Katsina moves to curb flooding, cholera ahead of rainy season

The Katsina State Emergency Management Agency, the Katsina State Bureau of Statistics and the United Nations Children’s Funds, Tuesday engaged stakeholders on a three-day workshop aimed at strengthening flood preparedness and cholera readiness amid warnings of heightened risks during the 2026 rainy season in the State.

The workshop brought together representatives of all 34 Local Government Area Emergency Management Committees, government ministries, development partners, traditional and religious leaders in Kano State.

Declaring the workshop open on Tuesday in Kano, the Statistician-General of Katsina State, Prof. Saifullahi Ibrahim said the state must adopt proactive measures rather than wait for disasters to occur.

He sated, “Though our venue is Kano, our mission is Katsina. The rains are already starting across the North. We cannot afford to wait for disaster before we act.

“Flood and cholera do not operate in silos. Neither should our response. When the Environment sits with Health, Water with Education, and Budget with LEMCs, then our action plan will be realistic and fundable.

“The 2026 Seasonal Outlook of the National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) listed a number of Katsina LGAs as high-risk areas due to expected rainfall and river discharge patterns.”

He further revealed that findings from the Bureau’s 2025 WASH Survey indicated that 38% of rural households still relied on unprotected wells and surface water, making them susceptible to cholera outbreaks after floods.

“Historical records from the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and the State Ministry of Health show that cholera cases in Katsina spike between two and four weeks after major flood events.

“The data is not predicting if. It is telling us ‘where’ and ‘when’. These three days must be used to decide ‘how’ we will respond,” he said.

Ibrahim announced that the Bureau of Statistics would produce a 2026 Flood and Cholera Vulnerability Atlas before the peak rainfall period, alongside a cross-sectoral early warning dashboard and a post-season impact assessment report.

“If we get the planning right now, we will save lives, farms and public funds later,” he added.

Earlier, the State Executive Secretary of SEMA, Binta Dangani, said the workshop came at a critical period as flooding continued to threaten lives, livelihoods and infrastructure across the state.

“Flooding remains one of the most devastating natural disasters affecting Katsina State. Year after year, many communities experience the adverse effects of floods, resulting in displacement of families, destruction of farmlands, damage to public infrastructure and loss of valuable economic assets.

“The expected outcome of this engagement is the development of a strategic preparedness plan that will strengthen our capacity to anticipate, prevent, mitigate and respond effectively to flood emergencies,” she added.

Flooding has remained a recurring seasonal challenge across many parts of northern Nigeria, often triggered by heavy rainfall, poor drainage systems and rising water levels in rivers and waterways.

Katsina state has in recent years experienced varying degrees of flood incidents that have displaced residents, destroyed farmlands and disrupted livelihoods, particularly in rural communities.