The governor of Anambra State, Chief Willie
Obiano, does not conceal the weightiness in steering the affairs of his
state; he is not a shirker from his sworn responsibility to lift the
state to an enviable status either. The
Governor’s multifaceted interests in advancing the state,
in addition to
the unique promptness of his actions, present a man who rests less to
nurture his vision for Anambra to tangible terms. Though Chief Obiano
has, from the day of his inauguration, maintained heightened commitment
to the ‘four pillar’ thrust of his administration itemized as:
‘aggressive mechanized agriculture, oil and gas, trade and commerce, and
industrialization,’ he has personally led crusades to inculcate
environment friendliness in Ndi-Anambra; just as he has equally
demonstrated absolute commitment to the security of lives and property
in the state. The effects of these efforts are recognizable in the
reinvigorated life among Ndi-Anambra who, apart from celebrating the
minimal crime record in the state, have bought into the Governor’s ‘free
the environment of filth’ campaign.
Environment, in its sheer
immensity and bountiful accommodation of life, could passably go for the
most expansive as well as the most charitable habitation for life on
planet earth. Indeed, life cannot be outside the context of an
environment, for even a vacuum depicts an environment of emptiness,
absence or nothingness. Vast and vague, environment has been in the
front burner of issues of grievous concern to organisations and
governments across the globe in their advocacy for wholesome life. The
challenges of making environment pliable to the demands of humans are as
diverse as the particularities of distinctive human habitations and the
consciousness of people to the environmental peculiarities they put up
with. The economy of the environment in human life is therefore as
immense, convoluted and probably as relevant as life itself suggests.
And mindful of the interface (more of fluidity) between its
socio-geographical pedestals, our target here is the implication of
human actions or inactions on the environment in Anambra State.
A few days into the life of his administration, Chief Willie Obiano
defied turbulent rainfall to embark on ‘Keep Awka Clean’ exercise. He
replicated the environmental discipline campaign shortly after in the
metropolitan cities of Onitsha, Nnewi and Ekwulobia where he enjoined
residents of the state to wake up to the challenges of reviving an
environment that has experienced continual depreciation. His persuasion
on the subject is apt: ‘Hygienic environment is a sine qua non for
pleasant neighbourhoods and good health.’ Governor Obiano’s passion for a
wholesome environment, physical and social, conduced to his choice of
‘Kpochapu’ (evacuate, remove completely) as a codename for a joint
security group comprising the Police, other arms of Nigeria’s Armed
Forces, Civil Defence and other relevant groups. This octopus subset of
the State security apparatus enforces the maintenance of a safe, decent
and civilized polity. While ‘Operation Kpochapu’ might fundamentally be
referencing containment of criminality in the State, the nomenclature
which explicitly points at the maintenance of decent neighbourhoods
underpins the Governor’s consummate passion to turnaround the
environment and the people to a blend of civilised entity.
Anambra State of Nigeria is unfairly burdened with multiple natural
ecological constraints. The State has over one thousand active erosion
sites whose persistent escalation, particularly during the rains,
continues to threaten lives and property of Ndi-Anambra. Conscious of
the non-cohesive texture of the soil in many parts of the State which
exposes it to malignant erosion, Governor Obiano, in his ‘Save the
Environment Campaign,’ stresses the imminent danger a harassed
environment poses to its abusers. He encourages individuals and groups
to duly dispose refuse at designated points to avoid blockage of the
water channels and the consequent erosion. In response to the Governor’s
message, it is now common to see people de-silting the drains that run
through their neighbourhoods, and properly disposing refuse at
designated spots from where the appropriate Government Agency promptly
evacuates same.
Anambra State leaves nobody in doubt
about the difficulties its governance poses; the enviable constellation
of stellar intelligentsia it boasts of regardless. This privilege, in
addition to the significant value of the wealthy and ‘know-some’ people
(who, indeed, might know very little) has ensured a clog in
administering the state. It is therefore not strange to see people,
particularly the rich, encroach on public land in erecting private
structures, with the haughty mindset that ‘nothing will happen’. At
times these structures are placed on water or other service lines, or
even on deliberate green parks reserved for public use. As Governor
Obiano superintended the demolition of such illegal structures at
Onitsha and its environs, he admonished perpetrators of such illegality,
and sternly warned that his administration ‘will not tolerate flagrant
violation of the law and encroachment on government property by anybody,
irrespective of social status.’
Again, in furtherance of Chief
Obiano’s passion for safe and decent environment, the Anambra State
Government has ordered an immediate removal of immobile vehicles along
major roads in the state; it has also ordered the removal of random
posters and billboards which deplete the aesthetic dispositions of the
cities. Given Governor Obiano’s compulsive persuasion on the primacy of
well groomed, decent and safe environment in the attainment of great
health and pleasant life, and upon Ndi-Anambra’s warm reception of the
noble counsel encapsulated in ‘Operation Kpochapu’, Anambra State is
surely on course to the haulage of laurels in environmental
friendliness.
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