The Prague Post - Aid slowly reaches Nigerian flood victims

EUR -
AED 4.321692
AFN 81.196674
ALL 96.971467
AMD 450.843974
ANG 2.106895
AOA 1079.099705
ARS 1725.161756
AUD 1.763186
AWG 2.118189
AZN 2.001117
BAM 1.957591
BBD 2.369267
BDT 143.189774
BGN 1.956447
BHD 0.44368
BIF 3465.59212
BMD 1.176772
BND 1.507579
BOB 8.146452
BRL 6.258187
BSD 1.176376
BTN 103.676844
BWP 16.618202
BYN 3.983244
BYR 23064.721749
BZD 2.365864
CAD 1.620791
CDF 3363.212795
CHF 0.935121
CLF 0.028544
CLP 1119.780014
CNY 8.377397
CNH 8.37693
COP 4598.905466
CRC 592.542061
CUC 1.176772
CUP 31.184445
CVE 110.881292
CZK 24.328564
DJF 209.136158
DKK 7.466409
DOP 74.077643
DZD 152.547846
EGP 56.692385
ERN 17.651573
ETB 169.336336
FJD 2.630316
FKP 0.868437
GBP 0.865027
GEL 3.178202
GGP 0.868437
GHS 14.391948
GIP 0.868437
GMD 82.951643
GNF 10190.841966
GTQ 9.017249
GYD 246.115148
HKD 9.155412
HNL 30.784518
HRK 7.536752
HTG 153.930817
HUF 389.590809
IDR 19265.514904
ILS 3.94282
IMP 0.868437
INR 103.701754
IQD 1541.570688
IRR 49483.242793
ISK 143.247971
JEP 0.868437
JMD 188.932837
JOD 0.834339
JPY 173.439656
KES 152.39157
KGS 102.908914
KHR 4715.323451
KMF 492.485946
KPW 1059.098696
KRW 1630.393345
KWD 0.359186
KYD 0.980297
KZT 635.751589
LAK 25500.639201
LBP 105379.889354
LKR 355.325054
LRD 209.67122
LSL 20.417153
LTL 3.4747
LVL 0.711817
LYD 6.348655
MAD 10.565937
MDL 19.568902
MGA 5266.052579
MKD 61.545016
MMK 2470.770777
MNT 4230.277824
MOP 9.425523
MRU 46.982583
MUR 53.531412
MVR 18.015296
MWK 2044.051961
MXN 21.607508
MYR 4.950087
MZN 75.179776
NAD 20.428938
NGN 1764.204315
NIO 43.199256
NOK 11.559374
NPR 165.882751
NZD 1.970998
OMR 0.452466
PAB 1.176376
PEN 4.109877
PGK 4.91479
PHP 67.317258
PKR 331.20211
PLN 4.24837
PYG 8398.683167
QAR 4.284331
RON 5.065179
RSD 117.167643
RUB 97.670791
RWF 1701.611615
SAR 4.413925
SBD 9.66955
SCR 16.807869
SDG 707.831014
SEK 10.91881
SGD 1.506591
SHP 0.924758
SLE 27.448216
SLL 24676.314655
SOS 672.526894
SRD 46.059423
STD 24356.794526
STN 24.947556
SVC 10.293329
SYP 15300.153012
SZL 20.417126
THB 37.444555
TJS 11.122475
TMT 4.1187
TND 3.409108
TOP 2.756119
TRY 48.615626
TTD 7.984304
TWD 35.549798
TZS 2907.45175
UAH 48.468928
UGX 4122.771537
USD 1.176772
UYU 47.212789
UZS 14568.431919
VES 188.574547
VND 31049.116497
VUV 140.71136
WST 3.233712
XAF 656.557623
XAG 0.027593
XAU 0.00032
XCD 3.180284
XCG 2.12014
XDR 0.818203
XOF 656.052377
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.95346
ZAR 20.435632
ZMK 10592.357151
ZMW 27.791424
ZWL 378.919949
  • RBGPF

