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Group alerts on ‘suspicious’ amendment of tobacco bill

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Akinbode Oluwafemi, deputy director, Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN), alerted media executives in Abuja on Thursday, May 4, 2017 on alleged attempts by the tobacco industry to undermine tobacco control regulation

ERA/FoEN
L-R: Hilda Ochefu of Campaign for Tobacco-free Kids, Akinbode Oluwafemi of Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN), and Adewunmi Imoruma, a youth activist from Gatefield, during the media session in Abuja

We have learnt of a very suspicious Bill to Amend The National Tobacco Control Act 2015 sponsored by Honourable Dickson Tarkighir representing Makurdi/Guma Federal Constituency in the Federal House of Representatives. Among others, the Bill seeks to vest the implementation of the NTC Act with the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and as anticipated, has the full support of the tobacco industry.

This should not come as a surprise to you. As we noted in the process running up to the passing of the NTC Act, the tobacco industry will stop at nothing to upturn efforts already in place to ensure effective tobacco control policies in this country. The NTC Act, we wish to state, has the potential to save millions of our citizens from tobacco-induced illnesses and deaths and put Nigeria on the map of nations that have effective tobacco control policies in place.

The suspicious Bill removes all powers of the Minister of Health and vests same with the Director General, of the National Agency for Food Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC), putting Tobacco Control absolutely under NAFDAC. It also vests full administration of the NTC Act in the National Agency for Food, Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC). Dubiously, the new bill deleted Sections 2,3, 4 and 6, of the NTC Act, which established the National Tobacco Control Committee  (NATOCC) and  seeks  to  create  a  National  Tobacco  Control  Directorate  under NAFDAC.

The tobacco industry is also advancing on another front by planting moles in ministries of government that have anything to do with tobacco control policy. It may interest you to know that we learnt of the recent leak of a confidential document relating to the implementing guidelines and regulations for the NTC Act at the Ministry of Justice.

This alleged breach in form of the smuggling of a supposed confidential document to one of the leading tobacco corporations in the country, is a sad reminder that an official from the same ministry who was on the delegation of the Nigerian government to the seventh session of the Conference of Parties to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) in November 2016 advanced tobacco industry-laced arguments that shocked the world at the talks. It will be recalled that the representative of the ministry at the Treaty Talks advanced arguments criticising Article 5.3 guidelines limiting Parties’ interaction with the tobacco industry, as well as Articles 9 and 10 which recommend measures to reduce the addictiveness of tobacco products.

Smuggling of official documents to non-government actors – individuals, corporations etc carry a heavy weight with the law. Worse is when such information is used to subvert the will of Nigerians who have overwhelmingly demanded measures to reduce tobacco addiction as enshrined in the provisions of the NTC Act.

In the light of the above we are immediately demanding that:

  • The Nigerian government, particularly the Ministry of Health remain unintimidated as it works on resolutions for the effective implementation of the National Tobacco Control Act.
  • The Ministry of Health hasten investigation of the controversial recommendations of some members of the Nigerian delegation to the Conference of Parties meeting held in India in November 2016. Delegates from the Ministry of Justice and the Standards
  • Organisation of Nigeria (SON) are of particular interest in the said controversy which cast Nigeria in bad light among the committee of nations that attended the Talks
  • The brain behind the alleged Ministry of Justice leaks be identified, investigated for ties with the tobacco industry and appropriately sanctioned
  • Put in place a mechanism for insulating tobacco policies from tobacco industry interference
  • Fast-tracking of the implementing guidelines and regulations for the NTC Act

I lose sleep over building collapse in Lagos, says Anifowose

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Lagos State Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Abiola Anifowose, has said that the incidence of building collapse in the state gives him sleepless nights.

Lagos-Housing-Fair
Lagos State Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Abiola Anifowose, at the Ministry stand during the Lagos Housing Fair

He was speaking on Thursday, May 4, at the 2007 Lagos International Housing Fair held at the Lagos Airport Hotel, Ikeja.

