Tag: Lake Chad

  • Troops rescue 85 hostages near Lake Chad

    Troops of 7 Division of Operation LAFIYA DOLE, led by the General Officer Commanding (GOC), Brig-General Victor Ezugwu, have rescued 85 Boko Haram hostages, mostly women and children, in Chukungudu, on the fringe of Lake Chad.

    The troops neutralised five insurgents in an encounter where several terrorists ran into the Lake Chad waters.

    Four rounds of Rocket Propelled Grenade (RPG) bombs, double-barrel gun, 349 packets containing ammunition, three magazines, link belt of machine gun ammunition and AK-47 rifle were recovered.

    An Improvised Explosive Device (IED) making factory was found at Geram, with several already-primed suicide vests.

    A well-equipped vehicle and motorcycle workshop as well as spare parts warehouse were discovered at Chukungudu, with three vehicles and motorcycles found.

    A soldier died during the encounter.

    Acting Army Director of Public Relations Col. Sani Usman said in line with the Rules of Engagement, the IED factory, vehicles and motorcycles were destroyed.

  • Troop rescues 85 hostages near Lake Chad

    Troop rescues 85 hostages near Lake Chad

    At least 85 Boko Haram hostages mostly women and children have been rescued in Chukungudu on the fringe of Lake Chad by troops of 7 Division Nigerian Army, Operation LAFIYA DOLE, led by the General Officer Commanding of the Division, Brigadier General Victor Ezugwu.

    Chukungudu on the southern fringes of Lake Chad Region in the northern part of Borno state is a strategic hub town from where Boko Haram conducts it’s strategic operations. However the maneuvering Brigade led by 3 Battalion of 22 Brigade, successfully cleared Geram, Bulankassa and Chukungudu.

    The  troops neutralized five Boko Haram terrorists fighters in a fierce encounter that made several of the terrorists running into the Lake Chad waters.

    The troops recovered 4 rounds of Rocket Propelled Grenade (RPG) bombs, 1 Double Barrel Gun, 349 packets containing various rounds of ammunitions, 3 Magazines, a link belt of machine gun ammunition and 1 AK-47 rifle magazine.

    During the clearance operations, the troops made spectacular discovery of an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) making factory at Geram. In the factory, they found several already primed suicide bombers’ vests. They also discovered a well equipped motor vehicles and motorcycles’ workshop and spare parts warehouse at Chukungudu village.

    The troops recovered 3 vehicles and several newly acquired motorcycles. ‎However, a soldier died during the encounter.

  • Germany pledges 18bn euros for Lake Chad

    Germany pledges 18bn euros for Lake Chad

    •To deport Nigerians without papers

    Germany plans to  inject 18 billion euro to Lake Chad Basin region and another 50 billion euro for the overall area in a bid to recharge the Lake Chad, Chancellor Angela Merkel saidat the weekend.

    Merkel at a joint press conference with visiting President Muhammadu Buhari in Berlin described the Lake Chad region as of great priority to both countries.

    “In terms of cooperation we said we will earmark 18 billion euro for the Lake Chad region area and 50 billion euro for the overall areas,” she said.

    “The Lake Chad region is in an alarming situation, there are 11 million people displaced. Some of them are starving there only 10 per cent of the Lake Chad is left which obviously erodes source of livelihood.”

    She hailed Nigeria’s success in combating Boko Haram activities in the area.

    Merkel noted the current economic difficulties in Nigeria and said the situation was complicated by the high prices of oil, high unemployment rate and the resurgence of militancy in the Niger Delta.

    On the problem of migration she said: “My point in this is that we need to see to it that human traffickers are out of business, we have to strengthen legal migration to also create jobs in Nigeria, jobs possibilities for vocational training, possibilities in education. Also in the context of migration partnership, we will also talk about readmission agreement.

    “Germany has hundreds of people who will have to be returned to Nigeria and our first interest will be how to help the young people to get a job or find a job.”

    Merkel also commended President Buhari’s effort in fighting crime, terrorism in Nigeria.

    She said: “You see first the successes of these policies and you also see great readiness of partners in ECOWAS and in the region to participate in this good fight and this good course.

    “Today’s exchange made our relationship closer, there is great potential we still need to tape and particularly in this difficult time we want to stand by your side.

    “Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa and has great potential for economic progress and this current crisis due to low oil price has to be overcome so that your GDP can be boosted and not in decline as is the case right now.”

