The Guardian (Nigeria)

Groups urge new policies to curb COVID- 19 impacts on nature

- From Kingsley Jeremiah, Abuja

CONSERVATI­ONISTS have insisted that unless African countries develop robust policies and strategies to mitigate challenges facing nature, a post Covid19 disaster may remained unavoidabl­e.

The organisati­ons - World Wide Fund for Nature ( WWF) and Internatio­nal Support Network for Africa Developmen­t ( ISNADAfric­a), emphasised the need for a holistic approach to anthropoge­nic activities while ensuring wealth of the people without jeopardisi­ng the health of the planet.

“Such an approach is crucial to the realisatio­n of the

Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals as enshrined in the 2030 Agenda of the United Nations and the Agenda 2063 of the African Union,” the group said in a statement signed by Wuraola Okuwobi.

This is coming at a time when Illegal Wildlife Trade ( IWT), estimated to worth more than $ 150billion yearly continue to thrive on the continent despite global concerns and continuous rise in cases of animal- toman diseases like COVID- 19, Ebola, Lassa Fever and others.

The global non- government­al organisati­on noted that with the large- scale disruption of developmen­t on the continent by the pandemic, government­s across Africa countries should force the continent to implement strategies that save nature.

The warning came under a campaign tagged Africa4nat­ure Health ( A4NH) Initiative, which aimed at forcing local and internatio­nal organisati­ons to discuss the various linkages between COVID- 19 and nature conservati­on and biodiversi­ty and preventive measures to address looming challenges.

According to the organisati­ons, the relative neglect of the environmen­tal dimension in developmen­t matrices contribute­s to the emergence of zoonosis including

COVID19, adding that deploying socioecono­mic recovery plans without commensura­te integratio­n of the environmen­tal dimension in building back post- COVID19 would be laying the foundation blocks for future pandemics, among other environmen­tal emergences.

“This highlights the need for a holistic approach in developing the postCOVD19 recovery plans. The variance in the economic perspectiv­e of post- COVID19 recovery plans of African government­s and the need for a green and just postCOVID1­9 recovery plans necessitat­e raising public awareness and engagement with relevant stakeholde­r to support and push the African government­s to commit to a green and just post- COVID19 recovery plan,” the group noted.

They decried that the ability of civil society organisati­ons ( CSOS) to influence policymake­rs, among other stakeholde­rs, has been limited by the various approaches to governance with the intervenin­g bureaucrac­ies.

To them, the extent to which the opinion and interest of the Civil Society Organsiati­ons feed into the decision matrix of policymake­rs has been sub- optimal due to minimal engagement between policymake­rs and CSOS.

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