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‘The real waste managers’

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Sunday Ahmed has been in the business of scavenging for waste materials for about 20 years. Every day, he roams the streets of Lagos in search of used and discarded plastics, bottles, paper and aluminium that he resells at a local dump site in Oke-Afa, Isolo – a notorious mountain of solid waste that gives a bird’s eye view of the surrounding neighbourhood.

Scavengers at work. Photo credit: environment-today.org
Scavengers at work. Photo credit: environment-today.org

“I used to repair generator for people before but when customers were no longer coming, a friend of mine introduced me to this scavenging business. At first I didn’t want to join him but when the pangs of hunger became too much for me to bear, I had to join him in the trade,” Ahmed says, recalling how he got into the trade about two decades ago.

Shifting to sit more comfortably, he continues: “When we go in search of recyclable materials, we look dirty because our business is all about dirt. But, as long as it can put food on my table, I don’t care what people think. In a good day, I can make about N10,000. But the danger of this job can take all the money away in one day.

“During the Ebola crisis in the country, we were afraid to scavenge for recyclable materials because the fear of Ebola was everywhere. There was a time that I fell sick when scavenging because a hospital waste was inside a bin. I didn’t know at first that I could be infected that way. But after suffering from an infection that almost took my life, my family members took me to the general hospital where comprehensive tests were done on me.

“The doctor said I was infected and when he was asking me questions, I told him about my contact with a medical waste. Since then I have been very careful in this job. I ensure I wear nose masks, hand gloves, and protect my feet especially during the raining season so that diseases don’t penetrate my leg from dirty water.”

But he is afraid that a recently built facility is threatening his source of livelihood – a waste recovery facility with the capacity to receive 130 trucks daily. He fears that the material recovery facility will drive him and his colleagues out of business.

“The government likes to do big projects but don’t consider people like us who are in the same business with them. If the government is sincere about their projects, they should look for ways to include us. They can employ us to work in this new recovery facility. We know the job, it is what I have been doing for about 20 years. I can even give them advice that will help the work. But they will look down at us and think we don’t have anything to contribute.”

But Ahmed has found an ally Alex Osahe, who makes aluminium pots, who frequently patronises him. Inflationary trends are increasingly making the importation of aluminium unattractive for Osahe’s business. According to him, a friend advised him to patronise scavengers and waste sorters like Ahmed but he was adamant initially.

“I didn’t believe I could get good recyclable aluminium from the scavengers. But I was shocked at what I discovered on the dump site. There are different recyclable materials that people don’t know about. What we throw away as wastes can be reused into something else. I now buy aluminium regularly from here and don’t have plan of importing the product for now. I can get what I need from Ahmed, so why import? These people we see on our streets scavenging are the real waste managers,” Osahe’s stresses.

The boom in scavenging in Lagos was triggered by the volume of waste generated in the state, which is estimated at over 9,000 tons of waste per day.

Scavengers, also known as rag pickers, now ransack the four major dumpsites across the state to source for used items that could be sold and recycled. They reportedly believe so much in the business that they refer to waste trucks as “consignments” that bring in goods to be cleared.

But the Lagos State Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) in realisation of the importance of recycling, recently initiated support for Public/Private Partnership Participation and employment opportunity in resource recovery through the Waste-to-Wealth programme such as nylon plastic recycling, kraft paper collection and buy-back programme from scavengers.

Some of the “qualified” scavengers are now manning recycling banks sited at various parts of the state as resource persons, just as the state government has adopted the 3 Rs: Reuse Recycle and Reduce strategy in waste management.

Nonetheless, some Lagosians frown at the trade. A resident, Adewole Oni, insists scavenging is a serious menace in the mega city that should be tackled.

“The government should not concentrate on the financial gains alone but adopt the San Diego’s option in order to safe guard the lives of children and women who are likely to go into scavenging,” he suggests.

Also, a health worker, who simply calls himself Johnson, expresses worry over the attitude of government despite the health implication on the practitioners.

According to him, it is worrisome to think that people wade through dump site irrespective of the offensive odour.

By Augustina Armstrong-Ogbonna

Lagos summit explores privatisation, right to water

Civil society groups, labour unions, activists, and human rights groups from across Nigeria and around the world converge on Lagos Tuesday, August 11 for the first day of a two-day summit on Our Water; Our Right. The event will explore issues related to the World Bank’s promotion of water privatisation and an investment in public alternatives that uphold the human right to water.

