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Employment records hit 12,500 in three years of Lagos Recycle Initiative

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By Moses Adeniyi

No less than 12,500 persons have been employed within the value chain of waste recycling in Lagos within the space of three years, the State Government has disclosed.

The three years period under review was September 2019 and September 2022 when the Lagos Recycle Initiative (LRI) was officially launched.

At the event by the Lagos State Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) to commemorate three years of Lagos Recycle Initiative (LRI), the Managing Director, LAWMA, Ibrahim Odumboni, made the disclosure, mentioning that the State has grown from the three official recyclers who formed the pioneering stakeholders as at September 5, 2019, to 157 registered recyclers in Lagos.

“What have we done since then? There were three official recyclers then (2019), but now we have over 157 registered recyclers in three years. We’ve also created job opportunities for over 12,500 persons in the last three years.

“We’ve also formalised recycling in such a way that we are now doing it with a lot of swagger.

“The values of recyclables have gone up from N15 on that day, (and) now, that same product is worth N150 – N170, not because of inflation, but because of understanding the value chain and the need for us to grow it,” Odumboni said.

He mentioned that by May 29, 2023, that the value would have appreciated to about N250 by projections, calling on Lagosians to optimise the benefit.

The LAWMA boss said efforts by investors have recorded daily processing of 4.5million plastic bottles out of Lagos and a corresponding recycled 4.5miilion bottles daily to manufacturers.

He said with engagement with stakeholders about 170 recycling centres would be established in the State before the end of 2023, warning all producers who have not joined the clean-up of plastic pollution in the State to act responsibly by keying into platforms created for same.

Other efforts the LAWMA boss mentioned were put in place within the three year period include: the introduction of the system to school curriculum with waste to wealth teachings; partnership with public and private stakeholders, among others.

Applauding the Governor Sanwo-Olu led Administration on the interest in recycling, he said the interest wasn’t for money but for sustainable environment.

He called on Lagosians to join the vision, stating that it was important for all to embrace the waste sorting system to operationalise and optimise the benefits of Waste to Wealth initiative.

Odumboni reiterated that from 1st October, the State Government would commence the enforcement of the waste bin directive demanding all households to possess and maintain a waste bin in their homes, mentioning that all defaulters risk prosecution.

He enjoined Lagosians to maintain a double sorting waste system of having a general a waste bin and a recycling waste bin.

“From the 1st October this year (2022), every household must own a waste bin. It is mandatory, it is a must, it is not negotiable. You just have to have a waste bin. It is in the law of the State.

“You must have a waste bin by 1st of October because if do not have, you will be served an abatement notice and then from the 4th of January (2023), you will stand to be prosecuted if you cannot provide an evidence of your bin. You have three months to sort yourself out to get a bin for your household,” the LAWMA boss said.

The President, Lagos Recyclers Association (LAGRA), Dr. Femi Adegoke, said the initiative as a fundamental development drive for waste to wealth has grown since 2019.

He said in line with the vision of zero tolerance for waste to protect the ecosystem, the initiative in three years has involved critical engagement, which has encouraged inclusion and expansion of waste to wealth value chain in Lagos.

According to him, the initiative has created empowerment opportunities while attracting international attention for investment in the State.

Applauding the State Governor, the State’s Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources, and the LAWMA Boss for the stride in the initiative, he called on all to join the zero waste campaign to minimise waste menace through recycling system “for an efficient and sustainable circular economy.”

Speaking, the Managing Director, Polysmart Packaging Limited, Mr. Wasiu Balogun, said it was important for Lagosians to optimise the deliverables of the value chain.

He said it was important to monetise the waste to wealth value chain to solve poverty, stating that Lagos lose about N8 – N10billion annually for only pet bottles.

Speaking, the Director Public Affairs, Communication and Sustainability, Coca-cola, Nigeria, Nwamaka Onyemelukwe, said the recycling system works on collective responsibilities.

She said the campaign must be well driven across societal institutions, including schools for sustainable environment and wealth creation.

She called on all stakeholder to work with the Government to achieve the green economy initiative.

In his address, the Executive Director, LAWMA, Mr. Adekunle Adebiyi said the Agency with all stakeholders, are more determined to ensure that all efforts were “felt by residents across the length and breadth of Lagos State and most importantly the environment.”

