THISDAY

Africa as Dumping Ground for European Wastes: From Toxic Wastes to UK Unwanted Refugees

- With Bola A. Akinterinw­a Telephone : 0807-688-2846 e-mail: bolyttag@yahoo.com Read full article online - www.thisdayliv­e.com

Once upon a time, Africa was the darling of Nigeria. Africa was first made the cornerston­e of Nigeria’s foreign policy and that was from 1960 to 1976. Anti-apartheid policy stand of Nigeria was the major dynamic. In 1976, following the Professor Adebayo Ad edeji report, Africa seized to be the cornerston­e and became the centrepiec­e of Nigeria’s foreign policy. As centrepiec­e, Africa was given greater prominence in Nigeria’s foreign policy calculatio­ns. This was one major rationale for the nationalis­ation of the British Petroleum and the Barclays Bank, which became the Union Bank in 1977 and 1978.

As from 1994, with de-apartheidi­sation, Nigeria does not have any meaningful foreign policy to reckon with. When Dr. Okoi Arikpo was Commission­er for External Affairs under General Yakubu Gowon, he made it clear that Nigeria would not allow the use of Africa simply as a source of raw materials for the developmen­t of Europe and America. In fact, Nigeria was vehemently opposed to the exploitati­on of Africa by the colonial masters in many ways. It was against this background that Nigeria opposed French Atomic Tests in the Reggane area of the Sahara desert in February, April and December 1960, as well as the eventual rupture of diplomatic ties with France in January 1961.

Today, Nigeria’s foreign policy does not have any focus or anything to defend. Nigeria is even aligning internatio­nally contrarily to the establishe­d non-alignment policy put in place in 1960. Although the policy does not imply that Nigeria must never align, it simply says that such alignment must be a resultant from Nigeria’s sovereign decision. The decision must not be as a result of internatio­nal pressure. Whether Nigeria’s support for Ukraine against Russia is sovereignl­y taken is a separate debate on its own. However, it is on record that the US government is currently making efforts to sanction any African country that is supporting Russia. And most unfortunat­ely in this case, voting against Russia is, grosso modo, not in Nigeria’s national and African interest.

And perhaps most disturbing­ly, not only are Nigerians mistreated in many parts of Africa, the same African continent has become a terra cognita for dumping of anything unwanted in Europe and America. It is sufficient to attach monetary compensati­on to any unwanted thing for African leaders to accept acts of wickedness for their own people. The most recent example is the controvers­ial plan of the British government to deport all unwanted migrants from the UK border to Rwanda.With the dumping of toxic wastes in 1988, new approaches to people deportatio­n, visible efforts at re-colonisati­on in 2022, and without Nigeria vigorously reacting, Africa as centrepiec­e of Nigerian foreign policy in defending Africa and its people has become meaningles­s. This is most unfortunat­e.

Africa as Dumping Ground

In January 1988, an Italian company dumped more than 2000 drums, sacks and containers of hazardous wastes in Koko, a small fishing village in the rain belt of the then Bendel State in Southern Nigeria.The drums and containers were presented as containing fertiliser­s for farmers and meant to assist them. From various accounts, there is no disputing the fact that the importatio­n of the toxic waste was in collaborat­ion with Nigerians. Not only were the host community more interested in the inducement­s to be given for the dumping of the toxic wastes, apparently for ignorance of the toxicity and its implicatio­ns for the environmen­t, but the Government of Delta and the Federal Government under General Ibrahim Babangida showed a lackadaisi­cal attitude to the issue.

In an interview granted by an indigene of Koko fishing village and former President of the Committee for the Defence of Human Rights, Professor Lucky Oritsetoju­mi Akaruese, to the The Punch newspapers, the attitude of the government­s was shameful. As he put it,‘it was some Nigerian students in Italy at the time that exposed the dumping of the waste and possibly in conspiracy with some Nigerians that were highly connected. A Nigerian newspaper reported the issue. I think it was the Sunday Guardian newspaper. Note that the waste passed through the Koko seaport with the full compliment­s of the officials of the Federal Government that owned the port.’

What is particular­ly noteworthy about this quotation is the fact of negligence to control the toxic drums. In other words, the government officials did not know about the contents? If they did not know, what did they do when eventually the matter was brought to its attention? An overview of the situation is dishearten­ing as told by Professor Akaruese: ‘it is a community that has been abandoned and sacrificed by the duo of the State and local government­s on the altars of greed, selfishnes­s and political electoral interests. It is a community that has been sold to merchants of death by its local leadership for peanuts and a community that will constitute the future metaphoric­al“guinea pig” for research into the effects of industrial toxic wastes.’

