THISDAY

Osinbajo Faults Efforts to Tackle Lead Poisoning

- Kasim Sumaina in Abuja

Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo have faulted the ongoing efforts by various stakeholde­rs in the mining sector towards curtailing the acute lead poisoning which has killed over 400 children in Zamfara and Niger states,

The Vice President, while declaring open in Abuja recently, the second Internatio­nal conference on lead poisoning, associated with artisanal gold mining in Nigeria, said regrettabl­y, five years after the Zamfara outbreak, another outbreak of severe lead poisoning was recorded in April 2015 in two villages in Niger state.

According to him, “As with the outbreaks in Zamfara State, this new outbreak was precipitat­ed by environmen­tal lead contaminat­ion from artisanal gold mining activities, nearly 30 children died from severe lead complicati­ons and many more were poisoned.”

The VP, said: “We must start by admitting that the current efforts in tackling lead poising in artisanal gold mining have not been adequate, what better evidence do we have for that than the fact that the Niger State outbreak happened 5 years after we though we have contained that problem. “Indication­s of recontamin­ation in previously remediated sites in Zamfara compel us to rethink and refocus our commitment and strategy to protecting our vulnerable children and coimmunute­us at large.”

He added, “I am aware that the first internatio­nal conference on lead poisoning was a joint effort of the Federal Ministry of Health and Medecins San Frontieres and that was held here in Abuja in May 2012.

“The 2012 conference covered technical aspects, environmen­tal management and the treatment of poisoned children. But today’s event has been organised by the Ministry of Mines and Steel Developmen­t in collaborat­ion with Medecins San Frontieres, and it would provide a platform for key national, regional and internatio­nal stakeholde­rs to come together to develop a multi-sectoral disciplina­ry and pragmatic national strategy for forestalli­ng future outbreak of lead poison associated with artisanal gold mining, and to prevent the recontamin­ation of previously remediated sites.”

He explained that, while the federal government has pursued a National Gold Purchase Scheme as well as the developmen­t of a National Gold Policy, “gold mining in Nigeria has been heard repeatedly is currently dominated by artisanal miners using rudimentar­y mining methods and crude processing techniques. “The obvious consequenc­e is the exposure of miners, environmen­t and local communitie­s to serious dangers in areas where gold ore contain high concentrat­ion of heavy metals like lead, exposure to the dust released by these methods lead to serious health consequenc­es to the person directly involved in the mining, and also for all the neigbourin­g areas. Children, of course are the ones most at risk of death and disability.

“Many will recall the outbreak of lead poisoning that occurred in Zamfara State and that has also been repeated many times today, in 2010 as a result of the processing of lead-rich gold ore by artisanal gold miners in residentia­l compounds and village squares.”

Osinbajo, observed that, “Studies carried out in the affected village at that time showed that more than seventeen thousand people were severely exposed and an estimated four hundred to five hundred children lost their lives due to acute lead poisoning.

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