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Rivers Commissioner Promises To Boost Water Supply

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President, PHCCIMA, Dr. Fmi Membre -Otaji (middle), with members of the chamber, during a thanksgiving service in Port Harcourt, recently Photo: Egberi .A. Sampson

The Rivers State Government says it inherited from the past administration only two per cent functionality of water supply facilities in the state, meaning they met virtually dry taps.
The Commissioner for Water Resources and Rural Development, Chief Ibibia Opuene Walter who disclosed this in Port Harcourt in an interview with The Tide, yesterday said the sad statistical data was contained in the handover brief by the permanent Secretary of the ministry, Dr Paulinus Nwakwaola.
Chief Walter who lamented the gory state of water supply in the state wondered how any administration, worth its salt would fail to appreciate the importance of water in the lives of human, animals and even plants.
That water facilities in the state functioned at about two per cent translates to the fact that the citizenry was left to search for other alternatives, namely satchet water, boreholes, or even stagnant water which health conditions could hardly be ascertained.
None, Chief Walter lamented, could imagine how many lives might have been lost through health condition caused by ill-treated water and assured that the Wike-Administration is determined to address the situation.
The commissioner said that the ministry has already set targets that would change the trend and bring relief to the people of the state.
Such targets include: To increase water supply facilities functionality in the  state by 80 peer cent in the next four years, meaning 78 per cent increase by 2019; ensure the approval and inauguration of board of agencies/ parastatals of the ministry, to ensure completion of development plans for all local government areas and ensure rehabilitation of existing/ abandoned water supply schemes.
The others include, to  finalise arrangements with private sector partners to undertake operations and maintenance  of small town water schemes and ensure the state’s counterpart fund for the EU-NDSP and EU-UNICEF assisted small town water supply and sanitation programme in order to facilitiate the successful take off of the project in Akuku-Toru and Opobo/Nkoro Local Government Areas.
According to Chief Walter, the Wike administration would effectively meet all loans conditions for Africa Development Bank (AFDB) and World Bank so as to commence work on the Port Harcourt/Obio/Akpor water supply project which would adequately provide for between 40-45 per cent of active Rivers population.
He called for patience among Rivers people, assuring that the Wike administration would not leave them to their fate in the area of potable water supply.

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