Severe flooding in northeastern Nigeria has killed at least 30 people and affected more than 1 million others, according to national emergency officials.
Hundreds of thousands are in need of assistance in northeast Nigeria, after torrential rains caused a dam to collapse and flood the area on Tuesday.
The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said on Wednesday that at least 30 people have died in the floods — the worst in 30 years, according to the United Nations refugee agency in Nigeria.
NEMA’s director general Zubaida Umar said on X on Thursday she was relieved that the “flood level in Maiduguri is receding, and normalcy is beginning to return to the metropolis,” adding that rescue operations were ongoing in the city flooded up to 40 percent.
According to WFP, the soup kitchens located in three camps — Teachers’ Village, Asheikh and Yerwa — aim to provide nutritious hot meals to 50,000 people who have lost their homes but more assistance is needed.
The impacts of extreme weather are being felt severely across the country. Some 800,000 people in 29 states in Nigeria have been affected by floods as of September 2024, WFP said, and over 550,000 hectares of cropland have been flooded. As of March 2024, around 32 million people were already facing acute hunger.
“Children and families are still trapped in their homes,” British charity Save The Children said in a statement on Friday.
“The immense damage to water and sanitation services is driving up the risk of cholera and other water- and vector-borne diseases,” the NGO said, pointing out that the city’s two main hospitals had also been flooded.
The World Food Programme (WFP) said the disaster would increase the risk of food insecurity, particularly in the vulnerable northeast.
At least 259 people have been killed by flooding in Nigeria since the beginning of the rainy season, according to Umar.
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