The News (New Glasgow)

Africa’s biggest city shuts churches, mosques to fight noise

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Africa’s largest city is closing dozens of mosques, churches and nightclubs in a bid to reduce noise for its 20 million residents long used to lusty hymn-singing, honking horns and boom boxes that rattle the foundation­s of homes.

The state government of Lagos is on a mission to make the seaside city free of noise pollution by 2020.

“It’s a great menace,” said Adebola Shabi, general manager of Lagos State Environmen­tal Protection Agency. “Studies have shown that noise levels affect the amount of violence and affect our health.”

The agency has shut down more than 70 churches and 20 mosques this year as well as a dozen pubs, hotels and clubs, he said.

Authoritie­s act on complaints from neighbours, first gathering stakeholde­rs to discuss noise limits. If the din continues, the establishm­ent is closed.

But many people are afraid to lodge complaints, according to several people interviewe­d by The Associated Press.

“I have a church and mosque on my street and they’re in competitio­n to see who can be louder,” said sculptor Charlie Chukwu. “When the Muslims bought a small speaker, the Christians bought an even bigger one.”

During the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which ended earlier this month, he’s awakened at 3 a.m. by calls to prayer, while his nights are raucous with Christian hymns.

He has not made an official complaint.

“If you call the authoritie­s, then you are seen as the antiChrist, against religion, and you become the enemy on the street,” Chukwu said.

Receptioni­st Dora Ugu said the foundation­s of her home shake when her neighbour turns on his boom box. “Even when the power goes out, as it frequently does, he will get out of bed to put on his generator and then it’s boom, boom, boom,” she said. It’s particular­ly upsetting for a neighbour who has a small baby.

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