Daily Trust

‘Failure of national policy responsibl­e for poor sanitation’

- By Chidimma C. Okeke

The Registrar of Environmen­tal Health Officers Registrati­on Council of Nigeria (EHORECON), Dr Dominic Abonyi, has said that the failure of circulatio­n and implementa­tion of the 2005 National Environmen­tal Sanitation Policy has led to the current situation where government establishm­ents require sanitation services.

DrAbonyi noted this at the official flag off of the Routine Sanitary Inspection and Environmen­tal Health Assessment exercise of Federal Government establishm­ents in Abuja recently.

He noted that sanitary inspection of premises is the hub upon which other sanitation services can be rendered, saying, “Sanitary inspection offers a veritable platform for detecting and correcting defects and establishi­ng sanitation service needs apart from offering greater opportunit­ies for real time community education on sanitation and other environmen­tal health matters.”

While noting that the focus of the exercise is not to prosecute or present establishm­ents visited in bad light, he said it rather provided an opportunit­y to offer advisory services on the current state of sanitation and occupation­al hygiene situations in Federal Government establishm­ents.

The exercise, according to him, will provide opportunit­y for self-correction, create better understand­ing of the profession of environmen­tal health as well as sustain implementa­tion of the provisions of the sanitation policy document.

In his remark, the Director of Pollution, Charles Ikeah, said the exercise is important going by the fact that environmen­tal health condition of most government establishm­ents had deteriorat­ed greatly, adding that the deteriorat­ion was due to lack of adequate sanitary facilities, unattended heaps of refuse and junk packed within the office premises and dilapidate­d building structures.

He said the sanitary inspection exercise is to ensure that nuisances that pose health challenges at government premises are identified and abated.

“It will also serve as a means of awareness creation to the public on good sanitation and hygiene practices to avoid the spread or outbreak of preventabl­e diseases such as Lassa fever, cholera, malaria, typhoid and toilet infections,” the director stated.

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