camp.
“We are stranded. The way they are going
about closing this camp is not what we expected. It is different from
the promises that the government made to us.
“We are asking them to, at least, give us some money and some foodstuff to enable us to start our lives afresh,” he said.
But the Media Coordinator of the
committee, Mr. Markson Fefegha, said the panel had decided not to give
money to the victims to avoid a crisis.
Fefegha, who is also the state
commissioner for information, said the materials would be shared to the
victims after they had relocated to their communities.
He, however, admitted that the committee
that was inaugurated immediately the floods started lacked the accurate
statistics of the displaced persons in the state.
He added that those who were hired by the committee to take records of the number of victims sabotaged the system.
Claiming that hoodlums had hijacked most
of the camps, Fefegha said some of the saboteurs diverted food items
meant for the victims.
He said the N2bn received by the government to manage the crisis was not meant to be spent on food alone.
“We are surprised that the people who
said they were ready to go home are now complaining that they don’t have
anywhere to go,” he said, adding that the committee had provided buses
for the victims to return home.
On the allegation that the money meant
for the victims was shared to commissioners, Fefegha said the
commissioners were not given money by the committee.
He said, “The money was shared to the
local government management teams, who were mandated to manage the
crisis within the local councils.”
Conversely, however, 11 relief camps in Anambra State have been closed following massive decamping by the victims.
The displaced persons left the camps in
spite of a directive by the state government that they should not leave
until their flooded homes were fumigated.
The Executive Director, Anambra State Emergency Management Agency, Dr. Nwabufo Ijezie, confirmed the closure of the camps.
He said the agency could not stop the
flood victims from leaving the camps if they wanted so the camps had to
be closed and those left behind moved to other camps.
He said most of the victims, who are farmers, said they needed to go home and farm since the flood water had receded.
“They are used to fishing and farming
businesses. But they have decided to go home in spite of the directive
from the government that they should not go yet,” he said.
The Secretary to the State Government,
Mr. Oseloka Obaze, had said the government would continue to cater for
victims who would stay back in the camps.
He said the government’s decision to ask
the victims to stay back was to allow the state to take stock of the
affected communities, to identify defective houses and fumigate the
homes.
He promised that the state government
would pay the West African Examination Council and the National
Examination Council examination fees of pupils of the affected
communities.
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