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Cameroonian Government Didn’t Inform Us Before Releasing Water From Lagdo Dam— Nigerian Water Resources Minister, Adamu

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October 21, 2022

SaharaReporters had reported how a rampant flood situation across the country ravaged many communities. It washed away farms and destroyed lots of property.

Minister of Water Resources, Suleiman Adamu has accused the Cameroonian government of not informing the Nigerian government before it released water from its Lagdo Dam.

SaharaReporters had reported how a rampant flood situation across the country ravaged many communities. It washed away farms and destroyed lots of property.

Commuters passing through the affected communities have had to take longer routes to get to their destinations.

Many roads were washed away, and many farmlands, houses, vehicles and other structures also succumbed to the overpowering impact of the flooding.

It has also been reported that the country is facing its worst flooding in a decade with the national emergency authorities describing the situation as “beyond control”.

While the devastating flood situation has become a recurring decimal, different narratives have been put forward as the cause. But the most trending one was linking it to the excess water from the Lagdo Dam in Northern Cameroon.

 

But according to the Minister of Water Resources, rainfall, not water from the dam, was the major cause of the flooding.

He said, “All these stories I’ve been seeing on social media, I just laugh because they are misleading,” Adamu stated in Abuja on Wednesday, October 19.

“The contribution of the Lagdo Dam to flooding in this country is only one percent. Sometimes they release the water without notice and when they do that, it has an impact on communities downstream but it is not the main reason we have floods in this country — 80 percent of the floods in this country is water that we are blessed with from God from the sky.

“This year’s flood, I can assure you, we cannot blame it on Cameroon to be sincere. We’ll continue to have floods on the river Niger and Benue basins. We signed the MOU with the Cameroonian authorities but since then, every year, it is the Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency (NIHSA) that calls them ‘what is your level in Lagdo?’

“Even this one when he called them, I was communicating with the DG NIHSA, I said ‘what’s happening in Cameroon?’ He said he has been calling them and they said they have not released any water but they said they will inform us. Finally, they said they will inform us tomorrow, they didn’t inform us, they informed us 24 hours after they had released the water.

“They did the same thing two years ago; I wrote to the minister of foreign affairs and Nigeria had to write a protest letter to the Cameroonian authorities that they did not inform us.”

 

“It was after our rains had gone down, suddenly we saw floods in Adamawa area and we were asking them. For two weeks they were denying that they had opened the reservoir. Of course, it didn’t go to the confluence, it was limited to the areas of Adamawa state and Taraba. Because like I said, the contribution to the flood by Lagdo Dam is not so high.” he added.