Tag: defecation

  • Lagos begins anti-open defecation enforcement on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

    Lagos begins anti-open defecation enforcement on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

    Persons who engage in open defecation, particularly in the Berger axis of the Lagos/Ibadan Expressway, will be prosecuted henceforth, the Lagos State government has said.

    Permanent Secretary (Office of Environmental Services), Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources, Gaji Omobolaji, stated this during an advocacy in the area. Sanitation officers cleaned the feaces which littered the median.

    Gaji said the enforcement was to prevent the spread of communicable diseases like cholera and diarrhea. He added that enforcement teams comprising the anti-open defecation squad, Kick against Indiscipline (KAI) and others would begin operation immediately after the campaign.

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    The enforcement teams would work in shifts to make their work more effective, Gaji said.

    He added: “It is appalling and shameful to find people defecate openly, especially on the road and medians. These actions are unacceptable and require a lasting solution to totally eradicate the menace. This is why the state has resorted to undertake enforcement and prosecution after this sensitisation exercise.

    “Anyone caught will face the full wrath of the law to deter others and ensure the fight against open defecation is sustained.

    “We thank the proprietor of the Total Filling Station on the Berger Expressway for donating five toilets free for public use. Another eight-room toilet is fully operational at the Berger bus top garage, and so we urge those in the habit of open defecation to turn a new leaf by patronising these public toilets near them or face the consequences of their action.’’

  • Operationalise detailed roadmap to achieve open defecation-free Nigeria, Reps urge stakeholders

    Operationalise detailed roadmap to achieve open defecation-free Nigeria, Reps urge stakeholders

    The House of Representatives has urged the Federal Ministry of Water Resources and Sanitation in collaboration with States, Local

    Government Councils and other key players across the federation to operationalize an achievable detailed roadmap towards achieving an open defecation-free Nigeria.

    The House urged that this be achieved using scientific approaches such as providing water, hygiene and sanitation in all public places.

    It mandated the Committee on Water Resources to ensure compliance and report back within four weeks for further legislative action.

    These resolutions followed the adoption of a motion titled, “Need for Adequate Provisions for Water Sanitation and Hygiene (Wash) Facilities in Public places in Abuja and other public spaces in Nigeria” sponsored by Hon. Henry Odianosen Okojie.

    The House informed that Nigeria has set a target to eradicate open defecation by 2025 in line with the revised global target set by the United Nations but unfortunately, no serious action is being taken to reduce the trends as over 23% (46 million) practice open defecation in Nigeria.

    The House said it was aware that the Nigeria Government has developed several initiatives to improve the water and sanitation

    situation in the country without success.

    It said for instance, the World Bank has approved the Nigeria Sustainable Urban and Rural Water Supply, Sanitation, and Hygiene Program (SURWASH) with a $700 million credit from the International Development Association (IDA) to provide 6 million people with basic water, hygiene and sanitation facilities especially in public places.

    The House said it was conscious that access to clean and hygienic toilet facilities is a basic human right and essential for public

    health which should be made available at motor parks, mechanic sites, public offices and areas with high numbers of pedestrians to curb the high rates of open defecation in Nigeria.

    The House said it was cognizant that the Nigeria government has set a target to become Open Defecation Free (ODF) by 2025.

  • Open defecation worsening Nigeria’s health challenges, experts warn

    EXPERTShave warned that unless stringent measures are adopted to check open defecation, Nigeria’s health challenges will be  aggravated. According to the experts,Nigeria comes second to India as the country with the highest prevalence of open defecation in the world. They warned that the situation is critical because Nigeria has in only a couple of years, moved from the fifth position on the global table of countries with open defecation to the second position currently.

    This was one of the critical issues thrown up at a two-day training workshop on ‘Communication for Behaviour Change in Essential Family Practices’ for various media houses, programme managers, state and national information officers, which was organised by the Delta State Ministry of Information in collaboration with UNICEF. Specifically, it was revealed that Nigeria, with over 47 million people still practising open defecation instead of using toilets, is today worse off than countries like Ethiopia and Indonesia, where over 27 million and 32 million peo ple, respectively, defecate openly still, according to latest survey.

