Halt planned privatization of Water
in Ogun State, groups tell Amosun
RIVER OGUN JUST BEHIND THIS MAN IN THE BACKGROUND IS THE MAJOR FORM OF NATURAL WATER SOURCE IN THE STATE
Plans by the Ogun State government to privatize water through a Public
Private Partnership (PPP) model promoted by the World Bank is a recipe to
enslave citizens of the state and generations yet born, the Environmental
Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) and the Amalgamated Union
of Public Corporations, Civil Service, Technical and Recreational Services
Employees (AUPCTRE) have alerted.
The ERA/FoEN and AUPCTRE insist that no consultation was made;
neither was there input from civil society and the labour unions in all the
stages that got the bill to the table of Governor Ibikunle Amosun. The bill,
awaiting his signature is said to have speedily passed through the State House
of Assembly on 13 May 2015.
The development in
Ogun resembles that of Lagos where intense local and international demands for
disclosure in October 2014 forced the World Bank to open up on a water
privatisation scheme, which centers on the
appointment of its private arm -- the International Finance Corporation (IFC)
to design a PPP water scheme. The Lagos project, just like what is unfolding in
Ogun State is shrouded in utter secrecy, with no input from critical segments
of the population that it will supposedly benefit. The bank had initially said
it had no deal with the Lagos government but swiftly announced it had cancelled
the IFC contract following global pressure.
In a reaction to the development in
Ogun State, ERA/FoEN Deputy Director, Akinbode Oluwafemi, said: “It is utterly
disappointing that the Ogun State government is toeing the same path we have
observed and campaigned against in Lagos. We urge Governor Amosun not to sign
away the sovereignty of the state residents by this anti-people initiative
promoted by the World Bank”.
Oluwafemi stressed that, “PPPs have
a devastating track-record which include rate hikes, sporadic access, unsafe
water, and infrastructure neglect so we are in solidarity with the Ogun people
in rejecting this false solution to making a basic human right accessible”
Ogun State Secretary of AUPCTRE,
Babatunde Omotola said: “the bewilderment of Ogun people is further heightened
by the fact that the bill before the governor will worsen their plight having
watched for years how successive administrations have deliberately allowed
public water infrastructure to collapse to pave the way to a loan arrangement which
will place more burden on the residents”
According
to Omotola, while the Ogun State government is obligated to identify ways to
ensure the rights of citizens to safe and potable drinking water, prioritising
the human right to water above and over profit motives should be the driver of
such a policy, even as he added that “we also demand a probe of all the loans
thus far sunk into water projects in Ogun State”
The groups urged the Ogun State
government to halt the planned privatization and instead, integrate broad
public participation in developing plans to achieve universal access to clean
water including investing in the water infrastructure necessary to provide
universal water access, to sustain and create jobs, improve public health, and
invigorate the Ogun economy.
No comments:
Post a Comment