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Concern over spate of environmental activists’ murder

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Expert on indigenous rights demands consumers boycott ‘blood-tainted’ products from land grabs amid weak state response, Alex Pashley reports for Climate Home, a part of The Guardian Environment Network

Honduran prize-winning campaigner Berta Caceres was slain by gunmen earlier this month weeks after opposing a hydroelectric dam project
Honduran prize-winning campaigner Berta Caceres was slain by gunmen earlier this month weeks after opposing a hydroelectric dam project

The killings of indigenous activists in Honduras signal a growing “epidemic” around the world, a UN envoy has declared.

Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, special rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, urged governments to give protection to forest defenders in an interview.

Relatives and friends carry the coffin of murdered indigenous activist Berta Cáceres. Around the world in 2014, the killings averaged two a week, according to Global Witness. Photo credit: Orlando Sierra/AFP/Getty Images
Relatives and friends carry the coffin of murdered indigenous activist Berta Cáceres. Around the world in 2014, the killings averaged two a week, according to Global Witness. Photo credit: Orlando Sierra/AFP/Getty Images

Prize-winning campaigner Berta Caceres was slain by gunmen earlier this month weeks after opposing a hydroelectric dam in the dangerous central American state.

Days later, a member of her organisation, Nelson Garcia, was killed by security forces during an eviction of an indigenous community.

“The pattern of killings in many countries is becoming an epidemic definitely,” Tauli-Corpuz told Climate Home by phone from Brazil where she is investigating violence faced by Amazonian tribes.

At least 116 environmental defenders were killed in 2014, according to NGO Global Witness, with 40% of whom were indigenous.

Many were gunned down by hired assassins or shot by police in disputes over mining, dams and agribusiness. Three-quarters took place in Latin America, with south Asia the second-deadliest region.

Tauli-Corpuz, a Filipino official and the third to hold the UN brief, called for recognitions of land rights and a robust legal system to prosecute perpetrators.

She also issued an appeal for consumers to boycott products “tainted by blood” that were grown on territories seized in land grabs and violated human rights.

“The economic effect makes a difference. We need all possible avenues to raise awareness.”

A fact-finding mission on indigenous rights in Brazil reached a damning conclusion: farmers and Indian are locked in “open warfare” as the agricultural frontier expands deeper into the Amazon.

“Brazil is perceived to be in a very good shape internationally, a country that talks about upholding advanced laws,” she said. “But the reality I see here tells me another story. There has been a systematic attack on the rights of the country’s Indigenous Peoples by all branches of government.”

She cited tribes evicted in food-growing region Mato Grosso du Sol by multinationals like French commodities giant Louis Dreyfus, and the controversial Belo Monte hydro project in Para.

Corruption has rolled back rights, a situation likely to be exacerbated by the country’s deepening economic crisis.

Tauli-Corpuz applauded the recognition of indigenous peoples’ role in mitigating climate change in 2015’s Paris agreement through better managing carbon-sucking forests.

When strange clouds fell from sky in Morocco

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Bubble cloud formations in Morroco
Bubble cloud formations in Morroco

It could be a scene from a fantasy film.

A video has shown huge unexplained foam-like clouds on the ground at Doukkala, Morocco, sending conspiracy theorists into overdrive.

The strange clouds cover large areas of the landscape and the man filming wanders around in awe, occasionally touching the substance.

Some of the blobs are huge while others are just small wisps.

At one point a particularly sizable cloud blows forward and almost seems like a fantastical creature crawling over the road barrier.

Some viewers have consequently likened it to Baymax from Disney film Big Hero 6 or Stay Puft Marshmallow Man from Ghostbusters.

So far explanations as to what have caused the clouds have ranged from from government weather manipulation, alien intervention and naturally occurring sea foam.

One superstitious person says: “Chemtrails!! They fell from the sky! Chemtrails!” According to conspiracy theory these are long-lasting trails left in the sky by high-flying aircraft.

It is believed chemtrails are chemical or biological agents deliberately sprayed for sinister purposes undisclosed to the general public.

Meteorologists claim the material is just artificial foam as clouds are unable to settle but Paranormal blog UFO Sightings Hotspot said of the clouds: “Clouds cannot plunge off the sky and settle on the ground.”

