
Some Lagos communities have been submerged, leaving as many as six people dead in its wake.
It was gathered that the recent release of water from the Oyan Dam in Abeokuta has plunged residents of some communities in Lagos into untold hardship as their houses, shops and places of worship have been submerged.
Residents of the God First, Ajegunle and Itowolo communities in the Ikosi-Isheri and Agboyi-Ketu Local Council Development Areas of Lagos State, alleged that some persons had drowned in the flood water.
It was gathered during a tour of the affected areas on Monday that the victims were a man identified simply as Baba Ibeji; one Baba Michael; a yet-to-be-identified Egun man; a woman who was bitten by a snake; and a mother and her baby, whose names could not be immediately ascertained.
It was learnt that the mother and her baby had visited the God First community to see someone around Maidan-Orile, when the canoe conveying them capsized.
A helmsman in the area, Chekwube Nuanya, told Punch Metro that the woman and her baby drowned, adding that their bodies were recovered three days after the boat had capsized.
The Anambra State indigene said,
“So, the canoe was swaying on the water with the woman and her baby on board. The helmsman told the woman to use a bowl to scoop water out of the canoe, because water had already entered it. It was while doing that that the canoe capsized and they all fell into the water. The helmsman survived, while the bodies of the woman and her baby were seen floating on the water three days after.”
At the Unity Estate, Owode-Onirin, PUNCH Metro gathered that another yet-to-be-identified woman was attempting to board a floater when she was bitten by a snake and died from its venom.
A resident, who identified herself simply as Mrs Agbaje, said “The snake crawled into the floater and bit the woman. People were shouting that the part of the body, where she was bitten, should be tied to prevent the venom from spreading, but it was too late.
He said,
“What heightened the suffering is that there are no drainage channels in the areas; we are appealing to the government to construct drainage channels to take water out of the communities. We park our vehicles outside the estate and pay helmsmen between N200 and N500 to convey us to our various houses using canoes and floaters.”
Residents noted that three people drowned on Monday after the canoes conveying nine members of the communities capsized when they ran into the debris and hyacinth at the Kio-Kio community between Itowolo and Ajegunle.
When contacted, the Director of Service, the Ogun-Osun River Basin Authority, Femi Dokunmu, confirmed that water was released from the Oyan Dam after it was filled up due to the heavy downpour.
He, however, noted that the agency had been exploring preventive measures to address the situation.
Dokunmu said,
“We have a proactive measure of systematically releasing the water during the dry season before the rain starts, which has helped us in years when there was no heavy rainfall; that is why last year and the year before, the people living in the affected areas did not experience this kind of flooding due to our preventive measures.
“Now that we have heavy rainfall, it is increasing the level of water in our reservoir and the river can no longer accommodate such volume of water due to the rainfall; so, we have to allow the water to go downstream by opening the gates of the dam to release the water that has inundated our reservoir.
“It is not that the agency is producing water; it is the rainfall and we cannot but release such water to go downstream.”
Posted: at | |