ABUJA TREMOR EFFECT
The federal government has confirmed the suspension
of all blasting activities in and around the affected areas that experienced
minor earth tremor last week at Mpape, Abuja.
The Minister of Mines and Steel Development, Alhaji
Abubakar Bawa Bwari, at the weekend hinted that the federal government, through
his ministry, ordered the suspension in order to enable the team of experts put
together by the ministry to investigate the incidence do a thorough job.
Bwari, in a statement by his media aide, Ishaku
Kigbu, in Abuja, noted that "getting to the root of the cause of what
triggered the tremor would be better achieved without further blasting
activities around the affected areas."
According to him, "Even though l would not say
the tremor experienced may have anything to do with excavations around the affected
areas until investigations are completed remembering that two years ago there
was an incidence like that in Kwoi, in Southern Kaduna, it is better to suspend
all mining and blasting activities around affected areas until investigations
by experts ascertain its cause.
"They have taken samples to aid their job, and
there was a need by the government to stop all excavations and other mining
activities to enable them do a good job."
The minister said considering that the world is
experiencing climate change, some of the unusual incidents could be natural
occurrences not envisaged, adding that the government had proactively acquired
some geoscientific detecting equipment to detect such happenings, and was in
the process of installing them when the Abuja incidence occurred.
He added: "The good news is that Nigeria
geographically is not on the lane of earthquakes but we are not relenting since
the world, considering climate change, unexpected things are bound to happen
where they ought not to, and the six geo science equipment, when installed,
will go a long way in detecting such natural occurrences while not ruling out
elements of human induced activities."
Bwari further hinted that there is no conclusion
yet on the matter since investigation is ongoing, but cannot also rule out
human induced activities, adding that “we may not have control over some of
these occurrences, but our control mechanism remains that mining is done under
best practices."
He advised Nigerians not to panic, saying: "Luckily,
we have not gotten to the trend where mining would be seen as dangerous in
Nigeria.
"We are not located in such dangerous zone. Our
men went to the affected areas and checked but no quakes or cracks were found.”
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