Home Blog Page 1698

How illicit Chinese mining destroys livelihoods, fuels conflicts in Cameroon (2)

0

Continued from last edition

‘We may be rendered homeless’

Rajahu Alahji Oumarou, a 21-year-old mother of two children, stands at the doorway of her three-room thatched house in the Zirgene neighbourhood of Colomine, lost in thought. Just 10 metres away, bulldozers belonging to Chinese miners are working in a huge hole. While the excavators continue to dig the over 70 metres deep hole, trucks stand by ready to be loaded with the soil which is carted away to the Chinese miners’ camp to be washed for gold.

Chinese mining in Cameroon
Local youth of Colomine blocking a truck belonging to a Chinese mining firm after a clash between locals and the Chinese over a mining area. Photo credit: Solomon Tembang

Like others who make up the 71 households in Zirgene, Rajahu’s forefathers lived in the area for decades. But now she says they, mostly of the Mbororo minority ethnic group, are about to be rendered homeless. Their thatched houses, which now perch on the edge of the large hole, may end up falling in. To add to this, children and even adults run the risk of falling into the hole which may end up being filled with water.

“I am not happy seeing this. My child almost fell into the hole the other day. If I was not vigilant to rush and hold him from behind, it would have been a different story,” Rajahu recounts. 

Oumoul Abdou, a 27-year-old mother of four, laments: “We are living in fear as we stare death in the face on a daily basis. There are several of these holes surrounding where we live. We can no longer use our latrine because a hole dug by the Chinese miners has ‘cut it off’. They destroyed our groundnut farm when they dug one of the holes.”

‘This hole belongs to us’

As I talked to Rajahu and Oumoul, I hear loud arguments coming from where the bulldozers were digging. When I got there, I found out that the machines have stopped working. A group of local youths have gathered around and are in a heated argument with the workers of the Chinese miners. Some of the youth had used logs of wood to block the loaded trucks from leaving and others from coming in.

Some of the youth were claiming that they have been carrying out artisanal mining here to earn a living and now, the Chinese have come with machines and want to take over the place.

“If they want to continue their activity here, they must compensate us financially. This area belongs to us,” some of the youths shouted.

The situation, which almost led to a brawl, was only brought under control when an elderly man from the Colomine community, after negotiation with the Chinese through their interpreter, assured the youth that they will be compensated the next day. But one of the youngsters told me such promises have been made severally but never kept.

Such clashes between the Chinese and the locals, Honore Sirgho, a local vigilante leader says, are the order of the day.

On the opposite end of the town, some pupils of Government Primary School Colomine are playing football behind one of the classrooms. But less than 60 metres away is a hole, about 30 metres deep, that has been dug by miners. Some of the pupils say they are aware of the danger the hole poses but have learned to live with it.       

Officials of the school, which counts some 1,400 pupils, were not available for comment.

Chinese mining in Cameroon
East region of Cameroon is ridden with such pools left behind by miners. Photo credit: Solomon Tembang

Death-traps 

The mining activities have also left behind death-traps in some areas like Ngoe Ngoe, a village in East Cameroon with about 2,600 inhabitants. In the night of January 1, 2017, nine people were killed in an abandoned mining site when they went in search of gold. The site collapsed and buried them in 33 feet of earth in the mine excavated by Lu and Lang, a Chinese mining company banned from operating in Cameroon in April because it lacked a license.

Yaya Moussa, head of Ngoe Ngoe village, recounts the tragedy. 

“The Chinese arrived with (Cameroonian) law enforcement to drive the villagers out of the mine sites to better exploit our resources,” he explained. “So, the villagers were forced to come in the night, in the absence of the Chinese, to extract gold and find food for their families. It was during one of these nocturnal outings that the earth fell on them.”

However, the deaths in this gold mine in Ngoe Ngoe have not deterred locals from venturing into it. When I visited the area in October 2018, some young men could still be seen digging in the ill-fated pit in search of the precious stone.

Oumarou Haman, president of the Ngoe Ngoe vigilante group, says the lure for gold still attracts people to the mine site, which is yet to be rehabilitated. 

“If nothing is done to refill this site, I fear that many will still die there,” he says.

Students drop school to chase gold

The lure of the gold is also having a toll on school attendance in the East region of Cameroon. Justin Chekoua says many students are dropping out of school to go to the sites that have not been refilled or closed by the Chinese miners to dig for gold. Women, some pregnant and others with babies on their backs, are also attracted to the mining sites.

Government authorities have told locals to stop digging in the abandoned sites. But the need for income is so high that many ignore the order, including kids who should be in school.

Yves Bertrand Awounfack, Senior Divisional Officer of the Lom and Djerem Division, sometime ago, launched a drive during which he went from village-to-village asking locals to leave gold mines alone and for parents to return their child miners to school.

Vincent Atangana, a Cameroonian official at Chinese mining firm EXXIL, blames parents for allowing their kids to work in the mines. He argues Chinese mining has helped develop the area.

He says many houses are being constructed with modern materials. Several years ago, fuel was sold in cans but today, says Atangana, there are fuel stations. He says these developments are coming when gold mining is still at a working stage – they will do even more when it reaches the industrial level.

Billions of francs CFA in gold lost 

Under Cameroonian law, minerals in the ground belong to the state. The state grants concessions to mining companies in return for 15 percent of the gold they extract. 

This 15 percent is supposed to be paid to a state-owned institution known as Artisan Mining Support and Promotion Framework with French acronym CAPAM. But Justine Chekoua of FODER says some of the miners declare less than what they mine, causing the Cameroon government losses in billions of francs CFA.

