Mr. Agalga, who was speaking on Eyewitness News on Tuesday called for ideas as to how to avert such a situation.
“The most threatening issue that we have to grapple with now is the looming food insecurity the region is bound to suffer because crops have been destroyed and farms have been submerged. The issue is how these people will make a living when the dry season sets in. Some of them have lost everything, their homes and farmlands,” he said.
Over 26,000 people are reported to have been displaced with about 19 people injured.
More than 20 people have also died as a result of flooding-related incidents including drowning and electrocution.
Even though some displaced residents of the disaster have started receiving relief items and some form of support, Mr. Agalga says that the destruction of harvests and farmlands put the people in the region in a very difficult situation and efforts must be made to assist them, especially in the dry season since they couldn’t harvest crops.
He estimated that the victims need over GH¢20 million to sustain themselves.
Meanwhile, the Builsa North legislator is calling for the head of the Regional Minister, Paulina Patience Abagaye. Read Full Story
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