The event, which held from Tuesday, May 2, to Friday, May 5, has the theme, “Quality Management in Housing Delivery”. It was organised by Beachland Resources Limited.

According to the Commissioner, the housing fair is an opportunity to come together, once in a while, to look at those areas stakeholders in the housing sector need to improve upon.

Noting that building collapse has in the past one year not been the news-maker it used to be, he praised the ‘whistle-blowers’ who have helped to prevent the collapse of buildings in the state.

Since March last year, he added, there was no building collapse in Lagos, except the one of last Thursday.

A board member of Lagos International Housing Fair, Jide Oke, called for sanctions for any artisan who messes any job up.

As many builders, ironically, do not factor in the fire service in building construction, a fire man at the event hinted that Lagos Fire Service does not fight raging fire alone, but its prevention.

Senior Fire Superintendent II of Lagos Fire Service, Ariyo Waheed, said: “Before you erect a building, normally you need to come to fire service. But people don’t follow this law, until there sites are locked.

“Events that deploy fireworks need to consult fire service, to guard against disaster.”

In its 16th edition, the Lagos International Housing Fair aspires “to make Nigeria and indeed Africa deliver quality houses and be self-sufficient in the production of building materials, and thereby enhance the country’s and Africa’s capacity in the export of products and services in the sector”, according to the organisers.

In his welcome address on day one of the fair, the Chairman of Lagos International Housing Fair Committee, Moses Ogunleye, said the organisers remain committed to the aspiration.

“We are, however, aware that for this to happen, the cooperation of key players in the sector is required. In this regard are producers of building materials, whose efforts are needed to continue to stimulate the input and output process of construction. There are also real estate developers, who are expected to be delivering large number of housing units. Another group of key players are the professionals and researchers in the sector, who can be described as development catalysts,” he said.

Touching on the theme, Ogunleye, who is also Managing Director, Beachland Resources Limited, stressed that “there are no two opposing definitions of quality, as quality is quality. A quality home will serve the intend purpose, viz, protect the owners or occupiers, give them maximum comfort and guarantee their safety.”

A structural engineer at the fair disclosed that most times, about 60 to 70 per cent, building collapse is not structural but electrical or mechanical.

“We should also look at the quality of the pipes we use,” he stated.

GE to build Africa’s first LPG-fired power plant in Ghana

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General Electric (GE) announced on Thursday, May 4, 2017 that it will supply the power generation equipment for the Bridge Power plant project in Tema, Ghana. The equipment, which will be used in the first phase of the project, will collectively generate 200 MW of power. An additional 200 MW of power will be deployed in stage two of the project.

Tema-Ghana
GE will supply the power generation equipment for the Bridge Power plant project in the Ghanaian port city of Tema

The equipment scope includes GE’s TM2500 gas turbine generator sets and GE’s steam turbines in a combined cycle (CC) configuration. This will be the first time the TM2500 gas turbines will be used in a combined cycle configuration globally and marks a milestone for the technology, which was also selected this week for Angola’s ambitious electrification programme led by PRODEL.

“The Bridge Power plant successfully brings together the need for a cost-effective fuel solution, in this case liquefied petroleum gas, with an integrated power solution driven by GE’s latest flexible technology,” said Leslie Nelson, CEO, GE’s Gas Power Systems for sub-Saharan Africa.

The 400 megawatt (MW) Bridge Power and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) import, storage, and transportation infrastructure project will address Ghana’s long-term energy requirements by providing enough electricity for the equivalent of up to 17 percent of the country’s capacity. Upon completion, it will be Africa’s first LPG fired power plant and the world’s largest plant of its kind. The fuel-flexible plant will also be capable of being fueled by LPG, natural gas or diesel.

