Lagos Government Violating Human Right to Water – ERA/FoEN
THE POSSIBLE PRIVATIZATION OF WATER IN NIGERIA IS ALREADY CAUSING RIPPLES IN THE POLITY
As the world commemorates the International Human Rights Day (December
10), the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria
(ERA/FoEN) and Corporate Accountability International have written to
the United Nations Human Rights Council’s Special Rapporteur on water,
Mr. Leo Heller, asking him to intervene in checkmating the Lagos State
government and the World Bank violation of Lagos residents’ human right
to water.
ERA/FoEN and Corporate Accountability International blame
the Lagos State government for not using the maximum available resources
in the state to realise the human right to water, allowing citizens'
general level of access to safe drinking water to regress, and
committing violations of the obligation to ensure active, free and
meaningful participation in decision-making relating to water.
The
World Bank is accused providing support and funding to the Lagos State
government to enact policies that aggressively shift water costs to
ratepayers through an emphasis on bill collections, metering and cost
recovery. These policies also fail to make adequate public expenditures
while focusing on “public private partnerships” that are not designed to
or capable of funding infrastructure expansion.
In the letter, the
groups x-rayed the Lagos State government and World Bank roles in the
Lagos water sector highlighting: violations of the obligation to fulfill
the human right to water; violations of the obligation to ensure
active, free and meaningful participation; and asked the UN Special
Rapporteur for help addressing these violations of the human right to
water in Lagos.
The groups agreed that “While infrastructure funding
challenges should not be underestimated, Lagos State failure to
allocate resources adequate to maintain or expand drinking water access
has taken place in a larger context of a growing economy and
dramatically increasing revenues. “
The letter highlighted the fact
that the leadership of Lagos State Water Corporation (LSWC) says total
available water assets are capable of producing only 210 MGD, of the 660
MGD needed, with the Lagos Bureau of Statistics going further to report
that corporation only pipes water into the home 11% of Lagos homes.
It cited first hand reports from employees of the LSWC which attribute
the problems in water delivery to poor maintenance and low staffing
power within the utility, a situation that has led to deteriorating
infrastructure and retrogression in the production of water.
On
infrastructure, LSWC staff go so far as stating that “all major Water
Works in Lagos are on the verge of total collapse” because of several
reasons. For instance, only eight of the 18 suction pumps at the Akute
plant (the city’s main raw water production facility) are functioning.
They also revealed that the control panel at Akute has been declared a
“danger zone, ” added to the fact that technical devices at the Akute
dam are “at the verge of total collapse.”
The group said that in all
this, the Lagos government and World Bank officials have pursued
policies that have failed to properly raise resources.
“We are
concerned that, at the urging and with the support of the World Bank,
LSWC is failing to ensure active, free and meaningful participation. On
the contrary, LSWC has adopted a “Stakeholder/CSO Interaction Policy”
that explicitly seeks to obtain Lagosians’ assent to plans and
priorities of the World Bank and LSWC, rather than ensuring active, free
and meaningful participation that could guide or shape water policy in
Lagos.”
They also list several World Bank and Lagos State government
projects and policies that institutionalize the cost-shifting and PPP
approaches.
One of them is the Lagos Water Sector Law 2004 which
focused on bill collections and metering that would shift a greater
burden of water system funding onto rate payers. Another is the $200
million World Bank - funded Second National Urban Water Sector Reform
Project (2NUWSRP) in Lagos and Cross River states that has as a major
objective the development of public private partnerships, an increase in
the proportion of water costs paid directly by citizens to 90%, and the
installation of meters to recover costs directly from citizens. Also,
since 2005, the LSWC has been observed to prioritise entering into PPPs
and is seeking to shift costs of water delivery to rate payers, among
others.
ERA/FoEN and CAI insisted that the identified policies
emphases on aggressively shifting costs to rate payers and on PPP
procurement have led to violations of the human right to water as they
have led to a failure to properly raise, allocate and utilize available
resources or to budget appropriately.
The group requested the
intervention of the UN Special Rapporteur with the Lagos State
government and World Bank to provide guidance on how the utility can
focus on progressively realising the human right to water and
sanitation.
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