    Merkel said Germany would assist Nigeria in recovering its stolen funds stashed abroad.

    “I do appreciate him (Buhari) and if he has any indication as to where those funds are we will obviously immediately follow up. Anything the president indicates to us in this respect we will take up, we want to fight corruption with him,” she said.

    “Our foreign minister for example, has been instrumental in establishing international exchange, our finance minister has worked on thus as well so in the future, it will be very difficult to get money out of the country to hide them. We will work together with you on this,” she said.

  • River Niger drying up, warns Federal Govt

    The Federal Government has raised the alarm that the River Niger is drying up.

     

    To save the river from the fate that befell Lake Chad, the Federal Government along with countries bordering the River Niger has approved the environmental audit of the river.

     

    Addressing journalists at the end of the 6th Annual Meeting of African Organization do Supreme Audit Institutions Working Group on Environmental Audit (AFROSAI WGEA) in Abuja on Tuesday on the development, the Acting Auditor of the Federation (AuGF) Mrs Florence Anyanwu confirmed that that River Niger was drying up.

     

    She noted that countries bordering the river have approved the environmental audit of the river and that commencement of the audit of one of the longest rivers in Africa will begin at the end of the meeting in Abuja.

     

    According to Anyanwu, “talks are ongoing on the cooperative environmental audit project on River Niger by Niger Basin Authority consisting of Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Côte d’ Ivoire, Guinea, Mali, Niger and Nigeria.”

     

    She lamented that the drying up of the River Niger posed social, environmental and economic treat to the communities bordering the river.

     

    When completed, the environmental audit of River Niger will afford the governments the information they need to save the river from further deterioration as well as ensure its continued benefit to bordering communities.

     

    With regards to Lake Chad that has significantly lost a large portion of it body of water, the chair of the AFROSAI WGEA, Mrs Mbah Acha Rose Fomundam said the environmental audit report of the Lake Chad has been sent to the governments of the four countries surrounding the lake to come up with laws to save the river from total evaporation.

     

    Lake Chad is a shallow lake that ordinarily should be fed with constant rain but environmental challenges have seen the lake suffer from sustained drop in the volume of rain fall feeding the lake and a growing population that depends on the lake for water, fishing and agriculture.

     

    Fomundam noted that “despite the signing of multilateral agreements on the environment and established institutions, current scientific studies reveal that many of the planet’s ecosystems have rapidly deteriorated over the last 20 years.”

     

    She added that “citizens have increasingly expected that organizations that hurt the environment be held accountable for their actions, with many citizens feeling that government declarations concerning the environment and sustainable development should be subject to independent audits to assess the extent to which they are implemented.”

     

    In her address the minister of environment Mrs Amina Mohammed said “environmental auditing is an essential component of sustainable environmental management as it provides the mechanism for allowing government to know what has gone wrong over time and highlights the need for urgent policy action.”

     

    She added that “our environment is our sustenance and unless we care for our environment, our lives will be at risk. Unless we have a clear knowledge of what is happening to our environment, we may not be able to make appropriate policies for sustainable environmental management

     

  • Buhari urges ‘rich countries’ intervention for Lake Chad

    Buhari urges ‘rich countries’ intervention for Lake Chad

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday charged the “rich countries” to save the Lake Chad from going into extinction due to adverse effects of climate change.

    The President made the appeal while receiving the Director-General of United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Ms Irina Bokova, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Buhari, in a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, warned that the failure to regenerate the Lake Chad will lead to another round of migration by people living in the areas.

    The President, who led seven ministers to an interactive meeting with the UNESCO chief, said Nigeria and the other countries of the Lake Chad Basin lack the billions of dollars required to channel water from the Congo Basin into the lake to check its rapid depletion.

    He said: “Those living in the Lake Chad region have suffered untold hardship and displacement because of the violence perpetrated by Boko Haram terrorists.

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    ‘‘If there is no farming and fishing, they will dare the desert to migrate.

    “Unless the developed countries make concerted efforts to complete the feasibility study, mobilize resources and technology to start the water transfer from the Congo Basin, the Lake Chad will dry up.

    ‘‘The people will go somewhere and they will create problems for those countries.”

    He commended UNESCO’s support to Nigeria particularly on the ongoing rehabilitation work in the Northeast and reintegration of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).