    Delta State Commissioner for Information, Chief Patrick Ukah, who declared the workshop open in Asaba,  described the training as timely and critical especially in the light of the numerous challenges today in family healthcare practices and implementation of relevant government policies for the citizens.

    Ukah assured that the Okowa administration was committed to good hygiene and sanitation practice in homes as well as public places in line with its healthcare policies, noting that media and information practitioners need training and refreshers courses to augment reading and research, so as to be able to inform members of the public accurately and promptly.

    According to UNICEF’s experts, Dr Hilary Ozoh and Martha Hokonya, media role in arousing both the citizens and government to issues of Water Sanitation Hygiene (WASH) cannot be overstressed considering the huge effects of open defecation on Nigerians and the attainment of United Nations’ deadline of opendefecation-free world in 2030. Nigerian governments at all levels should urgently address the issue even in public hospitals and other health facilities, markets and schools because the country’s health challenges could only worsen with air and water pollution in addition to flies, cockroaches and rodents freely transmitting various diseases among the people.

    UNICEF Health Specialist, Dr Abe Eghe, who gave an in-depth analysis of ”Essential Family Practices in Health and Key Messages”, underscored the importance of access to appropriate media information to safe motherhood and newborn vis-a-vis the promotion of child right, saying the government could save tens of billions of naira needed annually to tackle numerous health problems, by investing in WASH programmes and addressing the open defecation challenge.

  • Policy on open defecation, urination coming in Lagos

    As part of its World Toilet Day declaration, the Lagos State Government says it is finalising implementation plans on its Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) policy, envisaged to complement laws and curb the menace of open defecation and urination.

    Speaking at the year’s World Toilet Day in Ikeja, the Commissioner for the Environment, Mr. Babatunde Durosinmi-Etti decribed  open defecation and urination as unwholesome with a lot of negative impact on the environment, public health, human dignity and personal safety, especially for women, children and those in vulnerable situations.

    He said the celebration with the theme: “When nature calls”, was aimed at “promoting the campaign against open defecation, a practice that is not only unhealthy but also anathema to the Lagos Megacity of our dream”.

    The Environment commissioner stated that no fewer than 892 million people around the world practised open defecation as they were unable to access basic sanitation facilities, particularly toilets and water.

    “This staggering statistics, no doubt, calls for urgent action among all stakeholders to prioritise toilet and sanitation issues, enhance access to water and sanitation facilities and as well spread awareness of the ills of undesirable sanitation practices,” he said.

    He said the celebration brought to the front burner issues, such as water, sanitation and hygiene, which required urgent actions to stem the tide of diseases and bring about healthy citizenry.

    “The world is changing faster than we can imagine with human population increasing at an exponential rate. Therefore, there is an urgent need to provide access to safe and sustainable sanitation systems that will effectively address the menace of open urination and defecation as well as other sanitation infractions to prevent the widespread of diseases,” he said.

    According to him, proper handling of these critical issues would help reduce government expenditure on treatment of diseases and make more money available for other important public uses.

    He stated that the  government was making efforts to eradicate the menace of open defecation and urination through the provision of public toilets and upgrading of already facilities as well as the implementation of the Lagos State Water Sanitation and Hygiene Policy.

    He called on Lagosians to join the global crusade, spread the awareness, inspire environmentally-friendly actions and support in facilitating the provision of sustainable sanitation systems capable of promoting economic growth and well-being of the citizenry.

    The World Toilet Day is aimed at creating awareness to combat the global sanitation challenges facing humanity.

    The year’s edition was celebrated by the state government in conjunction with Reckit Benkiser.

  • 28 prosecuted for open defecation, dumping of refuse

    Twenty-eight persons have been arraigned at a mobile court in Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, for open defecation and indiscriminate dumping of refuse.

    Two, who are minors, were, however, discharged and acquitted. Others were sentenced to fines ranging from N2,000 to N4,000.

    The Magistrate, Modupe Afeniforo, hoped that the sentence would act as a deterrent to others.

    Environment Commissioner Chief Bisi Kolawole said the government would implement environmental and sanitation laws to eradicate open defecation and indiscriminate dumping of refuse.