Public water provision in a rural community in the Federal Capital Territory
Public water provision in a rural community in the Federal Capital Territory

The summit comes amid a growing movement across Africa, and from Detroit in the United States, to Manila in Philippines, opposing the commodification of water and plans to privatise water systems. Concerns over plans to privatise water in Lagos has drawn global concern and support, including from members of U.S. Congress.

The summit will witness a convergence supporting lead host – the Environmental Rights Action / Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN). Dozens of local, national, and international labour union member participants will also bring on their insights on cases of layoffs and the poor employment conditions for workers associated with privatisation exemplified by Nigeria’s power sector privatisation failure. 

Water sector experts will share lessons on how communities successfully resisted water privatisation schemes in Dar es Salaam and other countries of Africa. International human rights groups will also outline the tide of recent remunicipalisations around the world, elaborating on Public-Public Partnership models that have bolstered successful public water systems.

 Expected figures at the summit are former House Representative member, Uche Oyeagucha; leading human rights and corruption advocate, Mallam Auwal Ibrahim Musa (Rafsanjani); and women’s rights champion Dr. Josephine Obiajulu Okei-Odumakin. International participants include Mae Buenaventura from Manila, Philippines, where the World Bank facilitated a privatisation project in 1997 and Shayda Naficy and Nathaniel Meyer of Corporate Accountability International.

ERA/FoEN Executive Director, Godwin Ojo, said: “Access to water without the trappings of privatisers is non –negotiable. This summit is intended to debunk the myth behind public private partnerships and harness the skills of our local and international allies to promote the public public partnership that guarantees everyone have access to water regardless of their ability to pay for it.”

Shayda Naficy, campaign director with Corporate Accountability International, said: “The goal of any water system is to provide the water people need to survive, not earn profits for the corporate water industry. It’s time for the World Bank to end its dogmatic promotion of water for profit and support democratically controlled and publicly owned water systems, which is what the people of Lagos are demanding.”

In October 2014, the “Our Water, Our Right” coalition launched a campaign to compel then-governor, Babatunde Fashola, to reject a large-scale public-private partnership water management plan. Just weeks later, the World Bank’s private arm, the International Finance Corporation, indicated via email that its proposed role as transaction advisor for the project had been cancelled, followed by a public statement in January.

The summit is co-hosted by Public Services International, Amalgamated Union of Public Corporations, Civil Service Technical and Recreational Service Employees (AUPCTRE), in partnership with Transnational Institute, Corporate Accountability International, Asian Peoples’ Movement on Debt & Development, and Freedom from Debt Coalition.

Kyoto Protocol 1st period final accounting begins

Developed country Parties (Annex I) under the Kyoto Protocol have entered the final 100 days of the emission reduction treaty’s accounting period during which they ensure that they make up any shortfall in meeting their targets to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

Donald Cooper, UNFCCC Mitigation, Data and Analysis (MDA) Programme Coordinator. Photo credit: iisd.ca
Donald Cooper, UNFCCC Mitigation, Data and Analysis (MDA) Programme Coordinator. Photo credit: iisd.ca

Preliminary analysis has already demonstrated that countries with targets under the Kyoto Protocol collectively exceeded their original ambitions by a large margin – a powerful demonstration that climate change agreements not only work but can drive even higher ambition over time.

On 30 September the Secretariat will publish preliminary information on the actual situation of each party’s emissions and units.

From 10 August to18 November, countries with quantified emission limitation and reduction targets under the protocol can acquire or transfer any of the Kyoto Protocol units. These include emission reduction units, certified emission reductions, assigned amount units and removal units valid for the
first commitment period.

The successful completion of the Kyoto Protocol’s first commitment period can serve as a beacon for governments as they work towards a new, universal climate change agreement in Paris, in December this year.

The start of what is known as the “true-up” period was made possible when, one month before the official deadline, the last annual review report of individual Parties’ greenhouse gas (GHG) inventories was published on the website of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. To reach this milestone, for close to a decade hundreds of international experts prepared more than 200 technical reviews, coordinated by the UNFCC secretariat.