“Well, if it’s artificial foam where it comes from and are these ‘clouds’ another proof of geoengineering and weather manipulation?”

Another explains: “It happens when a city’s sewage system goes untreated and all the natural chemicals from the waste congeal into a foamy cloud like substance.”

Some joke it is soap: “Somebody drop the whole box of detergent in the washer again?”

The real origin of the bizarre substance is as yet unconfirmed.

By Harriet Mallinson, Mailonline

Images of 2016 Earth Hour celebration in West Africa

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Over five thousand youths from civil society groups in Nigeria, Senegal, Nigér, Ivory Coast, Bénin, Togo, Ghana and Gambia on Saturday observed the 2016 Earth Hour celebration with a call on governments and private sector players to do more to reverse climate change impact.

Indeed, major landmarks, businesses and households in cities around the world turned their lights off for one hour at 8.30pm on Saturday 19 March to raise awareness about climate change and show support for renewable energy.

Some of the landmarks include: Houses of Parliament in London; Piccadilly Circus, London; Eiffel Tower, Paris; Brandenburger Tor gate in Berlin; Trevi Fountain, Rome; Schoenbrunn Palace, Vienna; Hyllie Water Tower in Malmo, Sweden; National Library of Belarus in Minsk; Bolshoi Kamenny Bridge with the Kremlin, Moscow; Sydney Opera House and Harbour Bridge, Australia; Sydney Opera House, Australia; Taipei 101 skyscraper, Taiwan; Tokyo Tower, Japan; National Stadium, known as the Bird’s Nest, in Beijing, China; Marina Bay Sands hotel and resort in Singapore; Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; Business District in Jakarta, Indonesia; Grand Palace in Bangkok, Thailand; and, Borobudur Temple in Magelang, Central Java, Indonesia.

EnviroNews relieves memories of the celebration of the global event on the West African sub-region.

Earth Hour celebration in Abuja, Nigeria
Earth Hour celebration in Abuja, Nigeria
Earth Hour celebration in Cotonou, Benin Republic
Earth Hour celebration in Cotonou, Benin Republic
Earth Hour celebration in Abidjan, Ivory Coast
Earth Hour celebration in Abidjan, Ivory Coast
Earth Hour celebration in Banjul, The Gambia
Earth Hour celebration in Banjul, The Gambia
Earth Hour celebration in Lagos, Nigeria
Earth Hour celebration in Lagos, Nigeria
Earth Hour celebration in Makurdi, Nigeria
Earth Hour celebration in Makurdi, Nigeria
Earth Hour celebration in Niamey, Niger Republic
Earth Hour celebration in Niamey, Niger Republic
Earth Hour celebration in Dakar, Senegal
Earth Hour celebration in Dakar, Senegal
Earth Hour celebration in Jalingo, Nigeria
Earth Hour celebration in Jalingo, Nigeria
Earth Hour celebration in Lome, Togo
Earth Hour celebration in Lome, Togo

2016 Earth Hour: Youths demand actions to reverse climate change impact

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Over five thousand youths in eight West Africa countries have called on governments, as well as relevant private sector players to be more proactive and facilitate the establishment of sound institutional frameworks to help empower citizens to reverse the impact of climate change on sources of livelihoods and sustainable growth across the region.

Youths observe Earth Hour in Nigeria
Youths observe Earth Hour in Nigeria

The youths, who constitute members of groups from Nigeria, Senegal, Nigér, Ivory Coast, Bénin, Togo, Ghana and Gambia, made this call during the 2016 Earth Hour celebration, a global event dedicated to raise awareness on the devastating impact of unpredicted changes in weather pattern on agriculture, water and energy sources, as well as the role of citizens in ensuring environmental conservation.

2016 marks the 10th lights-out event since Earth Hour’s debut in Sydney, Australia in 2007. In the past nine years, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) and Earth Hour teams around the world have harnessed the power of the movement to raise support and funds for access to renewable energy, protection of wildlife and their habitats, building sustainable livelihoods and driving climate-friendly legislation and policy.