    He said the pathetic situation of IDPs require immediate and urgent response from international organisations such as UNSECO to provide infrastructure, health and education for the people in the area.

     

  • Saving Lake Chad

    Saving Lake Chad

    •It is an urgent matter with economic and political implications

    It is alarming that a humanitarian crisis is fast developing as a consequence of the continuing threats to the Lake Chad Basin in the West African sub-region. It is a reflection of how the scale of the emergency has escalated that the United Nations (UN) has renewed its focus on the deteriorating situation.

    The UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, Stephen O’Brien, who visited Nigeria this month in connection with the crisis, said: “The crisis in the Lake Chad Basin, including Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad, has continuously deteriorated over the last two years.” He added: “insecurity, violence by Boko Haram and counter-insurgency measures, have uprooted over 2.4 million people, making it the fastest growing displacement crisis in Africa.”

    The activities of terrorists further compounded a complicated situation. Lamentably, most of the people living around the lake have been displaced by natural forces. Decades of drought and desertification brought about by shortage of rainfall, high winds and temperature rise in the region have resulted in diminishing resources in the basin.

    Lake Chad, the largest fresh water reservoir in the Sahel region of Africa, is an important resource shared by Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, Chad and Central African Republic. The lake and its basin sustain over 30 million people, who are largely farmers, fishermen and livestock breeders.

    However, the lake has shrunk to nearly one twentieth of its size, causing serious environmental degradation, such as loss of biodiversity, loss and modification of ecosystem, desertification and sedimentation of the water bodies. Indeed, the lake has been described as an ecological disaster by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, a description that underlines its ecological role as well as the reversal of that role. Apart from the effect of the lake’s decrease on the expanding human population, there is documented evidence of endangered flora and fauna in the Lake Chad area.

    It is noteworthy that the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC) attributed the lake’s shrinkage to changing climate patterns and unsustainable human water use. The point is that there is no single cause for the disappearance of Lake Chad. Global warming is one factor blamed, apart from rainfall which has been steadily reducing by about five to 10mm a year. Other identified factors are irrigation and the damming of rivers feeding the lake for hydro-electric schemes. Even a 2001 study “blamed the lake’s retreat largely on overgrazing in the area surrounding the lake, causing desertification and a decline in vegetation”.

    But beyond causes and effects, it is commendable that the UN is seriously pursuing solutions. The lake and its basin are of such ecological significance that their sustenance must be pursued with a sense of urgency.

    Over the years, there have been efforts to save Lake Chad. A report highlighted when such efforts began and the dimensions: “Plans to divert the Ubangi River into Lake Chad were proposed in 1929 by Herman Sorgel in his Atlantropa project and again in the 1960s. The copious amount of water from the Ubangi would revitalise the dying Lake Chad and provide livelihood in fishing and enhanced agriculture to tens of millions of central Africans and Sahelians.”

    It continued: “Interbasin water transfer schemes were proposed in the 1980s and 1990s by Nigerian engineer J. Umolu (ZCN scheme) and Italian firm Bonifica (Transaqua scheme). In 1994, the LCBC proposed a similar project, and at a March 2008 summit, the heads of state of the LCBC member countries committed to the diversion project.  In April 2008, the LCBC advertised a request for proposals for a World Bank-funded feasibility study. Neighbouring countries have agreed to commit resources to restoring the lake, notably Nigeria.”

    The efforts to save the lake must continue. There is no question that the management of the lake requires greater resources and expertise, and the involvement of the UN is certainly a welcome intervention.

     

  • Abuja 2016 and Lake Chad region

    The tone and tenor of speeches of Heads of State and government at the Regional Security Summit hosted on Saturday by President Muhammadu Buhari suggest that the countries in the Lake Chad region are looking beyond the Boko Haram terrorism.

    Smart leaders they are, they didn’t present themselves back-slapping each other in a congratulatory mood over the enormous feat they have accomplished in the last 10 or so months, substantially reducing the terrorist threats in the region to the point of being described as a mopping up operation.

    They were conscious of the fact the Chibok Girls have not been found. No success can be declared in this war without the girls being found and reunited with their families.

    In addition, the world has come a long way since Gorge W. Bush stood there atop the ship “Abraham Lincoln” being saluted by the flight deck crew to read a speech announcing an end to the Iraq war. “The 2003 Mission Accomplished” banner dominated the background as he spoke. But with hindsight, the world knows that the war against Iraq is still work in progress.