“This verification demonstrates that Parties can and do live up to their commitments and that the review and verification procedures work,” said Donald Cooper, UNFCCC Mitigation, Data and Analysis (MDA) Programme Coordinator.

After the 100 day period, the UNFCCC secretariat will coordinate a comprehensive compliance assessment that is expected to be completed in early 2016. A final report will then be published for each Party which had a target in the first commitment period.

The Kyoto Protocol, adopted in 1997 and coming into force in 2005 as the world’s first emissions reduction treaty, includes quantified emission limitation and reduction targets for 37 industrialized countries and the European Community.

The first commitment period covers reporting from these countries on their GHG emissions and removals for the years 2008-2012. It has been recognised as an early and critical step that has enabled the world to move forward in acknowledging the scientific realities of climate change as well as offering flexible solutions to tackle it.

Ogoniland clean-up: Buhari commended, advised on implementation terms

The Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) has hailed the Federal Government for approving a $10 million take-off grant for the implementation of the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) Assessment on Ogoniland and reconstituting the Governing Council of the Hydrocarbon Pollution Restoration Project (HYPREP), saying both moves indicated the current administration is on the right path in tackling oil pollution in the Niger Delta.

Muhammadu Buhari, President of Nigeria
Muhammadu Buhari, President of Nigeria

The $10 million grant is to begin a set of activities to fast-track the implementation of the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) Assessment on Ogoniland.

A statement by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adeshina, said that President Muhamadu Buhari also approved the re-composition of the Governing Council of HYPREP to include: One representative each from the Ministries of Petroleum and Environment, a representative from Rivers which is the impacted state, four representatives from the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). Others are two representatives from Ogoni, One from the United Nations and one from the secretariat.

In a statement issued in Lagos, ERA/FoEN commended the Buhari administration for the decision, but however cautioned that the HYPREP was still “a contraption” without the backing of the law as it was domiciled under the Ministry of Petroleum.

ERA/FoEN Executive Director, Godwin Ojo, said: “We are pleased that the present administration has started taking steps that correspond with its promise that within the first one hundred days in office it will start implementing the recommendations of the UNEP Assessment on Ogoniland.

“While we see a body language indicating the President wants to sincerely tackle the pollution in Ogoniland and the entire Delta, we are however not comfortable with the HYPREP which does not have a legal framework backing it which the Ogoni people demand. What the UNEP recommended is an independent body to oversee the implementation of the report not one domiciled in a federal ministry.”

The UNEP’s scientific study released in 2011 exposed the large-scale, continued contamination of the water and soil in Ogoniland, and the serious threat this poses to human health. In one case, UNEP found that a community drinking well was polluted with benzene, a cancer causing substance, at levels 900 times above the World Health Organisation (WHO) guideline. 

The report presented to the Goodluck Jonathan administration on 4 August 2011, was however not implemented throughout the life of that administration. Instead, the government hurriedly set up the HYPREP without the consent of the Ogoni people and started awarding projects that did not correspond with the recommendations of the UNEP.

“For us, this is the opportunity to reiterate our call for the establishment of an Ogoniland Environmental Restoration Authority as an urgent priority; establishment of the Environmental Restoration Fund with at least $1billion of initial financing,” Ojo stated.

Meanwhile, the Bayelsa State Government has applauded President Muhammad Buhari for approving the implementation of the UNEP report on the cleanup of Ogoniland.

The Commissioner for Environment in the state, Iniruo Wills, in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Yenagoa on Sunday applauded the President for initiating the implementation of the cleanup the oil-polluted Ogoniland.

Wills said: “President Muhammadu Buhari’s approval of the steps to fast-track the cleanup and restoration of Ogoniland in line with UNEP’s recommendations is a positive signal for the hitherto relegated environment sector and for the Niger Delta region.

“This is an elixir, coming at the fourth anniversary of the release of the UNEP report, which happens to be the first anniversary falling within President Buhari’s tenure.

“We congratulate the Ogoni people and the entire Niger Delta.”

Wills further made a case for Bayelsa State and other states in the Niger Delta equally impacted by oil pollution, induced by oil and gas exploration and production.

He said: “We are very hopeful that the President and relevant Federal Government authorities will correct the crucial omissions in the measures approved, especially the non-incorporation/representation of other pollution ravaged states in the Niger Delta.

“For example, Bayelsa State is currently under the burden of about 1,000 recorded oil spills per year.