On January 8, 2018, CAPAM declared that in 2017, it channelled a little more than 255 kg of gold to Cameroon’s Ministry of Finance.

‘Sad situation’

Nyassi Tchakounte Lucain, Executive Director of Transparency International Cameroon, says they have read several reports from NGOs in the area about the deadly holes left behind by the miners.

“It is a very sad situation. We hope that while undergoing a deep study on the situation especially on the issue of transparency, we would be able to come back with concrete information and results about what is actually going on and what we can propose as a civil society organisation,” he says.

As to holes left behind by miners, Nyassi says “if verified, I will call on the government of Cameroon to ensure that the laws are applied for these holes to be filled because the government is the guarantor of the security of humans and properties”.

‘We can’t encourage destruction of environment’

Meanwhile, Ndouop Njikan Ibrahim of Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, EITI Cameroon Permanent Secretariat, says: “I have myself been to some of these areas where semi-mechanised mining is being carried out by the Chinese and I discovered that the activities are very harmful to the environment.”

“EITI has the objective to better the lives of the population and we cannot do so by encouraging the destruction of the environment. So, we persuade mining enterprises to respect the norms of environmental protection. We regret the fact that the local authorities in these areas, who should be acting like watchdogs, are not doing so,” Ndouop says.

“It is also regrettable that most of the Chinese miners are not acting through formal and identifiable enterprises in a direct relationship with the state. Most of them have got the authorisation to act on the field after having bought the license that an individual happened to have acquired from the administration. Now that the license acquired by an individual has been sold to another person, who is responsible for the environmental destruction? That is the issue that should be handled by the state. EITI Cameroon can only act like a whistle-blower to indicate that there is a problem here that should be resolved, or it may deteriorate the living condition of the local populations”. 

On the losses the government suffers financially, Ndouop says: “The only way the government can control quantities of gold mined is to go into commercial relationships with formal, identifiable companies on the field. The government should create and multiply control instances.”

While some of the Chinese miners who were suspended by the government have continued in defiance, Ndouop blames this on “laxity” on the part of administrative authorities.

“The Chinese are doing this in complicity with Cameroonians,” Ndouop states. “Something really has to me done in the semi-mechanised mining sector as it was done with the petroleum sector.”

Need for strict regulation

On her part, Evelyne Tsagué, Africa Co-Director of Natural Resource Governance Institute, says: “From the work that we have been doing, we know that the semi-mechanised mining sector in Cameroon has a lot of problems; the problem of impact, regulation, problem of effectiveness of the rule in place. There is the need to strictly regulate activities in the semi-mechanised mining sector.

“There is a huge gap between the mining rule and what is practiced. The government should ensure that if a regulation already exists to guide activities of people in the mining sector, this should be respected to the letter. Where there is no rule, the government should pass a law so that there is a kind of policy and regulation in this sector.”

Government moves to stem the tides

However, the government of Cameroon has not been lying on its laurels. It has taken several steps to stem the tide as far as the activities of the Chinese miners are concerned.

In April 2018, the Minister of Mines, Industries and Technological Development suspended the activities of three Chinese mining companies for non-compliance to regulations.

In a statement suspending Hong Kong, Peace Mining and Lu and Lang companies, the minister said they were no longer allowed to perform gold mining activities in the East Region of Cameroon, and that their officials have been asked to pack their bags and leave.

It appeared from the statement that Hong Kong Company did not have documents authorising it to carry out mining activities while Peace Mining and Lu and Lang companies’ suspension was linked to a series of conflicts recorded between their employees and local populations which resulted in deaths, in addition to a lack of respect to the environment, according to the statement.

Cameroonian government mining officials said they are trying to address the situation by using drones to investigate claims of other illegal mines, according to two officials who asked to remain anonymous because they did not have permission to speak to the press. They also said most of the Chinese mining companies do not have permission to work in the country.

The divisional delegate of mines for Lom and Djerem division, East region of Cameroon, William Djoulde, says artisanal mining contributes significantly to the national economy. He says there are over 20 authorisations and, with the measures being put in place, many clandestine miners will be flushed out.

“We want to professionalise this sector and send away clandestine miners who help neither the state nor the local populations. The measures are being implanted in the field,” Djoulde adds.

By Solomon Tembang

Concluded

This work was produced courtesy of a grant provided by the Africa-China Reporting Project managed by the Journalism Department of the University of the Witwatersrand

Nigeria approves first GM food crop for environmental release

0

The Federal Government of Nigeria has approved for environmental release the Pod Borer Resistant Cowpea (popularly called beans) developed by the Institute for Agricultural Research (IAR), Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria.

PBR Cowpea
Members of the National Agricultural Research System of Nigeria at a joint press conference on the approved PBR Cowpea, in Abuja on Monday, January 28, 2019

The approval was contained in a decision document issued by the National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) granting permit for the environmental release of the PBR Cowpea which has been genetically modified to resist the insect pest – Maruca Vitrata.

The approval means the crop is safe and posed no harm to human and the environment and can now be submitted to the National Variety Release Committee for consideration and registration as a commercial crop in Nigeria.

The PBR Cowpea, by this development, becomes the first genetically modified (GM) food crop to be approved in the country.

IAR in partnership with the African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF) commenced the research to address the deadly Maruca Vitrata attacks on beans in 2009 after series of efforts to use conventional breeding methods failed to produce results.