    The then American President, George Bush was to say to a CNN interviewer a few years later that he regretted the outlandish display. In November 2008 specifically, Bush indicated that he regretted the use of the banner, stating that it conveyed the wrong message.

    There are many who believe that the United States is still paying a price for that massive public relations failure.

    In all probability, the world would have benefited more from the leaders if the summiteers in Abuja had to say everything on the war situation as it enters its end in their territories but they, instead, chose to dwell on the promise of the future and what can be done to steer the economy and humanitarian situation into better times.

    While acknowledging the progress so far made, the summiteers who included French President Francois Hollande, Nigeria’s Muhammadu Buhari and 10 other African Presidents, prime ministers and delegates concluded that defeating Boko Haram terrorist group will require a sustained comprehensive approach based on clear and coordinated plans of engagement at at the regional level. Such an approach, they said, must confront challenges relating to effective security operations, providing civilian security and civil administration, restoring stability, and promoting economic development and job creation to break the cycle of violence in all countries where Boko Haram is active.

    Among other things, they  recommended the enlistment of local community and religious leaders as constantly hammered on by President Buhari; increased intelligence sharing; the prioritization of the public education system and sparing no effort in the continuing search for the Chibok schoolgirls and all those abducted by Boko Haram by pooling intelligence resources.

    The leaders also agreed to support the victims of sexual violence or forced marriage by Boko Haram, and the need to provide them with appropriate support including reintegration to communities; that defeating the insurgency requires more than a military solution but that it also requires government-led development action to tackle the root causes of insurgency in the Lake Chad Basin through the development of education and economic opportunities.

    The summit agreed to address the humanitarian situation affecting millions of IDPs, refugees and host communities in Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger. The critical situation of the inhabitants of the newly-liberated towns and villages was also adjudged to be very pathetic. The summit agreed to provide and rehabilitate facilities in the devastated towns and villages with a view to creating conditions for citizens to live without fear of violence and return to conventional life and called for additional support from the international community. They, in addition, took special note of the 20,000 unaccompanied children (below the age of 18 years) displaced by the conflict and over 6000 minors, under the age of five years, and agreed to work together with international organisations to reunite those children with their families.

    One other major step toward a lasting solution towards permanent peace in the region is identified as coming through the acceleration, specifically within three years, of the implementation of the Lake Chad Development and Climate Resilience Action Plan as presented on the margins of COP21 in Paris in consultation with communities of the Lake Chad. It is hoped that the accelerated implementation of the Action Plan would go a long way in bringing development to the Lake Chad Basin.

    For Nigeria in particular, the period of the summit was used to receive an important visitor described as a friend of Africa, Francois Hollande who, in a literal sense killed two birds one stone. He engaged his host, President Buhari in a bilateral meeting in the early part of the day and in the afternoon, joined the other leaders at the summit. The two presidents reviewed the activities of the Multinational Joint Task Force, MNJTF and the progress made since the Climate Change agreement, COP 21 in Paris. President Hollande gave commitment to Nigeria on the resettlement of IDPs as well as his continuing support towards the reestablishment of full security in the Lake Chad region. Five agreements were signed between the Nigerian parties and their French partners.

    In the margins of the security summit, the President also received in audience and at their request, Presidents Macky Sall of Senegal, Patrice Talon of Benin and Idriss Deby Itno of Chad.

    The President also had audiences with the British Secretary for Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Rt. Hon. Phillip Hammond, the U.S Deputy Secretary of State Anthony Blinken and the Deputy President of the European Union Ms Federica Moghereni.

    President Macky Sall raised concerns about the need for the emergence of a good candidate for the chairmanship of the soon-to-be vacant African Union Commission in view of the decision of Mrs Zuma not to run for a second term. He told President Buhari that his country has such a capable candidate.

    Although this summit also discussed a yet-to-be fixed donors conference on the rebuilding of the LBCD areas, the EU brought the good news of the plan to spend 140 million Euros in that regards in the next five years.

    The EU also announced a plan to spend 40 million Euros in the reconstruction of the North-east. The US promised an immediate return of Nigeria’s stolen $350 million held up their country. China, the African Development Bank, ADB, the Islamic Development Bank, IDB, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, IMF have all pledged various contributions they will be making.