Bridge Power is being developed by the Early Power Limited (“EPL”) consortium under a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with the Electricity Corporation of Ghana (ECG). The EPL consortium comprises of Endeavor Energy, a leading independent power development and generation company focused on Africa; Sage, a leading independent trading firm in Ghana; and GE (General Electric).

The Bridge power plant project will bring much needed electricity to Ghana and is expected to have an immediate positive impact on the reliable operation of schools, factories, offices, other local businesses, hospitals, and households. The project is another example of how GE works with the government, corporate customers and other stakeholders in Ghana. Together, GE and its customers in Ghana support economic growth through infrastructure development in the power, oil & gas and healthcare sectors. In March this year, GE opened a 5,600 square meter oil & gas facility in Takoradi, which will serve as a primary service center for deep-water offshore projects.

Benue outlaws open grazing

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The recurrent Fulani herdsmen attack on Benue communities may soon be a thing of the past as the State House of Assembly on Thursday, May 4, 2017 passed into law a bill outlawing open grazing in the state.

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Herdsmen grazing their cattle

Cited as the Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Law, 2017, the bill which was passed after the House considered the report of the Committee on Agriculture and Natural Resources as presented by its Chairman, Mr James Grange (Kwande East/APC), in the Committee of the Whole Chaired by the Speaker, Mr Terkimbi Ikyange (Ushongo/APC), provides for the establishment of Ranches and Livestock Administration, Regulation and Control.

The bill, which provides that anyone who engage in Cattle Rustling shall be liable on conviction for imprisonment for a term of not less than three years or N100,000 per animal or both also provides that “no individual or group shall after the commencement of this law, engage in open nomadic livestock herding or grazing in the State outside the permitted Ranches”.

Among other things, Section 19 (2) provides that “any person or group of persons who contravenes the above provision shall be guilty of an offence and shall, on conviction, be liable to five years imprisonment or N1 million fine or both”.

The bill also provides for monetary compensation in case of any damage to a property and imprisonment of two years of the livestock owner or manager in case of injury to any person within the state.

According to the bill, “where such contravention causes the death of any person within the state, the owner or manager of such livestock shall be guilty of an offence of culpable homicide punishable under the Penal Code Law”.

By Damian Daga, Makurdi

FIFA rankings: Nigeria maintains 40th position

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The Super Eagles of Nigeria has maintained the 40th place, the position it previously held, in the latest FIFA rankings.

Gernot Rohr-Nigeria
Super Eagles manager, Gernot Rohr

The three-time African champion also retains the 5th place in Africa. Egypt, who is the highest ranked African side, occupies the 19th position. Senegal is rated 30th, reigning African Champions Cameroon holds 33rd position, while Burkina Faso is 35th.

The Black Stars of Ghana are 45th, while Cote d’Ivoire holds the 48th.

Brazil, however, remains the top of the latest FIFA world rankings. The five-time World Cup champions occupied the position for the first time in seven years at the expense of great rivals Argentina.

In another development, an executive member of the Nigeria Olympic Committee, Jonathan Nnaji, is hopeful that the modern Penthalon course in Lagos will help coaches and athletes to be abreast with the techniques in the sport.

The course began at the weekend with about 40 technical instructors from 10 states of the Federation in attendance.

Nnaji told EnviroNews that the Union of the International Modern Penthalon (UIPN) is backing the event with Egyptian Sam Rusdi as facilitator.

“It is a new sport in Nigeria, which comprises five sports. The essence of the course is that we are training the trainers so as to spread the Sport to the 36 States of the Federation.”

This is the second time the course which consists of Shooting, Athletics, Swimming, Fencing and Horse Riding is holding in Nigeria.

By Felix Simire

Activists express concern over ‘conflict of interest’ of IPCC authors

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The inclusion of two senior employees of ExxonMobil and Saudi Aramco among the authors for a report being prepared by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has incurred the ire of a group of international civil society operatives, who insist that the situation amounts to a conflict of interests on the part of the authors.