After 10 years of extensive research, government has deemed it fit to introduce the crop variety into the nation’s agricultural seed system having met all regulatory stipulations and scientific procedures.

The introduction will address the national cowpea demand deficit of about 500,000 tonnes and also improve the national productivity average of 350kg/hectare.

At a public display of the approval on Monday, January 28, 2019 in Abuja, the coordinating agency for agricultural research in Nigeria, the Agricultural Research Council of Nigeria (ARCN), said that after many years of research the council was proud to present to Nigerians the first home-grown genetically modified food crop which, according to him, has passed all necessary scientific tests and posed no danger to human health or the environment.

“As the coordinating agency for the over 15 agricultural research institutes in Nigeria, we have identified modern biotechnology as one scientific tool whose potentials can help improve crop and animal production and we have done this with all sense of responsibility, bearing in mind both national and international protocols that guide the deployment of genetic modification,” the Executive Secretary of the ARCN said.

The Executive Director of IAR, Prof. I. U. Abubakar, in a presentation summarising the process that lead to the development of the PBR cowpea, said the decision to venture into genetic modification in cowpea breeding was as a result of pest infestation that has over the years made cowpea farming difficult as farmers get less for their efforts and even have their lives exposed to danger due to chemical spraying to keep the pest away.

“Cowpea is the most important food grain legume in Nigeria. The low yield of the crop in Nigeria is due to many constraints particularly pod boring insects which cause up to 90% yield loss in severe infestation cases.”

Dr Abdourhamane Issoufou, AATF Country Director, said since the mid 1980s, cowpea scientists have declared maruca as the main limiting factor of cowpea production in Africa hence the intervention of the AATF based on its principles of providing access to appropriate technologies by small scale farmers.

“AATF was able to obtain access to the Cry1Ab gene used for this modification on humanitarian basis and worked with institutions in Nigeria, Ghana, Burkina Faso and Malawi for the transformation. Today, Nigeria stands tall in the comity of nations for effectively managing and bringing to fruition this dream.

“The research results have shown that the PBR-cowpea is safe for human and animals, completely resistant to Maruca; leads to yield increase of 20% with fewer sprays of chemical insecticides,” he noted.

Prof. Alex Akpa, Acting Director General, National Biotechnology Development Agency (NABDA), said that by the approval, Nigeria has registered her name among the global scientific community as a country capable of finding solutions to her challenges. “After 10 years of laboratory works and on-field trials, Nigerian scientists have developed its first genetically modified food crop, the PBR Cowpea, we are proud to be associated with this noble development,” Akpa said.

Scientists call for coordinated action on obesity, under-nutrition, climate change

0

A new international report linking obesity, under-nutrition and climate change is calling for strong global actions to address all three issues at once.

Prof. Boyd Swinburn
Prof. Boyd Swinburn

The Lancet Obesity Commission report published on Monday, January 28, 2019 argued that, to address the three interconnected pandemics, leaders must take a hard line against powerful vested commercial interests.

Prof. Boyd Swinburn from the University of Auckland, co-chair of 43 world-leading experts, who authored the report, said the commission has overhaul regulations and economic incentives within the food system.

“Obesity, under-nutrition and climate change are usually viewed as separate, but we show that not only do they share many key drivers, they fuel each other via multiple feedback loops.

“For example, food systems not only drive the obesity and under-nutrition pandemics but also generate more than a quarter of global greenhouse gas emissions and about half of New Zealand’s emissions,’’ Prof Swinburn said.

According to him, car-dominated transportation systems promote sedentary lifestyles and generate up to a quarter of global emissions.

“Climate change will increase under-nutrition through greater food insecurity from extreme weather events, droughts, and shifts in agriculture,’’ Swinburn said.

The scientist said New Zealand could become a trailblazer if the principles behind the government’s new well-being budget were applied across all government policies and spending.

The Lancet Obesity Commission also recommended that all countries enshrine in law an overarching Right to Well-being, which would include the existing human rights, along with a new right to a healthy environment.

It also suggested subsidies redirected towards healthy and sustainable foods and energy; a global philanthropic fund of $1 billion to support social movements demanding policy action. Also, it called for “a 7-generations fund’’ to research and apply indigenous and traditional knowledge and worldviews on living well, “making decisions today for seven generations ahead.’’ 

UN seeks protection of 7.5m displaced in Lake Chad region

0

The UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) has called for urgent protection and humanitarian solutions for over seven million displaced persons across the Lake Chad Basin (LCB) region.

Lake Chad
Scientists say the Lake Chad, that borders Nigeria and some other countries, has shrunken by 95 percent over the past 50 years. They have also linked the Boko Haram insurgency to the lake’s situation. Photo credit: AP/Christophe Ena

Countries in the LCB region include Nigeria, Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad.

Mrs Liz Ahua, UNHCR’s Regional Representative for West Africa, made this known in Abuja during the second Regional Protection Dialogue (RPD).

She added that amidst the heightened insecurity, the Lake Chad Basin continued to face serious protection crisis.

Ahua explained that the region was traumatised and going through insecurity, terrorism, poverty and climatic situations that have deteriorated.

“Today, two-and-half years after the first RPD, all of us are gathered to share the pains being inflicted to over 7.5 million women, girls, boys, men, young and old in the Lake Chad Basin.

“The Regional Protection Dialogues seeks to remind the governments in the Lake Chad region on the principles of humanitarian action, principles such as respect for the people who are displaced.