    President Muhammadu Buhari’s just-concluded Regional Security Summit, which was the second after the initial one by President Hollande in Paris two years ago, has produced a communique unprecedented in terms of the strong words used and the space devoted to fighting terrorism, post-conflict resettlement and rehabilitation as well as ways of bringing social and economic justice, growth and development to a battered  part of Africa. It also unveiled an expansive security cooperation agenda that binds the West and Central African states to their U.S., European and Asian partners towards a lasting peace, itself a prerequisite for progress and development in the region and the continent. In spite of the foot-dragging by some participants, President Buhari’s key takeaways will include a benign consent to a partnership of the willing to  recharge the Lake Chad with waters from rivers in Central Africa.

    On account of these milestones, the leaders had no hesitation is agreeing to make the regional security summit a regular one.

     

    • Shehu is Senior Special Assistant to the President  (Media and Publicity)
  • Boko Haram: child suicide bombing on the increase

    Boko Haram: child suicide bombing on the increase

    The United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund {UNICEF} has confirmed that up to 1.3 million children have been forced into Boko Haram’s Islamic terrorist group across four countries in Africa.

     

    According Unicef,  Boko Haram’s use of child bombers has increased over the last year with one in five suicide attacks done by children.

     

    The four countries in Africa which have been victim of the insurgency over the past seven years are- Nigeria, Chad, Niger and Cameroon.

     

    In a report by BBC, it is an 11-fold increase with four attacks in 2014 compared to 40 the next year, including January 2016.

     

    The change in tactics reflects the loss of territory in Nigeria by the group.

     

    The seven-year insurgency in the north-eastern part of Nigeria and its neighbouring  Lake Chad countries has left over 17,000 people dead.

     

  • Boko Haram: Navy to establish  operational base in Lake Chad

    Boko Haram: Navy to establish operational base in Lake Chad

    To rid the country of terrorists, the Nigeria Navy (NN) has begun plans to establish a Forward Operation Base (FOB) in Lake Chad.

    Chief of Naval Staff (CNS) Vice Admiral Ibok Ette-Ibas disclosed this yesterday during a training seminar by the Naval Training Command (NAVTRAC) themed “the future of professional training in the Nigerian Navy’ in Lagos.

    Vice Admiral Ette-Ibas noted that conventional security challenges have forced the Navy to move towards adopting new strategies even as he directed a review of the force’ training curriculum to address the challenges.

    According to Ette-Ibas, the establishment of an FOB in Lake Chad, the creation of choke-points by placing house boats around the creeks, as well as the enhancement of surveillance capacities, were among the new strategies adopted.

    His words: “For over five years we have relied majorly on the Regional Maritime Awareness Capability (RMAC) that gives us an eye over the horizon.

    “We have begun the process of emplacing a more robust surveillance system, FALCON EYE, which when completed, will provide surveillance on the entire 200 nautical miles of our Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).

    “This will, therefore, boost our ability to contain the notorious maritime challenges that we presently have out there. The navy in particular has been obliged in the context of the prevailing national emergency to transit a complicated range of a full spectrum of warfare. From her traditional maritime environment in which she engages in ensuring order in the EEZ and territorial waters, washing ashore to be occupied by complex riverine and brown water operations, to a completely new challenge of engaging in fighting in build-up area and desert warfare, as obtained in the northeast theatre.

    “The evolving scenario has necessitated significant changes in our operational procedures, particularly in addressing the spate of crude oil theft, illegal bunkering and attacks on shipping.”

    He hinted of plans to establish a maritime university for training of its personnel and other stakeholders within and outside the country.

    Flag Officer Commanding (FOC) NAVTRAC, Rear Admiral Adeniyi Osinowo noted that the command conducts over 120 courses in its 11 colleges and schools, adding that the training was a function of operational realities, technological changes and fleet renewal.

    “As we have witnessed in the past two decades, the operational doctrine of the NN has been challenged by emerging threats in our maritime environment, with attendant need for new technologies and fleet recapitalisation. As a result, it became apparent that we devote significant effort towards reflecting on extant doctrine as well as the future direction of training in the NN,” he said.