Hamzat Lawal, the Chief Executive Officer of Connected Development (CODE), which promoted the programme in the region, said the event provides opportunity not only to discuss the negative, but also the abundant opportunities and positive aspects of climate change as well as how to live sustainably to save the environment from destruction.

“For us at Connected Development, we felt we should support groups like these across the West Africa region not to only depend on the government to take action,” Lawal said. “But we want people to take individual action, because from individual action we are going to have collective action where we are able to create jobs and sustain the environment.”

With the theme of this year’s celebration tagged: “Change Climate Change,” the group in Nigeria as part of its commitment extended its voice to support a petition asking the Federal Government to stop the Cross River State Super Highway project, a massive road construction exercise environmental advocates said would undermine protection of the largest forest cover in the country.

Participants from Lagos, Abuja, Cross River, Taraba and Benue states mobilised and carried out a candle light procession, cultural display, comedy as well as musical shows during the celebration to raise awareness and increase public knowledge on how to create a low carbon economy.

“In 2016, Earth Hour will continue to compliment grassroots efforts including driving a petition to save the Ekuri Forest and biodiversity in the Sahel of Africa, as well as help devise a comprehensive solution to the persistent waste management crisis by working with governments, businesses and civil society groups simultaneously,” said Oludotun Babayemi, West Africa Regional Director of Earth Hour, and the Monitoring & Evaluation expert to CODE.

Participants who spoke on the significance and involvement of young people in climate matters described the occasion as a trend setter that brings awareness to communities and various stakeholders with a message that emphasised the fact that it takes little effort to contribute towards sustainable development.

“This is a wakeup call for all actors to join forces to make a significant impact towards reversing climate change and to improve the livelihoods of the poor in our communities,” said Emmanuel Njoku, environmental rights campaigner and social activist.

By Etta Michael Bisong, Abuja 

Food security: GEO launches early warning crop monitor

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The Group on Earth Observations has announced the launch of the Early Warning Crop Monitor (EWCM), a new tool to fight food insecurity. The announcement was made during the GEO 36th Executive Meeting held in Geneva on 8-9 March.

GEO’s US Co-Chair, Dr Kathryn Sullivan
GEO’s US Co-Chair, Dr Kathryn Sullivan

Developed by the GEO Global Agricultural Monitoring Initiative (GEOGLAM), initiated by the G-20 Agriculture Ministers, the EWCM provides consensus reports on crop conditions in countries at risk of food insecurity in Central and South America, Africa, the Middle East, and Central and East Asia. The March EWCM bulletin reports that countries in Southeast Asia, and even more so in Southern Africa, face severe droughts attributed to the on-going El Niño.

The EWCM, together with the GEOGLAM Crop Monitor for the Agricultural Market Information Service (AMIS), will ultimately monitor crop development in 124 countries, totalling about 94 percent of the world’s agricultural area. Both reports synthesise remote sensing data, field observations and environmental modelling conducted by more than 40 international, regional and national organisations. The monthly reports are made available to decision-makers across the food security community and to the commodities markets. (http://www.geoglam-crop-monitor.org/)

GEO’s US Co-Chair, Dr Kathryn Sullivan, Administrator of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), stated, “Concerns over food and water security are rising globally.  Ensuring that agricultural industries around the world have access to the best science, data, tools and resources is essential as we work to increase food security and mitigate the effects of droughts and floods. The GEOGLAM Early Warning Crop Monitor provides decision-makers with essential information, gathered from satellites, buoys and other observational tools, to be ready, responsive and resilient against extreme weather and water events.”

During its latest meeting, the GEO Executive Committee also welcomed new Participating Organisations: European Association of Remote Sensing Companies (EARSC); Joint Board of Geospatial Information Societies (JBGIS); Mountain Research Initiative (MRI); and a new Observer, the Asia-Pacific Regional Space Agency Forum (APRSAF).

In addition to Kathryn Sullivan, the Executive Committee Co-Chairs include Hejun Yin, Vice-Minister, Ministry of Science and Technology (China); Rudolf Strohmeier, Assistant Director-General, Directorate-General for Research and Innovation (European Commission); and Philemon Mjwara, Director-General, Department of Science and Technology (South Africa).