“The state of Bayelsa has been suffering the same fate as Ogoniland for 60 years, dating back to the start of Nigeria’s commercial oil production, which took place in Oloibiri in present day Bayelsa State.”

Wills noted that the pipeline explosion from Agip’s oil field in Bayelsa State, which claimed the lives of 14 people, including two regulatory officials, reflected the plight of the state.

He said: “Overall, we are excited at the new prospects for environmental protection and restoration in our oil producing communities.

“If these measures are faithfully implemented and replicated across the other ecologically degraded states in the region, they will place President Buhari on record as a president that is serious about the remediation of the ravaged Niger Delta environment.

“We therefore look forward to a total reversal of the Federal Government’s long tradition of handling the grave dangers of environmental degradation by half measures.”

Wills called on the Federal Government to adequately fund NOSDRA and to urgently enable the agency to establish the National Oil Spill Control and Response Centre mandated by the NOSDRA Act.

The commissioner appealed to the government to implement the proposal by NOSDRA to site the oil spill control centre in Bayelsa State.

N9.2bn cookstoves: Lawsuit is a distraction

Hamzat Lawal’s Follow The Money, in a recent reaction to the saga, says the lawsuit involving government and the contractor is an unnecessary distraction   

The cookstoves imported under the N9.2 billion FG project
The cookstoves imported under the N9.2 billion FG project

In November 2014, the Federal Government of Nigeria approved a N9.2 billion initiative aimed at providing healthier, cleaner cooking alternatives to rural women in Nigeria and curbing the spread of desertification caused by excessive firewood use for cooking. The clean cookstoves contract was awarded to Integra Renewable Energy Limited to procure 750,000 clean cookstoves and 18,000 Wonderbags in the first phase of the clean cookstoves campaign.

On the 5th of August 2015, Follow The Money team was informed that Integra Renewable Energy Ltd had filed a lawsuit against the Federal Ministry of Environment citing the cause as the apparent termination of the initial contract between the government and Integra Renewable Energy Ltd. According to sources, the Federal Government has agreed to meet with Integra Renewable Energy Ltd in court and settle the matter through the appropriate legal avenues. This news has been met with public outrage with allegations of fraud being levied against both the Federal Government and Integra Renewable Energy Ltd.  However this lawsuit also potentially threatens to destabilise the progress that has been made in the procurement and distribution of these clean cookstoves and Wonderbags to the women and communities that require this intervention. As such, Follow The Money seeks to ensure relevant information remains available to the public and stakeholders associated with the clean cookstoves campaign.

Follow The Money Team was activated in December 2014 to monitor the procurement efforts of Integra Renewable Energy Ltd, the distribution mechanisms by the Ministry of Environment, and other aspects of the initiative. Furthermore, Follow The Money Team organised and facilitated regular stakeholder meetings to provide interested and affected parties with the opportunity to learn more about the initiative and remain updated about progress that had been made. It also launched a media campaign to increase awareness about the benefits of the Clean Cookstoves campaign and promote transparency and accountability in all aspects of the initiative. As such, Follow The Money has been made aware of, and can verify the following facts:

  • Clean Cookstoves reduce firewood consumption for cooking by 80%
  • As of November 2014, the Clean Cookstoves campaign was given a 12 week timeframe to achieve completion
  • As of May 2015, according to Follow The Money independent estimates, only approximately 45,000 clean cookstoves, mostly LPG cylinders, had been imported into the country and were being stored at the National Stadium in Abuja, Nigeria.
  • As of May 2015, the Ministry of Environment had received N5 billion from the Ecological Fund Office for the initiative, and had disbursed only N1.3 billion to the contracting company. N3.7 billion still remained in the Ministry’s accounts and N4.2 Billion with the Ecological Fund Office
  • In May 2015 the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Environment mentioned that the Ministry of Environment might cancel the official contract with Integra Renewable Energy
  • The clean cookstoves initiative was formally launched by the former President, Goodluck Jonathan, on the 26th May 2015.

Though the Federal Ministry of Environment eventually responded to a Freedom of Information request made by Connected Development (CODE), further information regarding the progress of the initiative has remained withheld from CODE and other stakeholders on the specifics of the contract awards and distribution mechanism.