Hoesung Lee
Hoesung Lee, IPCC chair. Photo credit: reneweconomy.com.au

The IPCC, which is meeting this week in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia to draft the outline the Sixth Assessment Report (AR6), has engaged the services of a team of experts to produce the “Special Report on the impacts of global warming of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels and related global greenhouse gas emission pathways, in the context of strengthening the global response to the threat of climate change, sustainable development and efforts to eradicate poverty”.

But protests have greeted the venture, courtesy of a recent correspondence addressed to IPCC Chair, Dr. Hoesung Lee. Titled: “Conflicts of interest of authors on the IPCC Special Report on the impacts of global warming of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels”, the letter was  signed by 108 international and national organisations, who are all active in the international climate negotiations and climate discussions at national, regional and/or international levels.

The campaigners allege that ExxonMobil and Saudi Aramco are the second – and third – largest corporate emitters of greenhouse gases worldwide, adding that they bear a large part of the responsibility for causing climate change, along with 88 other major oil, energy and cement companies.

The letter reads in part:

As you well know, the role of the IPCC, as stated in paragraph 2 of the Principles Governing IPCC Work, is to assess, on a comprehensive, objective, open and transparent basis, the scientific, technical and socio-economic information relevant to understanding the scientific basis of risk of human-induced climate change, its potential impacts, and options for adaptation and mitigation. Despite the important work the IPCC does to inform policy makers of the now-overwhelming scientific evidence of human-induced climate change, the climate crisis is deepening.

The delayed and inadequate responses to this crisis can be attributed in part to lobbying by businesses with vested interests in the fossil-fuel-driven economy. Disturbingly, the role of business has gone beyond mere lobbying: to delay urgently-needed climate action, several companies have financed climate change skepticism and denial. This is well documented and the subject of multiple judicial investigations.

The two aforementioned companies are the second – and third – largest corporate emitters of greenhouse gases worldwide. They bear a large part of the responsibility for causing climate change, along with 88 other major oil, energy and cement companies, which together are responsible for two thirds of the cumulative historical CO2 and CH4 emissions since 1854. Moreover, the Exxon staff member selected, Dr. Haroon S. Kheshgi, has been a leading proponent of controversial climate geoengineering proposals since 1995, including carbon capture and storage (CCS) strategies. Exxon holds the most patents related to CCS and other sequestration methods of any company, and on its website, publicly declares an interest in one quarter of existing global CCS facilities. This creates a strong financial interest for this author to favourably promote certain technological pathways to 1.5°C.

In 2010, the integrity and credibility of the IPCC was called into question, resulting in a thorough review by the InterAcademy Council. As a response, IPCC adopted, in its own words, “a rigorous conflict of interest policy” with the aim “to protect the legitimacy, integrity, trust, and credibility of the IPCC.” It is evident that conflicts of interest exist or can be implied in this case. This would constitute a violation of your conflict of interest policy.

The IPCC “Special Report on the impacts of global warming of 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels” was requested by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) to address the particular concern of countries already impacted by global warming such as the small island states. The lives of peoples and in some cases the future existence of these states, depends upon drastic reductions in global emissions, including specifically a shift away from fossil fuel dependency.

It is therefore difficult to understand that the IPCC could include authors from the industries that have caused the most damage, and for whom private profits would be affected if the necessary reductions are carried out. Similarly, it is also worrying that industry representatives are precisely those with interests in promoting unacceptable pathways and high-risk technologies, such as climate geoengineering, which distract from the real emissions reductions that are required to avoid catastrophic warming.

Furthermore, in the list of authors to this Special Report there are other representatives of industry-sponsored associations and institutions, yet there are no researchers from independent NGOs selected for participation, despite several nominations. This is a crucial report that must maintain high standards of scientific independence. The world cannot afford for this report to be converted into an alibi for the industries that caused climate change to continue business as usual, or a platform to promote high-risk technologies such as geoengineering.