    Warning that the administration would begin a continuous house to house monitoring exercise to ensure compliance with the policy of having at least one toilet in every house, the commissioner stressed that culprits would be punished.

  • Alarming rise in ‘bush defecation’ in Polytechnic Ibadan

    Alarming rise in ‘bush defecation’ in Polytechnic Ibadan

    It would not be out of place to say that the Polytechnic Ibadan is one of the oldest and foremost polytechnics (academically) in the country today. However, like a rose that have begun to lose its fragrance, the institution is gradually becoming a shadow of itself in so far as its environmental health is concerned.

    As the saying goes – “you can never cheat nature”. It really does not matter whether you are the General Manager or the Gate Man, a teacher or a lawyer, a politician or the common man on the street; when the “E” (excretion) in the popular MR NIGER D comes knocking…YOU MUST OBEY!

    God help you if there are no toilet facilities around you to facilitate your “business”, the bushes around the corners will definitely provide a way of escape for you.

    Lately, there has been an alarming increase in the number of students taking to defecating in bushes due to the dearth in the number of healthy public toilet in the school premises. Are there toilets in the hostels? Yes, there are, but there no toilets in the academic premises that are accessible to the populace.

    Students make use of the bushes around them to do their business; this poses a great threat to them and is detrimental to their health.

    Some very cunny students have devised ways to avoid the “bush” method by pretending to be bank customers and eventually using the toilet facilities. However, the question now is – how long can this continue? For how long are we going to put the health of our students at risk? How long are we going to continue to endanger the lives of our students?

    Students (especially girls) are very susceptible to venereal and skin infections due to unhealthy exposure during excretion in bushes and unkempt toilet facilities.

    This is a clarion call to the management of the Polytechnic Ibadan to begin to place a premium on the health of its students. It is high time they started the process of initiating and creating proper sanitary facilities within the school premises.

    If these acts of defecating in bushes are allowed to continue, it would definitely lead to an outbreak of diseases like cholera etc.

  • WaterAid attributes open defecation to indiscipline

    WaterAid attributes open defecation to indiscipline

    WaterAid, an International Organisation, has attributed open defecation to indiscipline among some Nigerians in major cities across the country.

    The organisation made the observation in a report titled; “Abandoning Open Defecation“, made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Monday.

    The report also considered demographic issue among the major determinant factors of open defecation, followed by poverty faced by the citizenry, especially in the rural areas.

    “WaterAid, an international NGO, has cited indiscipline among the citizens as attribute to open defecation besides other factors like lack of toilet and sanitation facilities in the country.

    “Furthermore, most of the citizens cannot afford to construct improved facilities because they are poor,’’ it said.

    According to the report, most developing cities in Nigeria do not provide public sanitation facilities; couple with the fact that laws enjoining landlords to provide sanitation facilities are not being enforced.

    “When primary waste services are not available, the incentive is to explore other options by the people.

    “And when regulation is either absent or non-compliant, the incentive is to dump waste in open access spaces such as streets, gutters and other public places.

    “The effects of open defecation are many, not only does it pollutes ground waters, it contaminates agricultural produce and the spread of sicknesses on the environment.’’

    It said that sanitation was important not only to human health but also for economic and social development.

    The report said that sanitation was facing a lot of challenges in the country, critically linked to human behaviours.

    “The overall objectives of WaterAid working in Nigeria is to identify key strategies and actions that could lead to complete and collective abandonment of open defecation.

    WaterAid called on all stakeholders in sanitation sector to strategise means of curbing the situation, such as provision of public toilet facilities and refuse bins.

  • Don seeks end to open defecation

    An environmental health expert, Dr Oladapo Okareh, has called for aggressive sensitisation against open defecation, saying the practice could lead to outbreak of diseases like cholera and diarrhoea.

    Okareh, a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Environmental Health Sciences (EHS), University of Ibadan, made the call while speaking with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Ibadan, Oyo State capital.

    He said: “Open defecation is the practice whereby people go out in fields, bushes, forests, open bodies of water or other open spaces rather than use the toilet to defecate or pass bodily waste.

    “Open defecation constitutes a major public health problem due to rapid urbanisation, lack of public toilets and low level of awareness.”