Follow The Money Team is concerned that the following lawsuit could potentially detract from the procurement and distribution of the 750,000 cookstoves and 18,000 Wonderbags. Furthermore, this cancellation of the contract and lawsuit could lead to more opportunities to increase the timeframe required to complete this initiative. As healthcare advocates and environmentalists, Follow The Money Team is determined to continue monitoring this initiative, providing insight to stakeholders, and collaborating with multiple agencies to ensure transparency and accountability are practiced by all involved agencies.

It’s important to note that as this case takes more time, our mothers and their children in local communities are at risk of losing their lives due to unclean smoke from cooking with firewood. Also, further delays will cause even more loss from our already dilapidated forest cover due to increased felling of trees for firewood which also leads to desert encroachment and threatens the Great Green Wall programme already instituted by the federal government.

We aim to ensure that the courts of justice, which represent the rights of every Nigerian, will also encourage transparency and have both parties make the contract document available to the public and ensure accountability in the entire process moving forward. 

Nigeria to implement global agenda on reducing disasters

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Nigeria has set in motion processes to implement the newly adopted global framework to curb the risk of natural disasters.

Nigeria Country Director of UNDP, Dr. Pa Lamin Beyai. Photo credit: ng.undp.org
Nigeria Country Director of UNDP, Dr. Pa Lamin Beyai. Photo credit: ng.undp.org

Tagged: “Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (SFDRR),” the agenda was endorsed last March in Sendai in Japan, replacing the 10-year Hyogo Framework of Action (HFA) that came to an end this year.

The SFDRR will however span 15 years (2015-2030), while emphasising a shift from disaster management to disaster risk management and recognising the importance of a well-functioning health system.

At a two-day forum held last week in Abuja at the instance of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), United Nations Development Agency (UNDP) and the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR), participants attempted an overview of the outgone HFA and explored avenues and priorities of action to be taken to implement the SFDRR.

While operational, the HFA had influenced the establishment of the National Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR), mainstreamed DRR into the nation’s disaster management policies and programmes as well as professional institutions, and developed a DRR and climate change curriculum for schools.

The HFA likewise established Centres for Disaster Risk Management and Development Studies in six universities across the nation’s six geo-political zones, and decentralised DRR through the establishment of Zonal and Operational Offices across the country.

In the light of experiences gained through the implementation of the HFA, NEMA has underlined the need – the course of implementing SFDRR – for focused action in priority areas listed to include: Understanding disaster risk, Strengthening disaster risk governance to manage disaster risk, Investing in disaster risk reduction for resilience, and Enhancing disaster preparedness for effective response.

“The document is expected to help us in developing strategies to further reduce risk and build nations and communities resilient to disasters. It therefore presents us yet another unique opportunity to commit more efforts towards disaster risk reduction and resilience building in Nigeria. We must recognise that one driving force in achieving the goals in this framework is strong commitment towards political leadership and will,” declared The NEMA Director General, Muhammad Sani Sidi.

The Country Director of UNDP, Dr. Pa Lamin Beyai, Beyai noted that the HFA achieved its objectives, stressing that the new framework is targeted at helping communities mitigate inevitable disasters they face before, during and after they occur.

While applauding NEMA for taking the lead in designing a national strategic plan towards implementing the Sendai framework, Beyai reiterated the UNDP’s commitment in supporting Nigeria in her implementation plan.

He however noted that, in implementing the framework, Nigeria must make sure that she combines disaster risk reduction with building resilience by developing the capacity of communities to bounce back from shocks.

“We must find local solutions because they are very crucial to disaster risks reduction. What works in one community may not naturally work in another.

“We must also promote inclusion. We all know that during disaster, women, youths, the elderly and people with disabilities are often affected the most. Everyone needs to be included. The elderly with their wisdom and unique perspectives and the youths with their strength and courage to tackle issues at hand,” he added.

On his part, the ECOWAS Commission’s Principal Disaster Reduction Officer, lamented that Africa is the most vulnerable continent to natural disasters with negative impact on the economy and the social development of the entire continent.

He stressed that based on the foregoing, stakeholders must shift from the fire brigade approach and focus more on prevention while also ensuring better management of disaster and reduction.

Ibrahim, therefore, pledged ECOWAS Commission’s continued support to Nigeria in designing a national framework for disaster risk reduction.