The intergovernmental Group on Earth Observations (GEO) is comprised of 102 member states, including the European Commission, and 95 participating organisations. Established in 2005, GEO strives to improve the world’s observation systems and provide policy makers and scientists with accurate and useful data that can be used to make informed decisions on issues affecting the planet.

Headquartered in Switzerland, the GEO’s primary focus is to develop a Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS) to enhance the ability of end-users to discover and access Earth observation data and convert it to useable and useful information.

UN climate campaign to make Angry Birds happy

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The United Nations encourages young people to take action on climate change and make the Angry Birds happy on the International Day of Happiness

The UN has appointed Red from the 'Angry Birds' as Honorary Ambassador for International Day of Happiness
The UN has appointed Red from the ‘Angry Birds’ as Honorary Ambassador for International Day of Happiness

The United Nations on Friday (March 18) announced a campaign to encourage young people to step up their actions to address climate change and ensure a sustainable and happier future for all.

The campaign is launched in partnership with the “Angry Birds” – the globally renowned mobile game characters – to make a direct link between tackling climate change and people’s happiness and well-being on the occasion of the International Day of Happiness.

“The Angry Birds have entertained millions of people around the world – and now they are part of making the world a better place,” said Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who appointed Red of the Angry Birds as an Honorary Ambassador for Green at a launch event at UN Headquarters in New York.

“We are proud to give Red a reason to go Green. There is no better way to mark the International Day of Happiness than to have our animated ambassador raise awareness about the importance of addressing climate change to create a safer, more sustainable and happier future for all,” Mr. Ban said.

The campaign, in partnership with Sony Pictures Entertainment, the UN Development Programme and UN Foundation, asks the general public across the world to make the Angry Birds happy by taking actions on climate change and sharing their photos and commitments on social media platforms using the common hashtag, #AngryBirdsHappyPlanet. By recycling, taking public transportation and conserving water, for example, individuals can share tips on how they can live sustainably and happily in their everyday lives.

As part of his ambassadorial duties, Red will go on a “virtual world tour” starting on 21 March, highlighting various ways to take climate action. His tour will take him to Paris, where countries adopted an historic agreement to address climate change in December, and will end in New York, where world leaders will sign the Paris Agreement at UN Headquarters on 22 April.

During the launch event, the voice actors from the upcoming Angry Bird movie, Jason Sudeikis, Josh Gad, and Maya Rudolph, and producers John Cohen and Catherine Winder gave hundreds of students gathered in the iconic UN General Assembly Hall a sneak preview of the #AngryBirdsHappyPlanet campaign materials, including public service announcements created to support the campaign. They also asked the young audience for their support to the campaign by doing their part to make a difference on climate change.

Brazilian opposition to fracking spreads

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The Federal Court in Brazil has declared the prohibition to use the hydraulic fracturing technology (fracking) to extract fossil fuels in the state of Alagoas. Following Piauí, Sao Paulo, Acre and Paraná, Alagoas thus became the fifth Brazilian state to prohibit fracking in its territory.

Nicole Figueiredo de Oliveira, 350.org Brazil Team Leader
Nicole Figueiredo de Oliveira, 350.org Brazil Team Leader

This sentence is the result of the efforts of the Coalizão Não Fracking Brasil (No-Fracking Brazil Coalition) to raise awareness and support the state attorney’s office in the process of filing a lawsuit against the National Oil and Gas Agency to prevent shale gas exploration and the allocation of new lands for exploration.

The coalition has held several meetings, public hearings and outreach actions to engage communities and local governments in preventing the use of fracking to keep Brazilian communities, the environment and crucial water resources safe from the threats this technology represent.

Eighty municipalities have committed to fight fracking locally, and 56 cities have already achieved its prohibition through local legal action.

“This is a fight we can win,” stated Nicole Figueiredo de Oliveira, 350.org Brazil Team Leader and part of the Coalizão Não Fracking Brasil. “Together with the local governments and the communities, we are winning and we will defeat the fossil fuels industry.”