The IPCC needs to maintain a broad and balanced approach to highlighting the necessary conditions to enhance real pathways to stay below 1.5°C, including: peasant and agro-ecological food systems; public transportation; ecologically-sound and locally-controlled renewable energy sources; and ecosystem protection and restoration, among many other proven and effective solutions. We therefore request the IPCC to reconsider the selection of authors, both for this and all upcoming reports, to ensure that no conflict of interest exists, and that multiple disciplines, regions and viewpoints are included.

Out of the 108 groups that endorsed the letter, three – CCN Nigeria, Centre for 21st Century Issues, and Health of Mother Earth Foundation – are from Nigeria.

Agencies laud Africa’s water monitoring, reporting system

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Stakeholders from across the globe have commended Africa’s trail-blazing web-based monitoring and reporting system for the water and sanitation sector.

Water review workshop
Participants at the Review workshop on the harmonised, region-wide monitoring and reporting framework for Water and Sanitation sector in Africa

The laudatory remarks were made in Accra, Ghana on Wednesday, May 3, 2017 at the opening of a week-long review workshop on the harmonised, region-wide monitoring and reporting framework for Water and Sanitation sector in Africa. The workshop draws participants from over 42 African countries as well as stakeholders from the global water family including the UN Water, WSSCC, UNICEF, UNESCO, UNECE and WHO GLAAS. Also in attendance are representatives of the African Union Commission (AUC) and the African Water Facility (AWF).

Developed in 2016 by the African Ministers’ Council on Water (AMCOW), the Pan African Monitoring and Reporting System serves as a platform to report progress on the implementation of the AU Heads of States and Governments’ Sharm el Sheikh Commitments which seek to accelerate the achievement of the Africa Water Vision 2025, as well as the global high level political commitments on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) on water and sanitation.

Considered as one of the most ambitious attempts at tracking sectoral progress, the system, according to Dr. Canisius Kanangire, AMCOW’s Executive Secretary, represents Africa’s readiness to learn from past mistakes in monitoring the implementation of the MDGs as well as efforts being made to attain Africa’s Agenda 2063.

The Ghanaian Sanitation and Water Minister, Joseph Koffi Adda, while declaring open the workshop, expressed his delight at AMCOW’s decision to convene the first review process for the Pan African Water and Sanitation Sector Monitoring and Reporting System in Ghana which is the home of Pan-Africanism. Represented by the Ministry’s Chief Director, Joseph Obeng-Poku, the minister recalled the words of the late Pan Africanist leader, Kwame Nkrumah, who on the 24th of December 1957 described access to water as a barometer for measuring the progress and welfare of the people.

“I therefore see the decision by African Political leaders to set up a Pan-Africa Harmonised Monitoring and Reporting System for the water and sanitation sector in order to report regularly to the Assembly of Heads of State and Government under the Africa Union as a desire to fulfil the vision and dreams of founding fathers of the continent,” Adda said.

Sylvester Matemu, AMCOW’s Technical Advisory Committee Chair, in his remarks lauded the workshop idea as a credible way of “reviewing the AMCOW monitoring system and deepening partnership with relevant global agencies for effective and harmonised monitoring and reporting processes.” According to Matemu, the workshop which also serves as the first inaugural meeting of the Integrated Monitoring Initiative under the UN Water Family “provides an opportunity to launch the 2017 data collection and submission campaign.”

Representative of UN Water, William Reidhead, in his remarks stated: “UN-Water is very pleased to have a chance to join efforts with AMCOW in this work. During the week to come we look forward to learning about the established mechanisms for national and regional monitoring in Africa, and steps that can be taken to harmonise the regional and global efforts.

“We are excited to explore opportunities for collaborating with AMCOW and with participating countries in the 2017 baseline process; and we are additionally interested in learning about communities of practice in Africa which can serve as an example for other regions in the world.”