“Non-renouncement, which means that if they flee to another country they should not be thrown out, then for us, a responsibility to ensure that if they are in camps, there are no infiltration of the bad people and creating mayhem.

“We remind the governments and work together with other partners to say we have a responsibility to protect you.

“From there, we also move to the areas of not just humanitarian assistance, but ensuring that even if they are displaced, their means of livelihoods are not diminished. Now, there is so much happening.

“The climatic conditions are pushing people to move from one place to another so, you have huge root causes.

“But we would like for these people, wherever they are, to be able to continue with their dignified activities,’’ Ahua said.

Acknowledging the successes achieved by military operations, Ahua said that there are cases of new displacements on regular basis.

She said that close to 320,000 persons have been displaced anew in the last three months.

Ahua said that in a bid to addressing the humanitarian and protection crisis, the UN and Nigerian government launched the Humanitarian Response Strategy (HRS) and the Nigeria Regional Refugees Response Plan (RRRP).

She said that the comprehensive approach plan seeks to address the weakness and vulnerabilities of refugees, IDPs, and persons of concerns and to ensure the humanitarian and development responses of actors.

Mr Yassine Gaba, UN Deputy Humanitarian Coordinator to Nigeria, said that as conflicts continue to linger everyday, civilians bear the brunt of the crisis.

Gaba said that protection of civilians remained the key priority of the operation and an issue that must be tackled head on at all levels and from all angles.

He said that despite the challenges, the humanitarian community was determined to continue providing life-saving humanitarian assistance in support of government-led initiatives.

The second RPD was a follow up to the maiden RPD which held in June 2016 and birthed the 24 commitments Abuja Declaration.

The RPD seeks to look at various achievements, progress made and challenges in the implementation of the Abuja Declaration.

By Lizzy Okoji

Concern over increasing destruction of oil palm plantations

0

A palm oil producer, Mr Godswealth Henry, on Monday January 28, 2019 decried the increase in destruction of oil palm plantations in the country.

Palm oil plantation
A palm oil plantation

Henry, who is the Managing Director of JEKON Integrated Farms Nig. Ltd., lamented the development in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos.

According to him, while Cameroon and Ghana are developing thousands of hectares of new oil palm plantations, Nigeria is busy destroying the same number of hectares of surviving oil palm plantations.

“We producers are being discouraged from producing palm oil in the country.

“Cameroon and Ghana have saturated the Nigerian market with their low quality palm oil, as a result our high quality ones are considered very expensive.

“Nigeria palm oil quality is of high reddish pigmentation unlike the ones from Cameroon and Ghana which have low reddish pigmentation.

“This high reddish pigmentation from wide palm is the real palm oil and is what makes our palm oil superior.

“However, it is difficult to export our palm oil now because it is very expensive compared to that of Cameroon and Ghana.

“Even locally, palm oil producers cannot compete in the market with the ones coming in from Cameroon and Ghana because they come in large quantities and at cheap prices.

“Producers of local palm oil are being forced to sell at par with the ones from Cameroon and Ghana which is far below our production cost,’’ he said.

Henry said that the volume of palm oil produced in Nigeria now was very low because of scarcity of palm fruits.

He said that the biggest palm oil miller in the country assisted by the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) could not mill oil to its maximum capacity because of scarcity of palm fruits.

The managing director added that even at the peak period of oil palm production, the mill could not operate steadily for a month.

He said that oil palm plantations were being sold for housing estate development projects, adding that even the oil palm plantation adjudged as the biggest in West African had been sold to a foreign company.

He noted that his company was planning to go to Cameroon and invest in Oil Palm plantation to ensure steady supply of fruits to its milling plant.

By Chidinma Agu

Government tasked on measures to reduce carbon footprints

0

An environmentalist, Mr Emmanuel Emechete, told the Federal Government on Monday, January 28, 2019 to embrace renewable energy in full force, “to reduce carbon footprints’ on the environment’’.

Alhaji Suleiman Hassan Zarma
Alhaji Suleiman Hassan Zarma, Minister of Environment

Speaking in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos, Emechete said there was an urgent need to compel Nigerians to live sustainably to save their lives.

“If we can switch to renewable energy that is one major way Nigerians can live sustainably and reduce the carbon footprint in the environment.”

He argued that living sustainably was the only choice for Nigerians to engender a habitable and safe environment conducive for living.

“To live sustainably as Nigerians, we must address the basic problem of Nigeria which is the unavailability of power.

“Due to power issues, Nigerians run their electricity generators for long periods of time. Generators are run in schools, market places, hospitals, offices etc.

“The fumes from the incessant running of generators affect the environment, owing to excess carbon emissions into the atmosphere.

“We do a lot of carbon flaring arising from these generators as well as through vehicular movements.

The environmentalist also spoke on the implications of vehicular fumes on living sustainably, calling on government to also take measures to correct the anomaly.

“The fumes from our vehicles cannot help us live sustainably because of the carbon emissions from faulty exhausts in them.

“Most vehicles in the country are vehicles that have lived beyond their normal life spans. In some of them, the drivers cannot see clearly because of the amount of fumes they generate.

“There has to be a regulation of the kind of vehicles that are certified as fit for Nigerian roads and the environment in the long run.

“The government had initiated a policy on taking these kinds of vehicles off our roads, but we do not know if it has been implemented.

“Our vehicles should pass particular tests before they can ply our roads.

“These fumes are not just hazardous to our health but also to our environment because they deplete the ozone layer,” he said.