     

    At the seminar were Commandant, National Defence College (NDA) Rear Admiral Ilesanmi Alade; FOC, Western Naval Command (WNC) Rear Admiral Raphael Osondu; Director of Operations, Naval Headquarters, Rear Admiral Uduak Essien; Admiral Superintendent, Naval Doctrine and Assessment Centre, Rear Admiral Jacob Ajani; Director of Naval Information, Commodore Chris Ezekobe and Commodore, among others.

    Retired naval officers including Rear Admirals Ndubuisi Kanu, O.O. Joseph and Francis Akpan, were also present.

     

     

     

  • In Paris,Buhari makes strong pitch for Lake Chad

    In Paris,Buhari makes strong pitch for Lake Chad

    ASK President Muhammadu Buhari what he thinks is the chief reason for the violence and insecurity in Nigeria, including the Boko Haram terrorism in the north-east, bloody wars between cattle herdsman and farmers in central Nigeria, erosion in the east and the environmental catastrophe in the coastal regions and he will say, almost upon instinct that it’s the climate change.

    The new Nigerian president who promised to tackle the problem of climate change in his inaugural speech has spun a compelling narrative on the disappearing Lake Chad, the environment around the Chad basin and how these have become the problem of the economy of the neighboring states through the failure of agriculture and joblessness which in turn have provided an easy recruitment into violent extremism.  It was a narrative so compelling that it literally arrested the attention of the world as 190 countries met in Paris to agree on the first global agreement on climate change. President of the United States, Barack Obama took it from here, illustrating how the drying up of the lake is becoming a major factor in the migration of Africans to the west, and on account of which, he agreed with our President that the revival of the lake had become a global imperative. It will require 14 billion U.S. Dollars to divert East African rivers to empty into the lake, the kind of money President Buahri told world leaders that his country cannot pay. He therefore asked for global assistance.

    President Buhari’s speech at the conference centered on two major planks: one, Nigeria under him has the political will to secure its ecological interests and two, we will work with the rest of the world to protect the environment without compromising industrial development.

    Starting with the Lake Chad, the President illustrated his awareness of the risk the changing climate presents to human security by recalling the richness of the waters and surrounding agriculture of the Lake Chad that attracted settlers, allowing the settled communities to enjoy education and comparable economic wellbeing. However, with prolonged drought and desertification, Lake Chad is now one-tenth of its original size, leading to poverty due to the failure of agriculture and fishing causing instability in the region that the insurgency of the Boko Haram has been able to cash in upon. The lake that once spread its territorial waters onto the four countries of the Lake Chad Basin Commission has now been reduced to a miserly presence on the Chadian territory, denying thereby direct access to its waters to Nigeria, Niger and Cameroon.

    Traders in Baga, the major trading hub which the army just recovered from the Boko Haram said on a good day, five truck-loads of fish are now transported out of town, in stark contrast to the 100 a day that carried fish from the interstate market in the past.

    Beyond the drought conditions of the Lake Chad, the President successfully showed the world Nigeria’s vulnerability to climate change as manifested in the various ecological zones.

    He cited the problem of soil erosion in the South as a consequence of “climate-change-related heavier and steadier than normal rainfall” that is worsening soil erosion in the subregion. “The recent increase in the number of reported severe landslides in the South-Eastern states of the country is an attestation to the possible climate change-induced changes in erosion intensity.”

    The President also reported on the sea-level rise, stating that Nigeria’s coastline is already undergoing “ pronounced morphological changes as a result of natural extreme events, such as sea surges and tidal waves.” He projected that 35% of the highly-productive Niger Delta could be lost if nothing was done to stop the anticipated global warming-induced accelerated sea level rise of between half-a-meter to one meter. Much of Lagos, the nation’s commercial capital will be abandoned if the sea waters rise by one meter.

    Forests and other ecosystems, he noted, which are already under significant pressure are being affected by the worsening climate change. In particular, he warned of persistent flooding and water logging that would make the coastal regeneration difficult and the Savannah region of Northern Nigeria becoming vulnerable to the reduction of rainfall. The recent violence wracking Kaduna, FCT, Plateau, Nassarawa and Benue states pitching herdsmen and farmers was equally cited, its primary factor, no doubt being the weather.

    The President listed a myriad of other implications arising for the climate change vulnerabilities of Nigeria including a major risk to access to potable water, increased energy demand for cooling; negative implications for tourism, one of the country’s fastest growing industries, as well as consequences for agriculture and food security.