“I’m reaffirming ECOWAS commitment to member states and most especially, the federal republic of Nigeria to promote the actualisation of the four priority areas of the Sendai framework on disaster reduction,” he said.

Sidi said the SFDRR would help the country in developing strategies to further reduce disaster risk and build her resilient to disaster.

“We must therefore work to prevent new risks and reduce existing ones and, where we cannot prevent, we must be ready to build back better,” he added.

UNICEF, media dialogue on child malnutrition

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A two-day media dialogue on child malnutrition with the theme: “Spend more money on nutrition” – #StopChildMalnutritionNigeria, ended on Friday in Kano.

A malnourished child. Photo credit: ghp.usa.org
A malnourished child. Photo credit: ghp.usa.org

The dialogue, organised by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), was facilitated by communication specialist, Geoffrey Njoku. It was attended by representatives of the traditional and online media.

It is coming ahead of new figures on child malnutrition due to be released soon by UNICEF. Malnutrition is widespread in Nigeria and is said to be killing over 1,000 children daily.

Speaking, UNICEF Chief of Communication, Doune Porter, stressed the need for media partnership so as to attract the necessary intervention to stop child malnutrition in the country.

Porter said a new figure on child malnutrition would be released by UNICEF soon, saying healthy and well-nourished children are needed for the future of Nigeria, calling on the media to sustain the partnership.

In his presentation on “An overview of malnutrition in Nigeria and its impact on children, UNICEF’s Chief Nutritionist, Arjan De Gwat, spoke extensively on the nutrition values of foods that he classified as macronutrients and micronutrients.

He said 55 percent of child deaths are attributed to malnutrition, adding that malnutrition of the mother could result in disability of the child or miscarriage.

Arjan, said malnutrition could also lead to reduction in mental capacity and ultimately poor education of the child, advising mothers to embrace exclusive breastfeeding for at least six months.

“Exclusive breastfeeding has the potential to save more children’s lives than any other preventive intervention,” he said.

Coordinator, African Centre for Media and Information Literacy, Chido Onuma, made a presentation on media advocacy required to keep the issue of child malnutrition on the front burner.

He spoke on how the media can support advocacy for increased resources for nutrition programming.

Onuma, therefore, charged the media to sensitize governments at all levels to increase resources to enhance child nutrition. He also charged them to do more of features, special reports and editorials to sustain focus on child malnutrition in the country.

Dr. Chris Osa Isokpunwu of the Federal Ministry of Health also made a presentation on Nutrition Situation in Nigeria.

Political undertones trail planned clean-up of Ogoniland

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Political undertones have trailed President Muhammadu Buhari’s recent move to fast-track the clean-up of Ogoniland in accordance with the report and recommendations of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

John Odey, former Minister of Environment
John Odey, former Minister of Environment

While officials of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) seem to be ‘milking’ the situation by heaping praises on Mr President while tacitly condemning the outgone President Goodluck Jonathan, the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) has somewhat reacted, claiming that, indeed, past PDP presidents had set the stage for the implementation of the report.

For instance, the Rivers State branch of the APC has described President Buhari as the true son of the Niger Delta, even though he is not from there, by the recent move.

In a media statement, the party’s Chairman, Dr. Ibiamu Ikanya, said Mr. President, has proved to be a better son of Rivers State and the Niger Delta than immediate past president, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, and Rivers State Governor, Chief Nyesom Wike.

“The news of President Buhari not only directing the cleaning up of Ogoniland but also the fast-tracking of the process came to us as a great relief, particularly considering the fact that former President Jonathan in demonstration of his hatred and disdain for Rivers State and its people ensured that this exercise did not see the light of the day throughout his ill-fated regime which was more of a curse to Rivers State people and the Niger Delta region.

“President Buhari has demonstrated by this act that he is a better son of Rivers State and the long-suffering Niger Delta than Dr. Jonathan and Chief Wike who, though from the region, instead, teamed up to ensure that the region was under-developed and even ceded our oil wells to other states while also ensuring that no Federal Government presence was felt in Rivers State throughout their evil regime.”

The Rivers State chairman commended President Buhari for what he called “this brave and patriotic step in cleaning up Ogoni land.”

He added: “President Buhari has proved that he is truly a God-Gift to Nigeria at this particular time to right the wrongs, injustice and wickedness Rivers State and Niger Delta under the regime of Dr. Jonathan Goodluck.”