Emechete, however, recommended research and advocacy which he said, were sure ways of helping Nigerians to live better.

“We should end plastic pollution through researches that promote the use of biodegradable materials in packaging, instead of plastic or polythene bags as done in developed climes.

“Individuals can also be encouraged to live sustainably by recycling pet bottles thus reducing plastic pollution and preserving the environment.

“We can also use biodegradable shopping bags, instead of requesting for disposable nylon bags when we go shopping,’’ he stated.

By Mercy Omoike

How illicit Chinese mining destroys livelihoods, fuels conflicts in Cameroon

0

Nagbayanga Valentin, a widow in her late thirties, sits on the earth floor of her thatched two-roomed house she shares with her four young children in Haya Haya, a mining encampment with about 2,000 inhabitants in Longa Mali village of Betare Oya sub division, some 200 kilometres from Bertoua, headquarters of Cameroon’s East region.

Artisinal mining in Cameroon
Locals carrying out artisinal mining in Cameroon. Photo credit: Solomon Tembang

Dirty pots, pans and other old household paraphernalia are strewn all over the tiny house. Outside, the laughter and chatter of her children and those of other neighbours is audible enough as they play a local game, virtually ignorant of the weighty problems their mother, and the community, are going through.

Poverty is discernible in the community whose inhabitants live in thatch houses, but just metres away, Chinese machines are rumbling as they mine away millions of francs CFA in gold.     

Conflicts had, over the years, been brewing between the local population and Chinese miners until it boiled over on November 15, 2017 when there was a confrontation and a Chinese pulled out a gun, shot and killed a local. The population rose up in anger and beat the Chinese to death. Since then, relations between the local community and the Chinese miners have been frosty as tension continues to simmer.

“My husband was shot and killed by a Chinese and now I am left with four children to fend for,” Nagbayanga Valentin says. “Things are not easy as life is becoming very difficult in this community. The little money my husband made from artisanal mining is no longer there and so I wonder how I am going to feed these children or even send them to school.”

Her husband, Issa Paul, was shot dead by a Chinese whom the locals simply knew as Bouboul. 

Beleke Andre, brother to Issa Paul, was there when it all happened.

“We were seven of us digging in our hole. The Chinese also had their hole not far from ours. But later, the Chinese, maybe realising that our hole was producing more gold, insisted that they must dig where we were already working. As they continued to insist, we said they should wait since we had our ‘stones’ in the hole and when we take them out, they can go ahead,” Beleke Andre says.  

“They wanted to pay us money to take over where we had been digging. But we said since we were seven of us, they should wait until we agree among ourselves before we can strike any deal with them. That is how we continued digging to take out our ‘stone’. But the Chinese, whom many villagers simply called Bouboul (we don’t even know his real name), was insisting on closing the hole. When we did not allow him to close the hole, he called the Chinese camp, which is close by, on the telephone.

“Three Chinese then arrived at the scene. At this moment, Bouboul went to one of their vehicles, took a gun and shot three times in the air. When he came close, I am the person he wanted to shoot. As my pregnant wife was also at the scene, I went and stood behind her.

“Bouboul then fired another shot in the air and then shot at my elder brother, Issa Paul. As my brother died, we overpowered the Chinese and took the gun. All I remember is the population coming out in anger and beating the Chinese who later died.”

The case has been dragging at the judiciary and the chances for them to find justice over the death of their loved one, Beleke says, are very slim. He says at the court, the Chinese maintain that if they have to pay for the death of the Issa Paul, the locals also have to pay for the death of the Chinese.

“But we are not the ones who started the conflict. He was the one who first shot and killed our brother,” Beleke laments.

A community in Zirgene
A community in Zirgene neighbourhood in Colomine threatened by mining activities. Photo credit: Solomon Tembang

‘This land is our livelihood’

Some of the locals have been mining in this area for decades after inheriting the land from their forefathers in accord with local traditional law (droit coutumier), only for them to get up one day and see Chinese brandishing a mining concession on their land.

This was the case with Doko Habraham in Colomine, some 100 kilometres from Betare Oya.

“This land is our livelihood. If taken away from us and given to the Chinese, we won’t have any other means of earning a living. My ancestors have been on this land for several decades. I went to where my mine was one day, and it was like I wasn’t even on my own land anymore,” Doko says.

“No one came to tell me that my land was going to be taken over by Chinese miners and if I was going to be compensated for the said land,” he adds.

Doko Habraham says he later found out that the Chinese miners who were working with machines on his land had bought a concession from a Cameroonian who had secured exploration rights in the area. Doko has no land title and so he is no match to the Chinese miners, whom, he claims, “could easily buy their way around”.

How the Chinese miners came here

For years, the local people had been mining for gold on their ancestral lands, through artisanal means using spades, buckets and hard work until the Chinese companies arrived with excavators and powerful pumps and are now practicing semi-mechanised mining. The Chinese have been devastating the environment and the locals say they’ve received no compensation.

The Chinese are in brisk business, mining away hundreds of millions of francs CFA in gold. But those bearing the brunt of the mining bonanza are the native communities who continue to live on the edge of the precipice.

But how did the Chinese come about carrying out semi-mechanised mining in this area? Justin Chekoua of Forêt et Développement Rurale (FODER), a non-governmental organisation (NGO) working in the area, explains that semi-mechanised mining came to the East region of Cameroon in early 2000 when the Cameroon government was planning to build the Lom Panga hydroelectric dam. He says when the government realised that a lot of gold would be lost in the area that was going to be flooded by the dam, it set up what was christened “Programme to Save Gold in Lom Panga Dam Area”.

