Site icon Fishe News

Senate Sounds Warning Over Unnoticed Lead Poisoning In Lagos And Ogun

The Senate on Thursday sounded a grave alarm over what it described as a “widespread and scientifically verified lead‐poisoning disaster” affecting Ogijo — a densely populated community that straddles the boundary between Lagos (Ikorodu area), and the Ogun East Senatorial District.

The crisis was traced to multiple used lead-acid battery recycling factories operating in the area. According to lawmakers, emissions and toxic waste from these factories have, over years, contaminated the environment, exposing children, women and factory workers to extremely dangerous levels of lead.

Scope of contamination and health impact

In debate, the motion — jointly sponsored by Mukhail Adetokunbo Abiru (APC, Lagos East), and Gbenga Daniel (APC, Ogun East), — described Ogijo as confronting “an environmental catastrophe of global significance.”

Investigations cited by the senators revealed contamination levels reportedly as high as 186 times the internationally accepted safety limits. Residents have reportedly suffered a range of severe health issues — persistent headaches, abdominal pain, seizures, memory loss, cognitive decline and other classic symptoms of chronic lead exposure.

Perhaps most alarming is the claim that processed lead from Ogijo has already entered global supply chains — being exported abroad and used in major automobile manufacturing — while the local communities remain poisoned.

A senator at the hearing described the situation as a “full-scale public health emergency that is silently destroying an entire generation.”

Senate’s demands and resolutions

In response, the Senate has issued sweeping demands and resolutions, calling for:

The Senate has directed its Committee on Legislative Compliance to monitor and ensure the implementation of all resolutions within six weeks.

Context: prior government action and concerns

The authorities have already begun to respond: the Ogun State Government recently shut down seven used lead-acid battery (ULAB), recycling factories in Ogijo and temporarily suspended export of lead ingots from the area.

Moreover, the state established a lead-testing centre at the local Ogijo Primary Health Centre, launching free testing for residents in early December 2025.

Despite these steps, senators warned that enforcement remains weak, many factory operators deny wrongdoing, and exposure continues — meaning the recent factory closures and export suspensions are merely “the first step.”

Advocacy groups have also called on the Ogun government to officially declare Ogijo a “contaminated site,” highlighting how indiscriminate siting of lead-recycling factories led to severe soil and air pollution, elevated blood-lead levels among workers and local residents, and irreversible damage to the environment and public health.

Why this matters — and what’s at stake

The unfolding tragedy in Ogijo underscores a broader danger across Nigeria: unchecked industrial pollution, weak environmental regulation, and lack of enforcement can transform ordinary communities into “sacrifice zones,” where profit is prioritised over people’s lives.

Lead poisoning is often “silent”: its effects— neurological damage, cognitive decline, organ failure, chronic illness — unfold over years or decades, often unnoticed until it’s too late. By the time symptoms become obvious, much of the damage may already be irreversible. The Senate described the crisis as a “full-scale public health emergency,” emphasising that it threatens the health and future of children, families and entire generations.

Moreover, the revelation that contaminated lead from Ogijo may have entered global supply chains raises serious ethical and international-product-safety questions. It suggests that toxic pollution in Nigeria is not just a local problem — it has global ramifications, potentially affecting the safety of products made with recycled lead abroad.

Conclusion — a national wake-up call

The Senate’s action on December 4, 2025 marks a critical turning point. The resolutions passed are ambitious and wide-ranging — but for many residents of Ogijo, they come long overdue. The tragedy there must not be allowed to fade into forgotten headlines.

If properly implemented, the demand for a dedicated national lead-poisoning response office, widespread environmental cleanup, medical intervention, regulatory enforcement and monitoring could serve as a blueprint for protecting vulnerable communities across Nigeria.

The call is urgent: for the government to act swiftly and forcefully; for civil society, media, and ordinary citizens to remain vigilant; and for Nigeria to commit — in policy and practice — to ensuring that no community becomes a dumping ground for toxic profit.

Exit mobile version