Olushola Olayide of the AU Department of Rural Economy and Agriculture while delivering the statement of the African Union at the workshop expressed delight over the fact that “the Monitoring and Reporting System for the Water and Sanitation Sector in Africa allows AMCOW, through the Specialised Technical Committee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Water and Environment of the AUC to report periodically on the progress of Water and Sanitation in Africa vis-à-vis progress made towards achieving the Africa Water Vision 2025; the Sustainable Development Goals 2030 (SDGs); the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR); and our Africa Agenda 2063.”

The African Union Commission in its statement urged UN Agencies and Partners to ensure that monitoring and reporting processes at Global level are aligned and linked with the Pan Africa Water and Sanitation sector Monitoring and Reporting System by working closely with the AMCOW Secretariat. This, according to Olayide, is to “avoid unnecessary duplication and placing an unwarranted additional monitoring burden on Member States.”

Francis Konu, representative the African Water Facility (AWF), hailed the continental monitoring and reporting platform established by AMCOW as timely and highly appropriate as “it is in sync with the African Development Bank’s drive to Light up and power Africa, Feed Africa, Integrate Africa, Industrialise Africa, and Improve the quality of life for the people of Africa.”

The web-based Reporting system was developed with funding from the African Water Facility (AWF), and supported by the M&E Task Force, the German Cooperation as well as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) and with technical assistance from UNEP-DHI. The highlight of the portal which can be accessed at http://www.africawat-sanreports.org is the 2016 Status Report of 42 African member states submitted using an online reporting framework. It also contains the 2013 and 2014 data submitted by Member States using a temporary paper based template.

The system which serves as database on water and sanitation for Member States in Africa is expected to promote cross-sector learning and knowledge dissemination within the water, sanitation, food, energy and climate nexus while supporting joint sector reviews. The online portal comes with maps and tabular view options which makes it easy to compare progress on various indicators across Member States in Africa.

Courtesy: PAMACC News Agency

Images: Stakeholders draft third climate communication

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A two-day stakeholders inception workshop for the preparation of Nigeria’s Third National Communication (TNC) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) held from Tuesday, May 2 to Wednesday, May 3, 2017 in Keffi, Nasarawa State.

According to officials of the Department of Climate Change (DCC) of the Federal Ministry of Environment and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), organisers of the event and promoters of the venture, the preparation of the TNC would, among others, enable the country to prepare improved climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies.

Peter Tarfa
Dr Yerima Peter Tarfa, Director, Department of Climate Change, delivering a welcome address
Prof. Olukayode Oladipo
Climate change expert and negotiator, Prof. Olukayode Oladipo, making a presentation
Kolo Mohammed
Mrs Kolo Mohammed making a contribution
Third National Communication
Participants at the workshop
Samuel Adejuwon
Former Director of DCC, Dr Samuel Adejuwon, making one of several presentations

Afghanistan emerges 43rd Party to Minamata Convention

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The Government of Afghanistan on Tuesday, May 2, 2017 deposited its instrument of accession, thereby becoming the 43rd future Party to the Minamata Convention on Mercury.

Ashraf Ghani
Dr Ashraf Ghani, President of Afghanistan. Photo credit: AFP PHOTO/Wakil Kohsar

This comes after Burkina Faso and Canada ratified the global treaty on April 10 and April 7, 2017 respectively. Canada’s ratification was preceded by those of Ghana, Honduras, Liechtenstein and Togo, among others.

The Minamata Convention on Mercury, a global treaty aimed at protecting human health and the environment from the adverse effects of mercury, was agreed at the fifth session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC5) in Geneva, Switzerland on Saturday, January 19, 2013.

A minimum of 50 nations are required to ratify the Convention to make it legally binding, a scenario that will ensure that the First Conference of the Parties (COP1) to the Minamata Convention on Mercury, scheduled to take place in the last week of September, 2017 in Geneva, Switzerland, becomes a reality.

Nigeria is one of the 128 signatories to the global treaty, but she is yet to officially ratify it. The nation’s Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Wednesday, April 12, 2017 approved the ratification of the Convention.