Cameroon’s mining code does not allow non-nationals to acquire mining authorisation for concession areas. Chekoua explains that because the artisanal miners would have been slow and not be able to save all the gold before the dam floods the area, the government allowed semi-mechanised mining to be carried out.

“But since the nationals carrying out artisanal mining did not have the expertise and finance to save the gold speedily through semi-mechanised mining, the government said Cameroonians could enter into technical-financial partnership with expatriates. That is how many Cameroonians brought in expatriates, majority of who are Chinese, to come into partnership,” Chekoua discloses.

The authorities conceded the move would violate mining laws but said the situation was an emergency.

“However, instead of going into technical-financial partnership with expatriates for the semi-mechanised mining, Cameroonians are now instead getting the authorisation and selling to the Chinese. They are now selling mining space to Chinese,” Chekoua regrets.

He elucidates that because the area around the Lom Panga Dam was going to be flooded, the semi-mechanised miners were not compelled to carry out any environmental impact assessment. They were also not forced to fill the holes their activities left behind.

“The mining code specified that each individual could have a maximum of four hectares to mine in…and instead of staying within the area where gold was to be saved, those who are acquiring authorisation and their Chinese ‘partners’ have gone beyond this zone,” Chekoua adds.

Environmental hazards

Since the Chinese miners went beyond the area to save the Lom Panga gold, the environment and local communities have continued to suffer. 

“Previously when the locals were carrying out artisanal mining, there was little or no impact on the environment. But since the Chinese came in with semi-mechanised mining, the environment has been devastated,” Chekoua says.

Many waterways have been disrupted and streams silted.

“Because the Chinese need a lot of water to carry out the semi-mechanised mining, they have deviated almost all the streams or rivers into their mining camps and local communities downstream have no water for household and other uses,” Justin Chekoua notes, adding: “In some areas such as Longa Mali and Ngoe Ngoe, mud from the activities of the Chinese miners has silted streams and rivers. The use of mercury by the Chinese miners has also polluted streams and rivers. Fish and other aquatic animals are dying. Oil and petrol from the Chinese machines are also polluting streams.”

Pristine forest is also being cut down to make way for the Chinese mining activities.  

Loud, vibrating sounds of excavators accompany the back-breaking work of the mine workers, just a kilometre outside of Colomine. Covered in mud, they sway around in the mining pits as they pan for gold, dig more holes, or use the noisy machines on the edges of the mining pit to fill trucks with quantities of the gold-containing mud that will later be processed with mercury. At this exact spot, there used to be a forest, but many layers of vegetation have already been removed by miners.

There is no possible coexistence between mining and forests, says Justin Chekoua. “All lands dedicated to mining and, in particular, to surface mining, will be a terrain where forests are sacrificed because it requires the removal of large amounts of land. This sacrifice of the forests represents an irreparable loss of natural capital.”

‘Misery is our potion’

Despite all the millions of francs CFA being mined away in gold, the inhabitants of these localities are living in abject poverty and lack the most basic of social amenities.

Hamadgoulde Bouba, the traditional head of the Haya Haya settlement, is not a happy man.

“We don’t have water. Where they throw their sand was where we used to fetch water. Now they have blocked it. Other places we have created to get water they have also destroyed them. Even the road is deplorable. Their trucks have completely destroyed the roads. In fact, all we know here is misery,” he laments.    

“They do very little for the population. And to worsen things sometimes, we go to our farm only to discover that the farms have disappeared, with the soil having been dug by the Chinese and taken away to their camp to wash and get gold. How do we live if our farms are being destroyed?”  

Many inhabitants of Haya Haya refused to talk on record, saying they were afraid of being victimised by the Chinese. The Chinese have instilled fear in the inhabitants of Haya Haya. One simply said, “The fear of the Chinese here is the beginning of wisdom.”

Deadly open tombs

The semi-mechanised mining activities of the Chinese have left behind deep holes which have been filled with water. The localities of Longa Mali, Colomine, Ngoe Ngoe, Ngoura, Ngoyla, Batouri, Yokadouma are littered with such holes, some as deep as 50 metres, many of which have been filled with water.

People are said to have lost their lives in these deadly tombs. According to statistics from FODER, at least 47 persons died in 2017 on the former mining sites. About 250 mining sites opened between 2012 and 2014 have not been filled, the NGO added.

Cattle and other livestock have also been falling into these holes, locals say.

“We cannot even rear livestock because they will all fall into the holes Chinese miners have dug everywhere. The situation is very pathetic,” Hamadgoulde Bouba says.

No compensation

According to Cameroonian law, the mining companies are supposed to pay compensation to local people who owned or were making a living on the land.

But Pilo Michel, traditional ruler of Longa Mali, says there is nothing to write home about the activities of Chinese miners in the area.

“They have not done anything good for my village that they are exploiting. The state of the road to the village is bad. I don’t know of what use the Chinese are here,” he says.

“Since the days of my parents before I took over as chief, the Chinese have done nothing here in terms of corporate social responsibility; not a school, not a health centre, not water supply, not even to repair the road they use to evacuate what they mine here. They have instead continued to destroy sources of livelihood in our village. They continue to exploit us. Longa Mali village is rich in minerals but has nothing to show for it,” Pilo regrets.

“Even the holes they dug, they have not refilled. Water has filled these holes and they are posing real danger to the community. People have been dying in those holes.”