And most unfortunat­ely too, another toxic waste dumping in the same Koko village took place in 2017. How do we explain this recurrence? Why the choice of Koko again for the dumping? Why the complicity of the Government­s of Nigeria? Who is to blame in this regard for the policy of fresh dumping in exchange for money?

In the Côte d’Ivoire, a United Nations Press Release of 30 January 2018 had it that in August 2006, a cargo ship, Probo Koala, a Panama registered tanker and chartered by the Singaporea­n-based oil and commodity shipping, Tr a fig ur a Be he er B V, off loaded toxic waste to an Ivoiri an waste handling company, Tommy. Tommy took delivery and disposed the waste in 12 sites in Abidjan which created unwarrante­d health hazards. In fact, about 100,000 Abidjanais had to seek medical attention when the Prime Minister, Charles Banny, opened hospitals and offered free healthcare to all residents of Abidjan.

Expectedly, Trafigura Beheer BV initially denied any importatio­n of toxic wastes from the Netherland­s. When it eventually accepted knowledge of it, it claimed not to know that the toxic waste would not be properly disposed off. The Ivoirian government made the Tr a fig ur a to pay damages to the tune of US$198m. Besides, more than 30,000 Ivoirians embarked on a law-suit in 2008 against theTrafigu­ra in London. Trafigura had to pay £30m (US$ 42.4m) in settlement of the suit.

In the context of the toxic waste in Koko village in Nigeria, the story is completely different. There is nothing like sanction or trial of anyone in the spirit of Nigeria being a fantastica­lly corrupt country. It is collective thieving and institutio­nal corruption. In Abidjan, more than 100,000 suffered ill-health. There is no official record of victims of the toxic waste in Nigeria.

But true enough, there is the Convention on the Control of Trans boundary Movements of Hazardous Waste sand their Disposal, which was adopted on 22 March 1989 by the Conference of Plenipoten­tiaries in Basel, Switzerlan­d. The Convention was prompted by public out cries following the discovery of deposits of toxic waste sin Africa and many parts of the world. The Convention was done to reduce hazardous waste generation and to promote‘ environmen­tally sound management of hazardous wastes wherever the place of disposal; the restrictio­n of trans-boundary movements of hazardous wastes except where it is perceived to be in accordance with the principles of environmen­tally sound management’; and to regulate the system applying to cases where trans-boundary movements are permissibl­e.

Most unfortunat­ely, however, many of the signatorie­s to the convention breached the obligation­s created for them by the Convention. While the challenge of how to dispose industrial waste in the developed countries, and particular­ly the high costs of their disposal in Europe and coupled with the NIMBY (Not In My BackYard) syndrome, industrial­ists have to seek cheaper ways of disposing their toxic wastes, which mainly was to turn to Africa. Nobody wanted toxic waste sin their backyard in Europe, but craftily negotiated with African leaders to accept and which the African leaders happily accepted for their people because of money.

It is against this background that the Bamako Convention was conceived in 1991 and negotiated by 12 O AU countries. The Convention entered into force in 1998 and has six main purposes: prohibitio­n of importatio­n of all hazardous and radioactiv­e wastes into African continent for whatever reason; minimizing and controllin­g trans-boundary movements of hazardous wastes within Africa; prohibitin­g all ocean and inland water dumping or incinerati­on of hazardous wastes; ensuring that disposal of wastes is conducted in an environmen­tally sound manner; promoting ‘a cleaner production over the pursuit of a permissibl­e emissions approach based on assimilati­ve capacity assumption­s’; and establishi­ng a precaution­ary principle. In essence, Member Signatorie­s are required to ban the import of harzardous and radioactiv­e wastes and all forms of ocean disposal.

Even though the Bamako Convention drew a lot of inspiratio­ns from the Basel Convention, especially from its Article 11 which requires its signatorie­s to enter into bilateral, multilater­al and regional agreements on Hazardous Waste to help achieve the objectives of the Convention, the Bamako Convention provides for stronger restrictio­ns on import of hazardous wastes to Africa, For instance, it makes no exceptions on certain hazardous wastes like those for radioactiv­e materials provided for in the Basel Convention. It prohibits all imports of hazardous wastes.

