The city of Onitsha is home to the largest open market in West
Africa and possibly the entire African continent. This river
town is connected to the sister city, Asaba, on the western
bank by the only bridge that straddles the lower Niger River
thus making it a strategic communication hub in south central
Nigeria. Onitsha is a bona fide Igbo city replete with an ancient
cultural institution that is presided over by the Obi of Onitsha.
Since the advent of British colonial rule, Onitsha has steadily
been transformed from its tranquil past into a bustling urban
center that is driven mostly by commerce. The city also hosts
the headquarters of Anglican and Catholic churches as well as
the two oldest educational institutions in the area, DMGS and
CKC, which were founded since the colonial era. For most Igbo-owned
businesses, Onitsha acts as base from where their tentacles
are fanned out to reach all corners of Nigeria and beyond. Almost
all major bus operating companies that handle intercity transportation
nationwide are based out of Onitsha. It is also from this city
that distributing outposts for building materials, pharmaceuticals,
auto spare parts and a host of other goods are supplied and
replenished throughout most parts of the country, especially
the East and North.
Because
of its importance, Onitsha was a hotly contested theater during
the Civil War. Suffice it to say that post-war Onitsha was a
ghost of what it used to be and remains so till today in the
eyes of many. Rural-urban migration, which kicked off during
the oil-boom epoch of the 1970s and ‘80s, led to explosion
of the city’s population without a commensurate growth
in infrastructure development to cope with influx of new residents
from near and far. The city limits expanded haphazardly engulfing
farmlands and settlements that lie to the north, south and east.
Whatever city plan that was in place prior to the Civil War
was virtually discarded in post-war period thereby setting the
stage for evolution of the chaotic development process that
has transformed today’s Onitsha metropolis into an eyesore.
The city and its environs belong to the equatorial rain forest
belt of West Africa and receive more than 80 inches of rainfall
annually, mostly during the 6 months of rainy season. Increasing
demand for housing to accommodate population explosion resulted
in widespread clearing of vegetation cover in farmlands and
woodlands throughout the area. Traditional floodwater channels
were blocked when new buildings were sited in their paths and
roads were poorly constructed without adequate provision for
drainage. Due to Onitsha’s peculiar topography, erosion
has become the greatest menace to the livelihood of this city’s
residents.
Post-independent
Onitsha was administered under the purview of an elected mayor
whose task it was to take charge of the city’s affairs.
In post-war era, management of urban centers throughout the
country was transferred to government bureaucrats who, for decades,
took direct orders from military top brass that ruled Nigeria
until recently. With pervasive official corruption that permeated
all aspects of governance, succeeding administrations looked
the other way while cities like Onitsha decayed beyond belief.
As we speak, Onitsha, a city of more than 1.5 million people,
has no functional waste management system. Every inch of the
metropolis is being smothered with heaps of garbage and other
refuse which, at times, pile up in shape of mountains. Open
sewer flows into roadways and streets even in the middle of
dry season. Major thoroughfares and streets are partially or
completely blocked by human waste that spill over from illegal
garbage dumps that appear daily across the city. Bewildered
residents have no choice but to walk and ride on piles of all
this filth routinely to get from one place to the other. Effects
of floodwater erosion throughout the city are compounded by
ubiquitous mounds of garbage and trash which are routinely washed
off and carried downhill after a typical torrential downpour.
Tons of debris, in turn, soon choke up drainage channels thereby
forcing floodwater to spillover and inundate roads, streets,
business premises and homesteads on regular basis. Okpoko and
Fegge sections of Onitsha bear the brunt of these combination
punches on regular basis.
Onitsha
is not only the largest urban center in Anambra state, but it
is also the economic engine that drives the livelihood of the
overwhelming majority of its citizens. The state government,
therefore, has an obligation in making sure that Onitsha lives
up to its potential as a vibrant commercial capital and a safe
living space for millions of its residents who call that metropolis
home. Succeeding Anambra state administrations have not lived
up to expectation in addressing the dual menace of erosion and
pollution that have transformed urban centers like Onitsha into
eyesores which are unfit for human habitation. Anambra State
Environmental Protection Agency (ANSEPA) was created to ensure
that residents and businesses comply with environmental standards
delineated in existing statutes. The role of this agency should
thus be essentially that of monitoring and supervision to make
sure that all who violate existing codes are identified and
disciplined according to the law. As far as Onitsha is concerned,
ANSEPA has failed woefully to discharge its responsibility to
Anambra people, in particular and Nigeria, in general. Ongoing
investigations have shown that, contrary to defined role of
ANSEPA, this agency has assumed the function of garbage and
trash collection from some Onitsha residents for a fee. Which
authority should then monitor ANSEPA to ensure that its new
assumed role as a trash/garbage collector agency is discharged
effectively?