Pilo says the government of Cameroon must force the Chinese miners to construct schools, health centres, repair the road and provide potable water to the community and even build a market. 

As for the open tombs they have left, Pilo says: “they should fill them. We insist on the Chinese closing these holes they have dug, if not, humans and livestock will continue falling into them.”

By Solomon Tembang

To be concluded

GM Cowpea: Why public education is key to citizens’ decision

Etta Michael Bisong, Coordinator, Journalists for Social Development Initiative (JSDI), in this piece examines the controversy surrounding the proposed release of the GM Cowpea in Nigeria, saying that, to alleviate such developments, public learning must be adopted and integrated into biotechnology development in the country

Cowpea
Cowpea

The disagreement between some environmental activists and the federal government over the commercial release of the proposed genetically modified Cowpea (GM Beans) has raised serious public distrust on the risks, safety and benefits of this crop on socio-economic growth. These environmental campaigners have strategically united into groups and taken to the streets to protest what they referred to as “dangerous pest resistance GMO Cowpea”.

They argue that this new variety contains the Cry1Ab Bt gene which is an old throw-away technology because of its unacceptable health risks and possibilities to use it as a tool for the sterilisation of Nigerians, as well as its hallmark as an economic disaster for farmers.

This coalition of activists laments that it is unfortunate that biotechnology firms try to force Africans to eat toxic GMO foods by capturing the food security of Nigeria. They indicted these firms of using people with links to the political class to influence policy at the detriment of national interest and food safety for Africa. Therefore, they have threatened to prosecute all proponents of GM foods that are assisting foreign business entities to harm Nigerians because of commercial interest.

Meanwhile, the National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA), the competent national authority on biosafety in Nigeria, views this differently. The Agency described this set of protesters as people who have continually fed Nigerians with contradictory and false information about the Agency ignorantly. The NBMA admitted that while the Agency believes that citizens are free to criticise government agencies’ decisions, it is expected that such criticisms should not be without relevant knowledge and should not be intended to damage the integrity of officers who are carrying out their legitimate duties in the implementation of the mandate of their offices.

The regulator decried that those who constantly criticise the Agency have never at any time visited its office to find out why some decisions are taken and ascertain its competence, adding that even when they are invited for their programmes they refuse to attend. They accused the NBMA of lack of neutrality.

The Agency urged these activists to understand that neutrality in this context should not be without a decision, arguing that the NBMA is not established to stop GMOs, rather to ensure they are safe to the environment and human health. Two committees are going to be constituted – the National Biosafety committee and National Biosafety Technical committee of eminent experts and scientists to carry out detailed review of the risks assessment and management and make recommendations to guide its final decision.

The Journalists for Social Development Initiative (JSDI) is highly worried about this sad development. Nigeria is the highest producer of Cowpea globally and yet the nation still imports this food crop to meet up domestic demand. Farmers continue to lose over 80 percent of their crops to the brutal devastation of the pod-borer insect (Maruca) and spend more money on pesticides spray which is very harmful to both human and environmental health.

Biotechnology is a sophisticated and knowledge driven technology, therefore, we believe that public education can help redefine this dialogue. The government and private sector must invest in several enlightenment initiatives to help the public understand and take the right position on the GM Cowpea. They must collaborate to build the capacities of journalists, lawyers, farmers, scientists, consumers and other actors in the agric-biotechnology circle to gather the required public support around this crop.

Public learning must be a continuous practice that is integrated into biotechnology development in the country, and not the periodic gathering of stakeholders that has failed to generate the required knowledge to mobilise public trust and acceptance of the recommended GM Cowpea in Nigeria.

On our part as an organisation, JSDI has made efforts to reach out and collate views from both parties on their reservations concerning this proposed new variety. Additionally, we are organising a Science Hangout on Monday, January 28, 2019 in Abuja to sensitise the public on the socio-economic implications of the GM Cowpea in Nigeria. We have released numerous publications and carried out talk shows on radio and television stations to increase public engagement, awareness on this indigenous and first ever food crop in Nigeria.

NiMet warns of climate-induced diseases in 2019

0

The Nigeria Meteorological Agency (NiMet) has warned that there could be prevalence of climate-induced diseases such as malaria, cerebrospinal meningitis and respiratory diseases in many parts of Nigeria in 2019.

Rainfall-Lagos
Heavy rainfall is one of the factors that will trigger the diseases

NiMet’s forecast, in its 2019 Seasonal Rainfall Prediction (SRP), projects that high temperature, rainfall and relative humidity as well as harmattan dust are factors that will trigger the diseases.

It predicted that incidences of malaria and other diseases would be higher in areas with high temperatures in the range of 18 to 32 degrees Celsius associated with high relative humidity above 60 per cent precipitation.

It said areas covered by thick vegetation that provide environmental conditions conducive for the survival of vector and development of malaria parasites were also prone to malaria spread.

According to NiMet, climatic and environmental conditions expected for January, February, March and April will make many states vulnerable to incidences of malaria.

“High vigilance is required over the coastal cities of Lagos, Abakiliki, Eket and Calabar; moderate vigilance over parts of Lagos, Ogun, Ondo and southern states and low vigilance over the rest of the country.

“In February, high vigilance is advisable over parts of Lagos, Ogun and southern states; moderate vigilance required over Ogun, Owerri, southern states and parts of Lagos and Enugu states, while the rest will require low vigilance.