    According to him, open defecation is a public menace because it could easily lead to outbreak of communicable diseases like cholera, typhoid, diarrhoea, intestinal infections, respiratory diseases and tuberculosis.

    He said it also causes air and water pollution when human faeces are washed away during the rainy season.

    “Water supplies can become contaminated with such faecal matters; we all know that human faeces contain bacteria and germs which consequently contaminate water people use for drinking,” he said.

    Okareh said in order to curb the menace of open defecation, government at all levels should increase public awareness on the health risk it poses  to the populace.

    “Government can also exhibit political will to stop open defecation through construction of public toilets in strategic places, stringent sanitation laws and proper waste disposal,” he said.

  • Iponri Low Cost Estate residents agree on roster for defecation

    SOME residents of Iponri Low Cost Housing Estate in Surulere, Lagos Mainland, have drawn up a roster on toilet use following the breakdown of their sewage plant.

    The plant, which processes human waste, stopped functioning when Eko Electricity Distribution Company (EKEDC) cut power supply to it.

    The residents told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday that the EKEDC took the action because of unpaid electricity bills.

    They said the estate was now covered with water from human waste.

    They said they were living under the threat of epidemic because of the untreated human waste from sceptic tanks.

    The residents urged the government to fix the plant to prevent an imminent disease outbreak.

    A NAN correspondent, who visited the estate, observed that more than 700 sceptic tanks were connected to the central sewage plant.

    Some buildings in the estate were affected by the human waste, a situation that has led to misunderstanding and fight among the residents.

    The residents lamented that the stench from the over-filled sceptic tanks was discomforting, adding that it may lead to a health crisis.

    The situation, they said was causing quarrels among the residents, leading to their agreeing on when the occupants of a block could defecate.

    Mr Samuel Adeleke of Block 64, Flat 3, told NAN that the matter led to misunderstanding between him and other occupants of his block on several occasions.

    “I discovered that my neighbour used to flush his toilet anytime l was about to have my dinner. We have quarrelled about it several times until we reached agreement on when to go to toilet,” he said.

    He appealed to the government to offset the bill so that EKEDC will restore power to the sewage plant and save the estate from an impending epidemic.

    Alhaji Abdul-Rasak Osho, the Chairman, Iponri Housing Estate Residents Association, told NAN that they were paying their land use and maintenance levies regularly to the ministry in charge of the estate.

    The chairman alleged that this was not the first time the government would fail in its responsibilities to the residents.

    “In October 2015, we suffered the same fate when officials of the EKEDC came to disconnect the power supply to the sewage plant.

    “After writing series of letters to the Ministry of the Environment without any reply, we contributed money to buy diesel to power the plant but it was too expensive.

    “When all hopes were lost, we approached the media and seven days after the publication, the government paid the bill and the plant was restored.

    “Must this thing continue to repeat itself? Now we are in for it again.

    “Since April the electricity supply had been cut off and the government is not responding to our pleas to have it restored,’’ he said.

    Mr Kehinde Ogunjinmi, a resident of Block 88 Flat 2, said his flat was most affected by the human waste.

    “When people flush their toilets, the whole thing comes down to my side and settles. The bad odour has forced me to leave my residence for a week now.

    “I have moved my children to my mother’s house in Ikotun area of the state because the place is safer,” he said.

    Efforts by NAN to speak with officials of the Ministry of the Environment working at the plant were unsuccessful as the entrance was locked.

    NAN reports that the power supply to the plant was disconnected last October because of an undisclosed amount being owed the EKEDC.

  • Lagos and the menace of open defecation

    This rather shameful business has continued to stain the image of Lagos as a rising mega city. For, adults the business is often done under the cover of darkness. For children, it is usually done in the open under the surveillance of adults. The name of this terrible business, which happens to be one of the fundamental aspects of sanitation and issues that mirrored our underdevelopment as a nation, is open defecation.

    Open defecation is a practice whereby people defecate in open area not meant for that purpose unmindful of its unhealthy and unhygienic repercussions. Despite all the infrastructure renewal efforts of the Lagos state government, poor sanitation and practice of open defecation remains a hurdle the State must overcome before entering the league of developed cities.