The
filth and infrastructural degradation that have overtaken Onitsha
as a consequence of decades of neglect are beginning to pressure
the State House in Awka to do something concrete now to change
the present image of Onitsha and other decaying urban centers
in the state. The situation in Onitsha, however, is so bad and
the damage so extensive that the process of deriving and implementing
workable solutions, which can provide a much-needed facelift
for the city, must not be left to the whims and caprices of
government bureaucracy. Anambra state government obviously lacks
the manpower and material resources that shall be required to
even make a dent in correcting the mess that is all over the
city as we speak. This is certainly not the time to point fingers
and apportion blames to anyone or group, including the present
ANSEPA board. This agency should never have been charged with
the task of waste management in the first place since it was
never equipped to perform that function. Changing the composition
or leadership of ANSEPA, though politically and administratively
expedient in the short run, may not yield any tangible results
down the road because this agency lacks what it would take to
meaningfully deal with the forces that deface Onitsha.
The
forces that create and sustain the eyesore that is glaringly
manifest in Onitsha are evident anywhere one looks in Anambra
state and beyond. Anambra is particularly vulnerable to floodwater
erosion because of its peculiar topography and soil formations
that are unusually fragile once the age-old equilibrium that
has persisted for centuries is recklessly trampled upon by modern-day
developers. Managing the eyesore in Onitsha cannot yield expected
results without thorough understanding and review of collateral
issues that continue to devastate our God-given land. There
must be a comprehensive and sustainable plan of action to address
erosion menace throughout Anambra state before anyone can stop
recurrent flooding that ravages Okpoko and Fegge sections of
Onitsha, for example. Proper environmental etiquette needs to
be inculcated into the generality of the populace before anyone
can get a handle on mountains of garbage and trash that litter
the streets and block natural drainage channels in Onitsha.
A government agency like ANSEPA should focus on enforcing the
removal of buildings and other illegal structures situated in
traditional drainage channels, such as the Otumoye Creek (Nwangene)
basin, in order to restore normal floodwater drainage and leave
trash/garbage collection and disposal to city authorities. Most
important, appropriate legal and legislative framework must
be put in place soon at each level of governance to ensure that
Onitsha eyesore, once removed, shall never be allowed to recur.
Present
condition of eastern Fegge epitomizes everything that has gone
wrong with today’s Onitsha. Silas Works Road branches
off Zik's Avenue, Fegge, just one block from the famous Ochanja
Market. This street used to be home for the once popular Silas
Bread and later, a base for retail tire business in Onitsha
metropolis. For those who wished to avoid traffic congestion
at Ochanja, the street provided a last-minute diversion to link
up with Port Harcourt Road which lies a few blocks to the South.
In the 1980s and ‘90s, it was a choice route for Run-for-life
Campaign jogging exercises that used to originate from what
is left of former Government Field, Fegge. Silas Bread has since
gone out of business and tire dealers have also been relocated
to Nkpor, off Onitsha/Enugu expressway. This once-famous street
can only be entered now via Zik's Avenue, but one cannot proceed
beyond 50 feet because most of the area is permanently under
water (open sewer). Just around the corner from Silas Works
Road, is what used to be a paved short-cut access to Ochanja
Market. This busy thoroughfare for residents of southeastern
parts of Fegge still handles heavy traffic even though the street
is completely blocked by a mountain of garbage. Access to Ochanja
via Port Harcourt Road to the south and Zik's avenue to the
north have fallen into disuse for some quite a while because
of total ruination. Getting in and out of Fegge these days is
certainly no child's play.
The
eyesore in Onitsha and elsewhere across the land requires a
broad-based citizens’ action now to assist in mobilizing
and deploying the enormous manpower and material resources that
shall be needed to turn things around for the better. A broad
coalition made up of individuals, groups and institutions (both
national and multinational) shall provide the platform for liaising
with governments in affected jurisdictions to institute models
that shall eliminate and prevent recurrence of urban decay,
starting with Onitsha as ground zero. The nucleus of such a
coalition is already in place and is currently increasing the
scope of consultations to include individuals and groups that
have genuine revulsion for the inhuman conditions in which our
folks are compelled to seek their livelihood. Onitsha can never
attain its potential as a burgeoning economic center for south
central Nigeria until decent people, including multinational
investors, find it an attractive and profitable destination
for investing their hard-earned capital.
The
present image of Onitsha portrays us as a people without a sense
of self pride and sound cultural values. The eyesore that Onitsha
has become in this era does not represent what we are as a people
and our aspirations for the future. It is our patriotic duty
to do our utmost now to help to give this city a facelift.