Buhari on the right path on
UNEP Ogoni report but pitfalls still in HYPREP - ERA/FoEN
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.
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 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.
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