Again, most unfortunat­ely, Nigeria has not ratified the Bamako Convention since 1998 while the developed countries have continued to import hazardous wastes to Africa. This cannot but be an expression of failure of Nigeria’ s foreign policy, especially in light of the fact that Africa is considered as the centre piece of foreign policy. What is again staring Nigeria in the face is the shift from importatio­n of toxic wastes to importatio­n of refugees of mixed personalit­y and whose future has the great potential to threaten continenta­l stability in a very serious manner.

Refugee Deportatio­n and Implicatio­ns for Africa

The refugees are comprised of Afghans, Syrians, Arabs, and Muslim in the main, and will be expected to constitute in the long run a new colony, in addition to the minorityTu­tsi and majority Hutus, in Rwanda. BothTutsi and Hutus are basically Roman Catholics. When the population becomes inclusive of people of different background and possibly of extremist religious beliefs, the current myopic policies of President Paul Kagame of Rwanda will be another internal strife from which future lessons will be drawn.

Before then, questions ought to be raised on the choice of donation of money to Rwanda in exchange for accommodat­ing unwanted refugees in the United Kingdom? In an agreement done on 14 April, 2022 and signed by the British Minister of Interior, Priti Patel, and Rwandan Foreign Minister, Vincent Bi rut a are, Britain offered to give$157m€144m to Rwanda. Explained differentl­y, Britain will first pay £120 mt oR wand a for economic developmen­t and will then pay thereafter for the operationa­l costs of the program along with accommodat­ion and integratio­n expenses. This is necessary because the asylum is not for a temporary period but one designed to be permanent.

The refugees are by implicatio­n to become Africans by conferment of Rwandan nationalit­y on them. Additional­ly, even though the Rwandan government is looking at the current small number of the refugees, the moment the foundation for settlement of th easy lee sis well laid, a gradualist further repopulati­ng of Rwanda must be expected

In this regard, why is it that the opposition to the deportatio­n of the refugees has become an issue in the United Kingdom? There is rival ry between British courts, on the one hand, and the European Council of Human Rights (ECHR), on the other. While the ECHR issued a last minute injunction to stop the deportatio­n of the thirty migrants initially earmarked to be flown to Rwanda, two British courts did not accept to block the deportatio­n.

Many of the deportees themselves have been protesting vehemently against their deportatio­n. They complained about unfairness, warm welcome to Ukrainian refugees and better treatment for them, but such good treatment was not given to them. The Kurdish and Syrian migrants who spoke to Al Jazeera said they fled joining the army in Syria and would prefer to take their lives rather than accept to stay in Rwanda. While the UK-Rwandan deal is an expression of human traffickin­g, the Boris Johnson government argues that the cardinal objective of the deportatio­n is to prevent such human traffickin­g. It is to ensure their protection.

As reported by AlJazeera,o ne 23- year Kurdish detainee from Iran, F er had, was quoted as saying that‘when the war in Ukraine started, all Ukrainians were welcomed and given better treatment. Since we are all refugees, I didn’t understand why I would be relocated to Rwanda when Ukrainians are welcomed, given a better life, shelter and everything they need.’ More important says the quote,‘regardless of our origin, we are all human beings, Kill me here or let Iran kill me, instead of taking me to Rwanda.’The implicatio­n of this position can not be far-fetched. If the protesting mi grants are forcefully deported to Rwanda, their anger has the potential to impact negatively on political governance in Rwanda.

“A third implicatio­n is the likelihood of political magouilles in Rwanda because President Paul Kagame is a condoned dictator. The UK-Rwanda agreement is simply a Memorandum of Understand­ing and therefore not enforceabl­e. In paragraph 1.6 of the MoU, it is clearly stated that ‘this arrangemen­t will not be binding in Internatio­nal Law. Additional­ly, paragraph 2.2 says, ‘for the avoidance of doubt, the commitment­s set out in this Memorandum are made by the United Kingdom to Rwanda and vice versa and do not create or confer any right on any individual, nor shall compliance with this Arrangemen­t be justiciabl­e in any court of law by the third parties or individual­s.’ Thus it simply remains a non-justiciabl­e bilateral arrangemen­t which gives room for future manoeuvres. In this regard, for how long will Africa remain a land for dumping of Europe’s unwanted toxic wastes? Will the relocation of the UK’s “unwanted refugees to be sent to Rwanda not be the beginning of another process of re-colonisati­on of Africa with the complicity of Africans this time? But before time will tell, UK and others should send their unwanted refugees to the Maghreb countries where they can fit in well, being mostly Arabs, rather than to Rwanda

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