    -1.2700

    76

    -1.67%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    24.45

    +0.2%

  • NGG

    0.0200

    71.62

    +0.03%

  • BCC

    -0.5600

    85.12

    -0.66%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    15.64

    +1.41%

  • BTI

    -0.5600

    56.03

    -1%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    46.86

    +0.77%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.32

    -0.16%

  • RIO

    1.2800

    63.72

    +2.01%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    40.3

    -1.32%

  • SCS

    0.0600

    16.87

    +0.36%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    11.81

    -0.34%

  • JRI

    -0.0365

    14.06

    -0.26%

  • BCE

    -0.4700

    23.69

    -1.98%

  • BP

    0.3200

    34.21

    +0.94%

  • AZN

    -1.5100

    78.05

    -1.93%

Aid slowly reaches Nigerian flood victims
Aid slowly reaches Nigerian flood victims / Photo: PIUS UTOMI EKPEI - AFP

Aid slowly reaches Nigerian flood victims

Along a highway engulfed by dark waters, Nigeria residents load dozens of boats full of food to bring assistance to the victims of the country's worst floods in a decade.

Text size:

Waiting by the waterside, past the many half-submerged trucks, Bolaji Phillips looks on next to his vehicle, which is filled with cassava flour, rice and noodles.

"My wife and I consulted and decided to withdraw our savings, the little we have, to do something for the people," the 40-year-old said.

Aid is slowly coming to southern Nigeria after the biggest floods since 2012 killed more than 600 people and affected nearly three million others, according to official figures.

Many have fled their homes, including to overcrowded displacement camps. The others, completely cut off from the world, remain in communities swallowed by the waters.

Efforts now focus on passing the damaged and partly impassable highway linking Rivers and Bayelsa states -- among the two most devastated regions.

Near the town of Ahoada, volunteers and NGOs are doing vital work until official aid slowly reaches the most destitute.

"The damage is enormous. The government has not done much so far. We are totally alone," said Winner Written, a 32-year-old entrepreneur among those helping out.

"We are just individuals trying to help one another."

- "Suffering" -

Over the weekend, volunteers loaded precious fuel in yellow jerrycans onto the boats heading to flooded villages.

Rivers State authorities have allocated one billion naira ($2.3 million) to help victims, especially around Ahouda, one of the worst hit.

The United States said it has donated $1 million in humanitarian aid.

Rescue officials said they have started delivering 12,000 tonnes of food across the country after the aid was approved by President Muhammadu Buhari.

But on the ground, few have seen the results of these efforts so far.

Supplying food is almost impossible, hampered by strong currents or waters that are strewn with obstacles or choked with vegetation, and aid coordination is hindered by lack of mobile coverage in remote areas.

In a black tank top, Jeremy Ogboka, 35, lends a hand on a section of the half-flooded highway.

"Right here, one of the speedboats capsized. Luckily, we saved them all," he said.

"We help as we can but nobody pays us. So many people are suffering. It's been two weeks the road is blocked."

Using two speedboats the Nigerian navy in the area has provided security and transport for facilitating humanitarian aid.

A rescue mission headed this weekend to the remote areas ferrying members of National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and sailors to bring aid and evacuate those they could.

- "Humanitarian crisis" -

Guided by young people who know the route to the ravaged communities, the motorboats sink into the heavy vegetation, struggling against the currents.

After half an hour of laborious progress, the remains of a village appeared. No sign of life.

Seated at the front of the vessel, the second lieutenant in charge kept his hand on his assault rifle.

"This is a volatile region. Two months ago, we arrested many kidnappers, criminals and acquired many rifles," he said.

All around, almost everything is submerged. The roofs and the panel of a school protrude, the only signs of a semblance of life now submerged.

Boat engines bog in the leaves as the current tugs at the vessel, making it impossible to advance to a flooded village where some victims requiring medical care managed to call NEMA.

Eventually, the rescue mission is aborted.

In addition to aggravating food insecurity -- farmland and crops were devastated -- the deadly floods have caused an outbreak of cholera, according to the NGO International Rescue Committee (IRC).

In 2012, particularly deadly floods ravaged Nigeria, but residents said this year's disaster was becoming much worse.

"Nothing has been done after to minimise the impact of the floods," said Opuwill Ayitu, a 40-year-old volunteer. "A humanitarian crisis is looming."

V.Nemec--TPP