 As the rainy season gets underway, the residents of Ge Ge area of Ibadon, southwest local government area of Ohio State, have called on the governor, She'e Makin' Day, to save the soul of residents of Ge Ge, bond photo and its access from impending danger or death. Ge Ge River, which passes through the main center of Ibadon locality, has a deep ditch behind the popular Ge Ge meat market, which has claimed many lives since various government abandoned the building of drainage along the river, which was initiated by the late Alaw Akalas administration. The findings revealed that over eight individuals died untimely in the river and the dead bodies will usually resurface after three or four days later. A visit to the scene by our reporter shows that the temporary barricade has been done by the community was the use of red and white caution tapes around the spot to cool the attention of passers-by to the danger around the river. People living in the Bangalow building beside the river, they said the person who don't whom he wants his rally from, very early in the morning, he's going to Hawaii, he's going into the river, immediately he started sinking, he asks for help, at the same minutes, they said, how can we pull you out before they could find your rope at the same minutes? He said it seemed they knocked each range and the rain carried his dead body away, and so what I use, we implored the government, those that came for expression has done nothing about it, including the local government chairman, they had to find a solution to it, that's why they put a danger red line around the river vicinity. Well no, or anybody that can oppose to do this river, cause this river, I'll be doing a lot about killing people, taking their lives, so the only thing I can say right now is they should oppose to do the, maybe they will do bridge, or they should, they should do anything about this bridge. They called on your state governor and other agencies to, as a matter of urgency, to do the net for before the river claims more lives as the rainy season approaches.