The Coalizão Não Fracking Brasil along with communities and local partners are now gearing up to take part in the global wave of actions to “Break Free from Fossil Fuels” that will take place this May. Mobilisations across the states of Acre, Ceará, Espíritu Santo and Paraná will highlight the negative impacts of the country’s extractive policies, including oil, gas, fracking and mining, as well as the great potential that the country’s natural resources offer to develop clean energy sources, keep the forests standing and avoid the worst impacts of climate change.

Fracking is the process of drilling down into the earth before a high-pressure water mixture is directed at the rock to release the gas inside. Water, sand and chemicals are injected into the rock at high pressure which allows the gas to flow out to the head of the well. The term fracking refers to how the rock is fractured apart by the high pressure mixture.

Environmentalists say potentially carcinogenic chemicals used may escape and contaminate groundwater around the fracking site. The industry suggests pollution incidents are the results of bad practice, rather than an inherently risky technique.

There are also worries that the fracking process can cause small earth tremors.

Campaigners say that fracking is simply distracting energy firms and governments from investing in renewable sources of energy, and encouraging continued reliance on fossil fuels.

State of Palestine joins UNFCCC

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The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) now has 197 members following the formal entry on Thursday (March 17) of the State of Palestine.

UNFCCC, Executive Secretary, Christiana Figueres
UNFCCC, Executive Secretary, Christiana Figueres

This is in accordance with its article 23 (2) which reads as follows: “For each State or regional economic integration organisation that ratifies, accepts or approves the Convention or accedes thereto after the deposit of the 5oth instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, the Convention shall enter into force on the ninetieth day after the date of deposit by such State or regional economic integration organisation of its instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession.”

The State of Palestine deposited its instrument of accession to the Convention on 18 December 2015.

The State of Palestine, also known simply as Palestine, is a partially recognised state in the Middle East. Its independence was declared on 15 November 1988 by the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) in Algiers as a government-in-exile.

Kofi Annan: Forests destruction poses threat to climate change

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The world could miss out in the fight against climate change and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) if the current scale of forest destruction continues, according to Kofi Annan, Chair of the Africa Progress Panel (APP).

Fisheries Transparency Initiative
Kofi Annan, chair of the Africa Progress Panel

Mr Annan warned against the destruction of forests, which provide clean air and water, and local communities with food, shelter and livelihoods, saying, “Each day more forests are cleared, driven by multiple activities, from agriculture to infrastructure development, to the growing demand for wood and forest products, often made worse by illegal logging.”

In his keynote address at the “Forests for the Future – New Forests for Africa” conference in Accra, Ghana on 16 March, Kofi Annan said: “Some of the world’s most precious ecosystems, such as the Virunga National Park in the Congo Basin, are threatened by oil, gas and mineral exploration and exploitation”.

 

Forests and climate change

Forests offer incredible impetus to the fight against climate change. “Forest restoration and reforestation in Africa can contribute to the global effort to tackle climate change and accelerate progress in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals,” said Mr Annan, adding that “forest restoration of 350 million hectares could generate $170 billion per year in net benefits from watershed protection, improved crop yields and forest products.”

To realise these gains, he encouraged African governments to create the conducive environment to promote domestic and international investment in sustainable reforestation initiatives.

In its 2014 report, “Grain, Fish, Money: Financing Africa’s Green and Blue Revolutions,” the APP argued that effective protection, management and mobilisation of Africa’s vast forest resources are needed to support transformative growth. The Panel estimated that Africa lost 12.4 billion Euros (US$ 17 billion) to illegal exports of timber in 2011.

 

Transforming the forestry sector

Kofi Annan challenged Africa’s leadership on reforestation to go hand-in-hand with a massive transformation of its energy sector. “Two out of three Africans – over 600 million people – have no access to electricity. Cut off from the grid, rural populations across the continent often have no other choice than chopping trees to make charcoal for cooking,” he stated, adding that “this is not just driving deforestation and climate change, but also putting people’s health at risk.”

He outlined three key steps to transforming Africa’s forestry sector:

  1. put an end to deforestation and protect the health of our remaining forests;
  2. recognise the huge potential of new forests and invest in sustainable reforestation of degraded lands; and,
  3. put Africa on a pathway towards a low-carbon energy future to end the clearing of forests for energy purposes.