But PDP chieftain and erstwhile Minister of Environment, John Odey, countered Dr Ikanya, saying that, though President Buhari deserves commendation for his bold decision, President Jonathan did no wrong and should not be condemned.

In a recent posting on his Facebook page, Odey submitted: “Nobody should condemn GEJ (Goodluck Ebele Jonathan) on Ogoni clean up. We don’t read. We don’t research. President Obasanjo set up the Remediation of Ogoni committee in the Ministry of Environment under the Chairmanship of Bishop Kuka with the professional team and expertise of UNEP.

“As Minister of Environment, myself, Bishop (Mathew) Kuka, UNEP and all the stakeholders met several times to work on the report. We received great contribution from Governor Rotimi Amaechi. He provided all the logistics and most of the materials UNEP needed for the study – security, transportation and accommodation. He personally escorted us to Ogoni for inspection of sites.

We started the study under President Yar’adua and completed it under President Jonathan before I left office in 2011. The next Minister after me presented the report to GEJ and it was adopted. This is work in progress. The bold step by President Buhari is commendable. The ministry of Petroleum Resources after the report delayed this process. This is another matter to be addressed later.

“This is work in progress and the four Presidents I have mentioned above should be commended. What is significant is the bold step President Buhari has taken to set the ball rolling again.”

Cautious optimism greets government’s plan to implement UNEP report

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A barrage of applause has greeted President Muhammadu Buhari’s decision to clean-up the extensively polluted Ogoniland in the Niger Delta region by implementing the much-vaunted report on the community prepared by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

Dr Godwin Uyi Ojo of ERA/FoEN
Dr Godwin Uyi Ojo of ERA/FoEN

But the voices of commendation are being cautious, saying that certain things don’t seem right and that they should be urgently addressed before the project commences in earnest.

For instance, the Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) applauds Mr. President, saying that the delay in implementing the four-year-old plan is unconscionable by all standards. The civil society group notes that the process leading to this had some consultations and that some structures have been established for its execution.

HOMEF, however, believes that the body saddled with the task of cleaning up Ogoniland should be addressed.

“Certainly, government does not wish to ‘restore pollution’ as the name Hydrocarbons Pollution Restoration Project (HYPREP) suggests. The object is to remediate the environment, not to restore pollution,” says Nnimmo Bassey, the HOMEF executive director.

His words: “HOMEF recommends that the name be changed to Hydrocarbons Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP) or Hydrocarbons Clean-up Project (HYCUP). Better still, the body should be renamed as Ogoni Environment Restoration Agency as recommended by UNEP. If the idea is to pave way for an agency that serves the entire Niger Delta, the needful thing to do, while having a specific project for Ogoniland, would be to rename the Niger Delta Development Commission (NNDC) as Niger Delta Environment Restoration Commission.

“There are rough edges that still require smoothening for a smooth take off of the clean-up project. A significant aspect is the non-inclusion of at least one representative of civil society in the structures set up by the President. The role and deep stakes of civil society in the struggle for the clean-up of Ogoniland and the Niger Delta cannot be overlooked. Their inclusion is essential for oversight reason.

“HOMEF also recommends that the new HYPREP or HYCUP should ensure that verified debts owed workers and staff of the defunct body are settled. In terms of the budget to commence the immense tasks ahead, in addition to the $10 million from the Federal Government, the polluter, Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), should place the $1billion estimated by UNEP as a start-up sum on the table now without further prevarications,” Bassey adds.

But the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) believes that Hydrocarbons Pollution Restoration Project (HYPREP) should be scrapped in its entirety and replaced with a new body that will reflect the provisions of UNEP and have the backing of the Ogoni people.

Godwin Uyi Ojo, executive director of ERA/FoEN, discloses: “We commend and support President Buhari’s decision to implement the UNEP report. It goes a long way to show that he is sincerely willing to tackle this problem.

“However, we are not comfortable with the fact that HYPREP is to oversee this project. HYPREP is a government agency domiciled in the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources. The UNEP in the report recommended an independent body, which HYPREP isn’t. Also, it has no statutory backing.

“We therefore recommend that HYPREP should be abolished and an entirely new independent body established urgently. This body will have the backing of the Ogoni people.”