“Lagos as a whole generates an estimated volume of 13,000 metric tons of waste daily. The daily influx of people from other states in search of greener pastures has resulted in high volume of waste generation with plastics accounting for about 17percent of this,” he said.

According to him, Indiscriminate and incessant littering of the environment with plastics have resulted to blockage of waterways and drainages, which sometimes result in flooding, destroying properties and affecting lives.

The trend, he said, has necessitated the need recycling system to convert waste to wealth.

“Most times plastic waste ends up in the ocean, polluting it, threatening ecosystems, killing biodiversity, and poisoning the food chain .

“If this trend continues, our living and livelihood will be in jeopardy and all the dumpsites will run out of space in less than five years’ time.

“Hence, the need to create value from waste through reuse, reduce and recycle so that we can decrease the volume of waste that goes to the dumpsite.

“In the recent time, the narrative is changing moving from straight line economy to circular economy where waste is seen as a resource in line with global practice,” he said.

Recall there was the launch of the BLUE BOX programme by the Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu led Administration, on the 5th of September 2019, in an attempt to harness opportunities that abound in the waste sector and to promote recycling through the distribution of colour coded thrash bags for sorting at source. The Bluebox programme metamorphosed into the Lagos Recycle Initiative (LRI).

The LRI involves the collection of recyclables from the point of generation with Community Recycling/drop off centers at different Local Government Areas/LCDAs with recyclers and aggregators assigned for collection of these recyclables.

The LRI harmonises all recycling programmes of LAWMA and bring together all key players in the production, utilisation, collection, buy-back and recycling of materials in Lagos State using the PAKAM APP.

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NSCDC arrests 11 pipeline vandals in Benue

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The Anti-Vandal Unit of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps has arrested 11 suspected pipeline vandals opposite the depot of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Limited at Apir, a suburb of Makurdi, Benue State capital.

The State Commandant of the corps, Yakubu Ibrahim, who disclosed this on Saturday said that following an intelligence report, the command dispatched its team to the area opposite the NNPCL depot at Apir.

Ibrahim said that the team discovered an illegal vandalisation of an NNPCL pipeline also known as the Yola line at the location.

Ibrahim said, “Eleven persons were apprehended at the crime site and they will be taken for questioning and profiling.”

While describing the activities of the vandals as an “act of terrorism,” the commandant said the destruction which stretches over 10km was an economic sabotage.

“This is my first time. I’ve never seen a thing like this before. It’s disheartening that these excavated pipelines which may have cost so much would be sold for pittance, indicative that the well-being of the Nigerian people was never in their consideration,” the commandant said.

Ibrahim expressed sadness over what he described as a “conspiracy of silence” by the residents and traditional rulers of the community near the scene of the incident. He, however, promised to investigate if they were found complicit.

He urged the people of the state to be more vigilant and more conscious of activities in their environment.

Items recovered at the site were the vandals’ working equipment with 16 cut pipelines.

In late April 2024, men of the Benue State Community Volunteer Guards arrested two pipeline vandals in Yakyor in Apir, a suburb of Makurdi.

The culprits were trailed and arrested at the weekend after they had sold the first batch of the loot for N400,000 and shared the money, according to Joseph Har, the Special Adviser to Governor Hyacinth Alia on Security and Internal Affairs.

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SERAP sues 36 governors, FCT minister over FAAC allocations

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The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project has sued Nigeria’s 36 governors and the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja,Nyesom Wike.

They were sued for failing “to account for the spending of trillions of Federation Account Allocation Committee allocations collected by their states and the FCT since 1999″.

This was contained in a release on Sunday by SERAP’s Deputy Director, Kolawole Oluwadare.

The release said the lawsuit followed reports that the FAAC disbursed N1.123 trillion to federal, state, and local governments for March 2024. They shared N1.208 trillion in April. States collected N398.689 billion in March while they collected N403.403 billion in April.

In the suit numbered FHC/ABJ/CS/666/2024 filed last Friday at the Federal High Court, Abuja, SERAP asked the court to “direct and compel the governors and Wike to publish spending details of the FAAC allocations collected by their states and the FCT since 1999 including the list and locations of projects executed with the money.”