    From Agege to Apapa, Epe to Badia, Ikorodu to Badagry and other such communities in the state, it is common to see people on the highways disembarking from their cars to defecate openly along the road. Walking along the railroad tracks even gives one more panoramic view of things as people- male and female engage in mass open defecation. On the streets, behind bushes, in groves of trees, in rivers or streams, inside gutters, dump sites, in motor parks, markets and what have you, people use faeces to litter the environment with impunity. Even some of the fanciest areas are not exempted.

    In many parts of the state, communities located near the rail track or canals are the guiltiest of open defecation. The question is why is the practice so rampant? A lot is responsible for the menace. A lot of those who indulge in the habit come into Lagos without making any arrangement for a decent accommodation. Just like people travelling abroad without any conceived idea of how they could earn a decent living, many people see Lagos as the New York of Nigeria. They came to the city and make garages and other open spaces their home, where they sleep and do other things.

    But not just the homeless defecate openly in Lagos; many residents of populated areas built in the classic ‘face-me-I-face-you’ model are also guilty of this. In many of the poor neighbourhoods in the city, where these houses may be found, poor sanitary condition reigns supreme. Hence, it is not out of place to see houses with more than thirty tenants without or with a single latrine. Many buildings have latrines that are unusable or overfilling and had to be abandoned. in such a situation, people resort to open defecation.

    Unfortunately, however, it seems only few people appreciate the extent of this problem which could degenerate into an epidemic in the state. It is a fact that many deadly diseases currently ravaging the world are linked to open defecation and other such poor sanitary practice. It triggers death, contaminates food, transmits skin diseases, causes respiratory diseases, eye problems, scabies, intestinal parasites resulting in kidney damage, tuberculosis and diarrhoea-related diseases. A study has claimed that open defecation can cause mental and cognitive stunting among young.

    Many people seem not to understand that the quality of our lives as human beings is substantially a reflection of the quality of the environment which we inhabit. Many still seem not to comprehend that open defecation creates a host of problems that exceed the merely aesthetic. Beside health implication, open defecation also affects the economy. A 2012 World Bank report reveals that Nigeria loses NGN 455 billion annually due to poor sanitation. This is 1.3 per cent of the national GDP. It should also be understood that an individual produces 200 gram of shit every day. One can imagine volume of shit that goes in to the river and those that end up on our source of water and food when there is flood. Worryingly, according to WHO, one gram faeces of an infected person can have up to 10,000,000 viruses, 1,000,000 bacteria and 1000 parasite cyst and 100 parasite eggs.

    The next question is what should be done? In Lagos, open defecation is against the law. But it is not suffice to simply enact a law and say people should stop defecating in the open without sufficiently changing their mentality. The government needs more campaigns to enlighten the populace about danger of open defecation as a lot of people are still ignorant of the UN supported Community Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) operational  in the state since 2013 which places the burden on communities to take responsibility for the sanitation of their environment.

     Perhaps, the campaign should not be left for the government alone. The media, the artists, the comedians, religious bodies and civil society group etc should be actively involved.  Our popular musicians can take a clue popular musician, Lagbaja (the masked one), who once called on those who defecate openly in the city to return to their villages. And in a humorous tone, he advised that they can then defecate right in front of their houses in the village. “To ba de abule yin, ma tie lo si salanga, se ni ko fa siwaju agbo ile yin,” (When you get to your village, you can defecate in front of your house).

    It is also important for agencies saddled with the responsibility of enforcing sanitation laws in Lagos State to be alive to their responsibilities. In other countries like Nepal where only about 46 percent of the population have access to toilets, the people have adopted a name and shame approach where offenders names were pasted in the community centre. This method though has not stopped the practice but it has nonetheless been effective. Can Lagos borrow this unique model?

    The state government, especially at the local government level should also make arrangement to provide more public toilets at the grassroots. This could be done in partnership with private investors. Above all, the state government need to explore opportunity of its laudable town hall meetings and other such public outreaches to further impress on Lagosians on the imperative of living a dignified life through proper sanitation.

    • Diyaolu wrote from Agbado- Ijaiye, Lagos.