The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), says airlifting is the only solution to the rising flood in the Ogbaru Local Government Area of Anambra.
Mr Thickman Tanimu, Zonal Coordinator of NEMA, South-East, made the disclosure in a telephone interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Saturday, October 8, in Awka
According to Tanimu, any boat that goes in there is likely to capsize because the flood has covered houses to roof level.
The report we are receiving is that as of yesterday (Friday), the flood level rose above the 2012 flood level by 11 per cent.
People were thinking that it is the normal flood water that will eventually recede, which is why they refused to leave their homes.
What I suspected happened yesterday at Ogbaru, Anambra, going by the report we received from the State Emergency Management Agency, is that the water kept rising and the people were trapped.
They decided to escape the rising water and 85 of them jam-packed inside the boat which capsized due to the rising flood.
It is very unfortunate because the flood has covered many houses up to roof level.
Out of the 85 persons, nine were found and the remaining 76 are no where to be found.
Also at Uzo-Uwani Local Government Area in Enugu, two men and a pregnant woman died in the flood.
It is sad to note that as at yesterday, we recorded 79 deaths due to the rising flood; 76 in Anambra and three in Enugu.
Tanimu said that the agency was in talks with the Military in Onitsha and Abuja to activate the Disaster Response Unit (DRU), to airlift trapped residents in the affected communities.
This will involve the Air force and the Navy so that we can get an area view of the affected areas, see people who are trapped, and airlift them.
The 82 Division of the military is preparing and once they get the go-ahead from Abuja, we will begin to airlift those who want to leave because our people are very conservative and they might refuse to leave.
The NEMA coordinator urged residents in flood-risk areas to relocate, saying as the flood level had risen above the 2012 flood level by 11 per cent.
Tanimu lamented that people refused to relocate in spite of the intensive sensitisation and warnings because they thought the current flooding situation was the normal kind of flood water that would eventually recede.