Business
Groups Seek Scavengers’ Incorporation In Mainstream Economy
The Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR) in collaboration with Netherlands-based INCLUDE, has intensified efforts to bring waste collectors, otherwise known as scavengers, into the mainstream of the Nigerian economy by improving their activities.
Director General of the institute, Dr. Joseph Ochogwu, disclosed this at a stakeholders’ validation workshop tagged “Formalising the Scavenger Economy for Sustainable Development in Nigeria”, held in Abuja last Friday.
Noting that it is aimed at ending stigmatisation, marginalisation and profiling of the waste pickers, also known as Baban bola in Hausa language, he said the IPCR and its partners embarked on a research about the activities of the waste pickers and dump sites in Abuja and Lagos, to ascertain their conditions, even as the research made far-reaching recommendations on how to provide medical care, funds, loans, grants, security and generally transform the sector to add more value to the Nigerian economy.
Ochogwu noted that the scavengers help in the recycling process which has added billions of Naira to the Nigerian economy, stressing that the public must be made to end the exclusion towards the waste management system.
According to him, “Whether we like it or not, scavengers are very important to the waste management ecosystem. As a matter of fact they are the frontline people. As humans we produce waste on a daily basis and these are the people that help us to pick them up.
“From the waste areas to the garbage dump they are everywhere and it’s so unfortunate to note that they suffer stigmatisation. Some see them as security threats while others tag them as a thief which is not supposed to be so. They are neglected by society which is why we decided to undertake this research”.
He also appreciated partners from the Netherlands for providing funding to enable IPCR carry out the research both in Abuja and Lagos.
He said “this research took us to one of the largest dump sites in Lagos and you need to see how people live in this site. We also looked at the level of vulnerability of the people there both adults and children and this calls for policy concerns on why we need to zoom in and provide policies through research on this group of people because they are very essential to our lives”.