HOMEF, nonetheless, wants the new body it recommends to engage in urgent and transparent consultations to agree on steps to be taken, the competences to be employed in the clean-up and the milestones to be targeted.

“This laudable step of President Buhari should be followed with a commissioning of environmental audits on other devastated territories in the Niger Delta, in line with the call for one by the people of Egi Land. These should be the starting point for an urgent and thorough auditing of the total state of the Nigerian environment, from the South to the North and from the East to the West,” says George Awudi, a member of the governing board of HOMEF.

He adds: “HOMEF applauds the Ogoni people for their consistent and dogged struggles to ensure that their environment is cleaned up. With this coming in the year that marks the 20th anniversary of the execution of Ken Saro-Wiwa and other Ogoni martyrs, the sacrifices made by the Ogoni people justify the stanza of our national anthem that declares that the ‘labour of our heroes past shall never be in vain’.”

Town planners inaugurate 10-man examination board

National President of the Nigerian Institute of Town Planners (NITP), Dr Femi Olomola, has inaugurated the institute’s Examination Board, which comprises 10 members who are mostly academics.

National President of the NITP, Dr. Femi Olomola (third from right), with some members of the Board
National President of the NITP, Dr. Femi Olomola (third from right), with some members of the Board: Dr Wale Alade (second from left), Mrs Taiwo Olurin (third from left), Dr Ezirin O. N. (second from right) and Mrs Esuabana E. A. (right). National Secretary of the NITP, Alex Ogbodo, is in white on extreme left

The Board was inaugurated on the Friday, July 31st 2015 in the NITP Board Room of Bawa Bwari House, Abuja with all Management Board members of the Institute in attendance.

In his inauguration speech, the Dr Olomola emphasised that members were selected purely on merit, academic pedigree and commitment to the planning profession as well as activities of the Institute.

“You should assist in bringing sanity to the conduct of the examinations and restore honour to the profession,” said the NITP president.

Members of the 10-member Examination Board are: Tpl (Town Planner) Mrs Taiwo Olurin; FNITP (Chairperson), Tpl (Dr) Ezirim O N.; MNITP (Secretary), Tpl (Mrs) Esuabana E A; FNITP (Member), Tpl (Dr)  Mrs Helen U. Anazia; FNITP (Member), Tpl (Dr) Wale Alade; MNITP (Member), Tpl  (Dr) A.O Afon; MNITP (Member), Tpl (Prof) Dung-Gwom Jy; MNITP (Member), Tpl Yekeen A Sanusi; MNITP (Member), Tpl (Dr) Edund Iyi; MNITP (Member) and Tpl (Dr) Peter Uyanga; MNITP (Member).

Due to flight cancellations and delays, four of the Members could be physically available for the inauguration. Other members sent in their apologies.

Those in attendance were: Tpl Mrs Taiwo Oluri; FNITP (Chairperson), Tpl (Dr) Ezirim O N.; MNITP (Secretary), Tpl (Mrs) Esuabana E A; FNITP (Member) and Tpl (Dr) Wale Alade; MNITP (Member).

The Board’s terms of reference (TOR), amongst others, are:

1)    Be responsible for the conduct of all examinations of the Institute

2)    Make regulations for the approval of the Council regarding:

  1. a)    Examinations
  2. b)    Preparation, security and distribution f question papers
  3. c)    Dates, centres and invigilation of by local Examiners
  4. d)    Assessment of answer scripts and publication of results and
  5. e)    Disposal of cases of examination malpractices and complaints

The Board has a four-year tenure which commenced on 31st July, 2015 to expire on 1st August, 2019.

In her acceptance speech, the Chairperson, Tpl Mrs Taiwo Oluri; FNITP thanked the National President and Management, assuring them of the committee’s continued loyalty and dedication to the development of the noble profession in general and the conduct of the Professional Examinations in particular.

She went further to register her appreciation to the out-going Examination Board members under the leadership of Tpl (Dr) Ohakwe as, according to her, she worked with the team as one of their examiners.

She also pledged the new board’s commitment to ensuring that issues between NITP and the Town Planners Registration Council (TOREC) are resolved amicably.

Finally, she on behalf of the Examination Board Members assured the National President and Institute of their loyalty and commitment that a high and up-to-date standard of planning education is maintained.

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