The organisation also asked the court to “compel the governors and Mr Wike to invite the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission to probe any allegations of corruption linked to the allocations and to monitor how the money is spent”.

It argued that, “Nigerians ought to know in what manner public funds including FAAC allocations, are spent by the governors and FCT minister.”

“Opacity in the spending of the FAAC allocations collected by the governors and Mr Wike would continue to have negative impacts on the fundamental interests of the citizens,” SERAP said.

It noted that trillions of FAAC allocations received by Nigeria’s 36 states and the FCT have allegedly gone down the drain.

It believes that, “Directing and compelling the governors and FCT minister to provide the information sought and widely publish the spending details of the FAAC allocations collected by them would serve legitimate public interests.”

It added, “The failure by the governors and the FCT ministers to account for the spending of the FAAC allocations collected by them is entirely inconsistent and incompatible with the Nigerian Constitution 1999 [as amended] and the country’s international anti-corruption obligations.”

The suit filed on behalf of SERAP by its lawyers Kolawole Oluwadare, Kehinde Oyewumi and Andrew Nwankwo, read in part, “States and the FCT should be guided by transparency and accountability principles and proactively account for the spending of the FAAC allocations collected by them.

“Secrecy in the spending of FAAC allocations collected by the governors and the FCT minister also denies Nigerians the right to know how public funds are spent. Transparency in the spending would allow them to retain control over their government.

“The governors and FCT minister have a legal obligation to provide the information sought including the list of specific projects completed with the FAAC allocations collected, the locations of any such projects and completion reports of the projects.

“The information sought should also include details of the salaries and pensions paid from the FAAC allocations collected, as well as the details of projects executed on hospitals and schools with the FAAC allocations.

“Despite the increased FAAC allocations to states and FCT, millions of residents in several states and the FCT continue to face extreme poverty and lack access to basic public goods and services”

It added, “The reported removal of petrol subsidy and the floating of the exchange rate by the Federal Government has translated into increased FAAC allocations to states and the FCT. However, there is no corresponding improvement in the security and welfare of millions of Nigerians.

“FAAC allocations received by the states and the FCT are reportedly characterised by mismanagement, diversion of funds, and abandoned projects. FAAC allocations have also been allegedly spent for other purposes such as election campaigns and political patronage.

“Publishing the documents on the spending of FAAC allocations by the states and the FCT would promote transparency, accountability, and reduce the risks of corruption in the spending of the funds.

“Publishing the documents would also enable Nigerians to meaningfully engage in the implementation of projects executed with the FAAC allocations collected.”

SERAP noted that the report that “some 140 million Nigerians are poor suggests corruption and mismanagement in the spending of trillions of naira in FAAC allocations collected by the states and the FCT”.

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Soludo sacks 21 Anambra transition committee chairmen 19th May 2024

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Anambra State Governor, Chukwuma Soludo, has sacked all transition committee chairmen across the 21 local government areas of the state.

This is contained in a letter titled ‘Expiration of tenure and handover to Heads of Local Government Administrations (HLGAs),’ dated May 17, 2024, and signed by the state Commissioner for Local Government, Chieftaincy and Community Affairs, Collins Nwabunwanne.

The order takes effect from Monday, May 20, 2024.

The letter read, “Following the expiration of your tenure as Transition Committee Chairman, you are hereby directed to handover the affairs of your Local Government Council to the Head of Local Government Administration (HLGA), in your respective Local Government Councils.

“This directive takes effect from Monday, 20th day of May, 2024. Thank you for your service to the state.

“All replies to be addressed to the Honourable Commissioner.”

The last time LG elections were held in Anambra State was towards the end of former Governor Peter Obi-led administration in 2014.

Since then, the local governments have been run by caretaker committee chairmen.

It was 10 years in January 2024 since the elections were last held, after the administrations of another former governor, Willie Obiano, and incumbent, Soludo.

During a forum organised by the International Peace and Civic Responsibility Centre in collaboration with the African Centre for Leadership and Development in December 2023, stakeholders including monarchs, clerics and residents, urged Soludo to conduct elections in the 21 LGs in the state, adding that governance is suffering at the grassroots due to the non-elected officials.

Meanwhile, Soludo had, during the 2021 governorship campaign and even at his swearing-in as the state governor on March 17, 2022, assured all that he would conduct LG elections within six months in office.

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