Editorial

Dealing With Destitution In Port Harcourt

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The Rivers State Council of the Nigeria
Union of Journalists (NUJ) struck a
strong chord last week when it called on the Rivers State Government to take urgent steps to check the influx of destitute persons into the State. According to the union, the resumption of the rail services has worsened matters.
Chairman of the NUJ in Rivers State, Comrade Omoni Ayo-Tamuno who made the call when the State Commissioner of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation, Mr. Damiete Miller Herbert paid a courtesy call on the union said that whereas the streets of Port Harcourt were being defaced, a fresh influx through the cheap or free transportation provided by the railway can be troublesome.
The Tide thinks that this is one subject that needs to be reconsidered and given proper attention. This is moreso because it has become one area that had defied steps by successive governments to handle. That a matter that affects the health and aesthetics of the State would be handled with kid gloves is what beats the imagination of many people.
Perhaps, it should be stated that Port Harcourt and Rivers State as a whole cannot be the preferred destination for tourists and investors and at the same time be the preferred destination for destitute persons. The State under the present government must take the decision and make the State an investor’s haven.
This has become even more imperative because Port Harcourt still remains the only city in Rivers State. Famous as the city is across the world, the ability to control destitute persons should be the least concern. In fact, even when the present government actualises the plan to develop three more cities, destitution should not be a problem.
A couple of months ago, a band of young men suspected to have come from the Northern states entered Port Harcourt in droves. These young men go about seeking anything to do for food and at night take up any available space to pass the night. A cursory look around shows where and how they ease themselves.
When they came, many suspected them to be forerunners of Boko Haram, but their stay has shown that they are not only posing environmental threats, but providing ready hands for criminality and violence. To continue to ignore their activities is to endanger the population as a whole.
Meanwhile, the presence of some persons from neighbouring Republic of Niger and others have defaced parts of the State. While the quarters of some persons from both the Yoruba and Hausa origins have posed great environmental problems, the arrival of more has caused some kind of overflow that cannot be without conflict in the future.
For as long as anyone can remember, major roads in Port Harcourt have been punctuated with all manner of beggars, sick persons and hawkers.  They actually compete for right of way with vehicles and sometimes cause mishaps. Even more avoidable is the sore-sight of some grievously ill persons, disabled and very old persons. In some cases, it is groups of young lactating women with group of toddlers buzzing all over for alms.
Lest anyone forgets, some of these destitute persons have been found to be informants and assistants to robbers. One was actually found with a gun, which he gives to robbers for quick operations and hides same thereafter. Among them are the mentally unstable who go about naked, take over bus stop stands for their home and endanger public facilities as the authorities look the other way.
But this cannot continue if Port Harcourt must regain its former glory as the garden city of Nigeria. This cannot continue as the Rivers State Governor, Chief Nyesom Wike builds roads, bridges and institutions to re-invent Rivers State. In fact, the intervention being planned by the Commissioner of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation is heartwarming.
Even so, we expect that the Ministry would raise monitoring/enforcement teams to go round the State with a view to arresting infractions before they become too sickening and dangerous. They should make good the plan to revisit the charity homes and laws affecting the work of the Ministry generally.

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