The Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), a non-governmental organization, has decried alleged proposal by the European Union (EU) to include Nigeria in the list of countries for which non-hazardous waste for recovery is authorised and dumped.

This is as HOMEF alleged that Nigeria and other African Countries had become dumpsites for thousands of obsolete and unusable computers and other e-waste.

“Major sources of these e-waste include China, the United States, Spain, the United Kingdom, the UAE, and Morocco”, the Group noted.

“We see the “Request for Inclusion in the List of Countries to Which the Export from the European Union of Non-Hazardous Wastes and Mixtures of Non-Hazardous Wastes Destined for Recovery is Authorised” as a ploy to woo countries like Nigeria into obnoxious systemic legal waste colonialism.

“Nigeria is already plagued with environmental pollution arising from oil and gas exploitation, pollution arising from the exploitation of solid minerals, plastic pollution, and genetic pollution in foods.

“For a country already almost overwhelmed by these issues, seeking approval to import waste of any kind is not only ill-advised but also ecocidal and dangerous”, it added.

Speaking further, Nnimmo Bassey, HOMEF’s executive director, said, “This move exposes the government’s willingness to discount the wellbeing of citizens for a mess of porridge,

“It is inconceivable that a nation with life expectancy of about 56 years and a broken healthcare delivery system would succumb to the level of begging to import someone else’s waste, when we can hardly handle our domestic wastes,”

HOMEF, as well as other well-meaning Nigerians, reject the Nigerian Government’s plot to allow other countries and regions to use Nigeria or any other African nation as dumpsites for waste products from their conspicuous consumption.

The Group further stated that even wastes certified as non-hazardous are often hazardous – containing traces of heavy metals and other dangerous elements. “We denounce the ploy, under any guise, to import any form of waste to Nigeria”.

Noting that rich countries commodify waste and make it appeal to the appetites of poorer countries that are seeking foreign exchange by all means, they said that was why the EU could report that €18.5 billion worth of EU waste was exported in 2023.

“What the impacts of those wastes have been and will continue to be in the countries where they were exported is a question that the trade merchants will never answer” HOMEF said.

The EU seem to align with the assertion of Lawrence Summers, World Bank Chief Economist in 1991, who wrote that Africa is hugely under polluted and that it makes economic sense to dump wastes here.

In his memo, he said, “Just between you and me, shouldn’t the World Bank encourage more migration of the dirty industries to the LDCs [Least Developed Countries]? A given amount of health-impairing pollution should be done

in the country with the lowest cost and the country with the lowest wages. I think the economic logic behind dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest wage country is impeccable, and we should face up to that

”In a world that is in the grip of extreme geopolitical distortions, the shameful truth is that the high consumption nations are happy to offload their wastes on zones regarded as suitable for nothing except to be sacrificed as refuse dumps.

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