“In March, high vigilance is required over southern states; moderate vigilance over the inland states of Enugu, Ondo Ebonyi and parts of Kogi, Cross River, Benue, Ogun, Osun, Ondo and Delta states.

“In April, high vigilance is required over the south and parts of Kogi, Benue, Plateau and Kwara states and moderate vigilance over Abuja, parts of Kogi, Kwara, Niger, Nassarawa, Benue, Plateau and Taraba states,’’ it stated.

On cerebrospinal meningitis, NiMet disclosed that low relative humidity, low rainfall, high temperatures, dry north easterly winds and surface dust conditions would encourage the spread of the disease up to mid-March.

It said that the meningitis epidemiologic season would observe slight increase in cases due to intensifying effects of harmattan over the northern and central states.

On respiratory diseases, NiMet warned that harmattan dust in the months of December to mid-March would likely increase the incidences of asthma, bronchitis, flu silicosis and lung cancer.

It disclosed that warm conditions were expected over the country during the months of February to May, adding that heat related ailments such as measles and heat rashes were expected during the hot season.

According to NiMet, the information and projections provided will assist health policy makers to plan early warning and reduce the negative outcome with good lead time.

“Early warning would assist health authorities such as the Nigerian Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) to develop effective vaccination strategies to prevent outbreaks,’’ NiMet said. 

By Sumaila Ogbaje

UNEP endorses 6th environment outlook ahead UNEA-4

0

The Sixth Global Environment Outlook (GEO-6) Summary for Policy Makers (SPM) has been endorsed and is set for presentation to the fourth session of the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA-4).

GEO-6 authors
GEO-6 authors

This formed a major outcome of the Intergovernmental Meeting on the GEO-6 SPM convened from January 21 to 24, 2019 at the UN Environment (UNEP) headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya. The meeting was attended by 251 participants from 95 countries, including 26 participants from major groups and stakeholders.

Throughout the week, delegates discussed the SPM in order to reach agreement on a document that will be presented to UNEA-4. On Thursday, January 24, they agreed to the GEO-6 SPM, and requested the Assessment Report Co-Chairs to formulate and forward a summary with key messages of the SPM to UNEA-4.

Jorge Laguna-Celis, Secretary, Secretariat of Governing Bodies and Stakeholders, UNEP, who opened the meeting, noted that GEO-6 would be presented to UNEA-4 for possible endorsement in March 2019.

Joyce Msuya, Acting Executive Director, UNEP, characterised the GEO reports as one of the most important UNEP products, representing “the very best of science and partnership for the environment.” She noted that, unlike previous reports, the GEO-6 report considers policies that may help make a difference in future outcomes.

Highlighting the disconnects between policy, science, and action, Keriako Tobiko, Cabinet Secretary for Environment and Forestry, Kenya, urged decision makers to incorporate science into policies and called for translating policy into tangible, concrete and measurable actions on the ground. He lauded the GEO-6 authors for incorporating traditional knowledge, thus strengthening the link between science and traditional knowledge.

The GEO-6 report, organised under the theme “Healthy Planet, Healthy People,” draws attention to the connection between environmental and human health. It also encourages the achievement of the environmental dimensions of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), internationally agreed environmental goals, and the objectives of multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs), for the benefit of humankind.

The GEO-6 differs from the GEO-5 in that the development of this report involves Co-Chairs in addition to Vice-Chairs. This structure was recommended by the Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP) to help further ensure the scientific credibility of the GEO-6 process, and to encourage learning from best practices from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services.

The GEO-6 meeting considered the second order draft of the SPM, which was developed at a meeting convened by the High-level Intergovernmental and Stakeholders Advisory Group. The GEO-6 assessment report and the SPM adopted at this meeting will be presented for consideration and possible endorsement by UNEA-4, which will be held from March 11 to 15, 2019 in Nairobi, Kenya. This endorsement is expected to raise the profile of GEO assessments due to the high-level and universal membership of UNEA.

The SPM consists of five sections:

  • What is the Global Environment Outlook?
  • What is Happening to Our Environment and How Have We Responded?
  • Effectiveness of Environmental Policies;
  • Changing the Path We Are On; and
  • Knowledge for Action.

Previous GEO Reports

GEO-1, published in 1997, provided a comprehensive overview of the state of the world’s environment and showed that although significant progress had been made in confronting environmental challenges in both developing and industrialised regions, there was still a need to vigorously pursue environmental and associated socioeconomic policies.

GEO-2, published in 1999, concluded that if current trends in population, economic growth, and consumption continued, the natural environment would be increasingly stressed.

GEO-3, published in 2002, provided an overview of the main environmental developments over the previous three decades, demonstrating how social, economic, and other factors contributed to the changes that had occurred. It highlighted increasing poverty and concluded that four major divides categorise the world and threaten sustainable development, namely, the environmental, policy, and lifestyle divides, and the vulnerability gap.

GEO-4, published in 2007, assessed the state of the global atmosphere, land, water, and biodiversity, as well as the human dimensions of environmental change, and presented scenarios and policy options for action in the context of environment for development. It issued an urgent call for action in dealing with persistent and urgent environmental problems, such as climate change, that undermine human wellbeing and development.

GEO-5 was requested by the 25th session of the UNEP Governing Council, held in February 2009, in Nairobi, Kenya. The GEO-5 report differed from previous GEO reports by shifting from assessing priority “problems” to include assessments of priority solutions. The GEO-5 report consisted of three major parts: an assessment of the state and trends of the global environment; regional policy analyses; and potential opportunities for action at the global level.