Ratification automatically makes a nation a Party to the Convention with the duty to domesticate its content.

The signing of the Convention would enable such a country to:

  • Develop a National Implementation Strategy (NIS)/Action Plan to holistically address challenges relating to the reduction and elimination of Mercury;
  • Undertake a comprehensive inventory as a basis to develop and implement a more robust Mercury preventive programme which will include the identification and location, contaminated sites and extent of contamination, storage, handling and disposal to ensure that mercury related activities do not result in further damage to health and the environment;
  • Enhance national capacities with respect to human resources development and institutional strengthening, towards addressing concerns about the long-term effects of Mercury on both human health and the environment and also to ensure the effective domestication of the instrument that will be implementable at national level;
  • Sensitise the populace and policy makers on the hazards of mercury;
  • Develop and implement Mercury Release Minimisation Projects; and,
  • Control mercury supply and trade.

Major highlights of the Minamata Convention include a ban on new mercury mines, the phase-out of existing ones, the phase out and phase down of mercury use in a number of products and processes, control measures on emissions to air and on releases to land and water, and the regulation of the informal sector of artisanal and small-scale gold mining. The Convention also addresses interim storage of mercury and its disposal once it becomes waste, sites contaminated by mercury as well as health issues.

FGM: Group carries out clitoral restorative surgeries in Kenya

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From May 2 to May 13, the U.S.-based, non-profit organisation Clitoraid on Tuesday, May 2, 2017 launched a two-week humanitarian mission in Nairobi, Kenya, offering for the first time clitoral restorative surgery to victims of female genital mutilation (FGM).

Dr. Marci Bowers
Dr. Marci Bowers, Clitoraid’s gynecological surgeon

According to Clitoraid spokesperson, Nadine Gary, this new mission is part of the multiple actions planned during the month of May, the month of Clitoris Awareness.

“Dr. Marci Bowers, Clitoraid’s gynecological surgeon, will operate on 40 women in Kenya.

Clitoraid is partnering with the Kenyan non-governmental organisation Garana and Dr. Abdullahi Adan, a plastic reconstructive surgeon in this endeavor.”

“Dr. Bowers will restore sexual pleasure to 40 patients,” Gary said. “But those having surgery next week are only a few of the many FGM survivors who have contacted us, desperately seeking to be made whole again.”

According to a 2013 UNICEF report, a quarter of all Kenyan women are victims of the barbaric custom of FGM, also known as “cutting.”

Gary said Bowers will also train local surgeons during her stay in Kenya.

“She’ll present the clitoral restorative technique developed by French urologist Dr. Pierre Foldes,” Gary explained. “Clemence Linard, our clinical sexologist in France, will also participate, offering counseling to patients and sharing her expertise with Kenyan sexologist Dr. Tammary Esho, who volunteered to assist.”

Clitoraid’s humanitarian mission began in 2004.

“International spiritual leader Maitreya Rael during one of his visits to West Africa in 2003, learned of the gruesome practice of mutilating girls’ genitals,” Gary said. “He launched Clitoraid not just to launch an educational campaign against FGM but to provide the surgery that repairs the damage inflicted on its victims.”

Gary said Clitoraid has already operated on over 250 FGM survivors, mainly in the United States, where 500,000 victims reside today.

“Among our former patients is Jaha Dukereh, a U.S. resident born in the Gambia,” Gary said. “Last year she was named one of Time Magazine’s ‘100 Most Influential People’ in recognition of her anti-FGM activism. She calls her restorative surgery through Clitoraid ‘a life-changing experience’.”

Meanwhile, Clitoraid’s first hospital dedicated to FGM victims and their medical needs in West Africa is still awaiting licensure in Bobo Dioulasso, Burkina Faso.

“Corrupt male politicians and greedy doctors prevented our 2014 opening, oblivious to the anger and despair of countless local FGM patients,” Gary said.

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