Nigeria Auditor-General: River Niger drying up

Acting Auditor-General for the Federation, Mrs Florence Anyanwu

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Acting Auditor-General for the Federation, Mrs Florence Anyanwu, has said that environmental audit of the River Niger would begin soon to prevent it from drying up like Lake Chad river.
She said this on Tuesday in Abuja during the 6th Annual Meeting of African Organisation of Supreme Audit Institutions Working Group on Environmental Audit (AFROSAI WGEA).
The theme of the meeting is “Working together for a healthy and sustainable environment in Africa.’’

Anyanwu said that the River Niger was drying up gradually on the Onitsha side and that in some countries where it flowed to, it had dried up.

She said that Nigeria represented the largest coastal area of the river and that there were lots of economic activities that it represented.

“There is also a whole lot of prospective power and navigation activity, so it is very relevant and important even in terms of agriculture.

“We do not want to sit back and watch what happened to Lake Chad to happen to River Niger.

“So the earlier we can address it as Supreme Audit Institutions (SAIs), the earlier we can come up with recommendations to assist our member countries to be able to address them in policy formation and implementation.’’

Anyanwu said that at the end of the meeting, the commencement of the auditing would begin “although the policy itself and the agreement to start that audit have already been adopted by the AFROSAI WGEA”.

She also said that Nigeria would particularly like to see that the Niger Basin Authority comprising Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Cote d’ Ivoire, Guinea, Mali, Niger agree to commence the cooperative environmental audit project.

In her speech, Chairperson of AFROSAI WGEA, Mrs Mbah Fomundam, said that the meeting would address issues of wild legal poaching and illegal trade, bio-diversity and plastic pollution.

She said that for some years now environmental sustainability had become a global challenge that was synonymous to responsibility towards future generations.

“It therefore behoves on the SAIs to make sure that the governments are implementing the policies, because the environment is not only for us but for posterity, for the future, our children and our grandchildren.

“In this regard, good governance is important in ensuring that commitments taken in the area of environmental protection and sustainable development produce credible results.’’

Fomundam said that the results of the audit of the Lake Chad had been submitted to the different governments, and that the different governments would meet to know the next step to take.

“The audit report was to look at the laws of each country, the international laws adopted as far as the Lake Chad is concerned or the environment concerning water and forestry.

“What laws have been adopted, what has the countries done to implement these laws, are they respecting these laws?’’

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