The conference, which aims at large scale reforestation in Africa, is an initiative of the Dutch forestry consultation company, Form International; the sustainable forestry plantation company, Form Ghana; Nyenrode Business University; and in cooperation with The Forestry Commission, Ghana and the World Resources Institute.

By Stephen Yeboah (Research Fellow at the Africa Progress Panel)

Women crusaders kick against water privatisation in Lagos

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Veronica Nwanya, Chairperson, African Women Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Network (AWWASHN), tells Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State in a letter presented during a rally on Thursday (March 17) to reject all forms of water privatisation and commodification. The AWWASHN is a group of women advocates in the public and civil society founded to lend a voice on issues bothering on water, sanitation and hygiene

Akinwunmi Ambode, Governor of Lagos State. Photo credit: ecomium.org
Akinwunmi Ambode, Governor of Lagos State. Photo credit: ecomium.org

AWWASHN requests you join us in affirming the fundamental right to clean water and independent self-governance which Lagos citizens deserve. We are deeply troubled that decades of influence by the World Bank and the private water industry have pushed the currently proposed water privatisation plan in Lagos and similar schemes throughout countries of the Global South.

As a group, we are deeply worried that the Lagos State Water Corporation (LSWC) with the support of the World Bank and private water corporations, is pushing hard for privatisation of water in Lagos under a Public Private Partnership (PPP) model that is known to have failed in other parts of the world.

Failures in water PPP models have been recorded in Manila, Philippines where, as part owner of water corporations that win PPP contracts, the World Bank has positioned itself to profit from this model. This conflict of interest drives the Bank’s misleading marketing, especially its promotion of key “success stories “like Manila and Nagpur, India, where water PPPs have failed. Around the world, cities from Paris to Dar Es Salaam that have attempted to solve water crisis with PPPs have failed and have instead rolled back water privatisation and advanced down the road of remunicipalisation.

In the light of the above, we urge you and other decision-makers to stop any form of water privatisation in Lagos, including PPPs that are based on models that fail to uphold the human right to water and has locked governments into long-term contracts and enslavement of their people. This is further proven in facts that such deals have proven exceedingly difficult for cities to exit, despite rate hikes, service cutoffs, and unfulfilled infrastructure promises. They prevent cities from making crucial progress towards real solutions to water access challenges.

In the light of this, we urge you to lead us in developing these real solutions that truly address people’s access to water from the prism of human rights. These solutions cannot be found in corporate management of public goods or privatisers managing public assets. The rave today as espoused by the United Nations in 2010 is collective investment in water infrastructure and democratic decision-making prioritising the human right to water above profits. We are ready to stand in solidarity with you and any other leader who shows a strong commitment to investing in a public water system that aims for universal access.

Our demands in this correspondence echo the recommendations civil society and community-based groups made to your Excellency on 23 March 2015 during your governorship campaign. International participants at a two-day International Summit on: Our Water, Our Right, held here in Lagos 11 -12 August 2015 also raised the same points.

As you continue unveiling your administration’s policies to make life in Lagos meaningful for all residents, we again use this medium to ask the Lagos State Government to:

  1. Reject all forms of water privativation and commodification.
  2. Fully uphold the human right to water as an obligation of the government, representing the people.
  3. Integrate broad public participation in developing plans to achieve universal access to clean water.
  4. Reject contracts designed by, involving, or influenced by the IFC, which operates to maximise private profit.
  5. Disclose all IFC and World Bank activity and discussions with Lagos government officials regarding water, including formal and informal advisory roles.
  6. Build the political will to prioritise water for the people, therefore leading to a comprehensive plan that invests in the water infrastructure necessary to provide universal water access, which will create jobs, improve public health, and invigorate the Lagos economy.

We write today to

  1. Ask you to issue a public statement informing Lagos citizens of your government’s stance on Lagos’ controversial PPP water privatisation scheme.
  2. Urge you to propose and develop a comprehensive plan for achieving universal access to clean water in the state.
  3. Respectfully request that you advise the “African Women Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Network”, on whose behalf we write, when we might have an opportunity to meet with you to discuss how we can work together to move Lagos State toward a future where all Lagosians are drinking clean, safe water.
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