    In line with the principles of the Paris conference, Nigeria joined 179 other countries-which together are responsible for 97 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions- to submit voluntary commitments on how and when they plan to cut emissions.

    In our specific case, the President submitted a two-stage proposal- an unconditional first phase to cut our own contribution to global warming by 20 percent, and this included a decisive plan to end the flaring of gas in our oil fields and a commitment to extending power supply to parts of the country that don’t enjoy electricity using solar energy and other renewable sources. On account of the latter, President Buhari accepted an invitation by Narendra Modi to join an international alliance of 121 “solar-rich” countries to advance the use of this clean source energy. The second phase of the Nigerian proposal described as equally bold would see the country cutting the emission by a total of 45 percent, however on condition of international support. The measures here include increased level of energy efficiency and a significant reduction in the use of generators while providing access to power to all Nigerians.

    To do this, Nigeria has asked for support from the rich countries accused by  Indian Prime Minister Modi of   “powering their way to prosperity on fossil fuel” at the expense of the developing countries.

    The moral underpin of the Paris conference states unequivocally that the rich countries must actually take responsibility for the current mess up of the global climate and lead the fight against global warming through several compensatory steps, one of which is a proposal to fund redemptive activities with an annual fund of 100 million U.S Dollars.

    In addition to drawing from this, Nigeria is asking for further international support in the form of finance and investment, technology and capacity building.

    All these proposals are in a document Nigeria joined other countries to table as its “Intended Nationally Determined Contribution, INDC.”

    In these documents, the countries of the world each outlined their goals and action plans towards a redemption of the environment and the steps, going forward they will be taking to achieve sustainable development and delivering on government priorities.

    In the case of Nigeria, President Buhari approved several policies and measures that will deliver immediate development benefits which are in addition to the climate benefits.

    These policies and measures, according the government document, set out to alleviate poverty,increase social welfare and inclusion, as well as improving individual wellbeing in a healthy environment. President Buhari made clear the political will on the part of the government at the center in Nigeria to tackle the catastrophic problems associated with climate change. Some of these, as manifested by the dirty air in our cities deriving from the use of diesel generators, cars and trucks as well as the burning of wastes that in turn spew up toxic gases are matters he said government will tackle.

    To achieve this massive transformation (oh, no! Transformation again?), the approved policy document sets out what it calls sector-specific strategies, policies, programs to reduce the impact of  climate change through actionable measures by the federal government ,the states, local governments, civil society, private sector, communities and individuals.

    In a nutshell, these measures will, hopefully improve awareness and preparedness for climate change impact; mobilize communities for climate change adaptation actions; reduce the impact of climate change on key sectors and vulnerable communities and integrate climate change adaptation into national, sectoral, state, local government planning and into the plans of universities, research and educational organizations, the civil society, the private sector and the media.

    Broken down, there are strategies for agriculture (crops and livestock); fresh water and coastal water resources and fisheries; forests; biodiversity; health and sanitation; human settlement and housing; energy; transport and communications; industry and commerce; disaster, migration and security.

    Equally, there are strategies for livelihoods which are about encouraging community participation including civil society organizations; the vulnerable groups who are not to be left out and strategies for education.

    The overall participation by Nigeria at the Conference of Parties to United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP-UNFCCC) agreement at the Paris Conference on Climate Change showed a rare type of seriousness on the part of our country. This is in terms of both preparation, pedagogy and actual participation.

    While this is a true reflection of President Muahmmadu Buhari’s self-professed seriousness of commitment to issues of the environment, it is also a testimony to the solid teamwork the new ministers, Mrs. Amina Ibrahim Mohammed and Ibrahim Usman Jibrin are injecting into the ministry responsible.

    It is equally important to note that this ministry which enjoys a rare combination of bureaucrats, scholars and technocrats in its staff had spent not less than one year setting out scenarios and priorities for the country at the conference, a spectacular effort that won the appreciation of the ministers and the President. No doubt, Nigeria’s historic presentation at the climate change conference is a milestone at the start of a long, tortuous journey.

    In the final analysis however, it is the resolutions taken and the actions that follow that will determine the success of Nigeria at the COP in Paris and the policies and actions that will be pursued.  For now however, it is gratifying that the President’s appeal to the rich nations, the UN and other world bodies has been heard and heeded, somewhat to a degree, with world leaders including India’s Modi and Barack Obama coming in tow.

     

    • Shehu is a Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity.