Monday, 17 August 2015

FESTAC sewage systems gush out dangerous wastes’


A resident of FESTAC Town, Mr. Oghene Emma-Egoh, has lamented the poor state of the area, calling it “a disaster waiting to happen.”
Emma-Egoh, a member of the House of Representatives, on Sunday urged the Federal Government to move in and save “FESTAC and its satellite towns” in Lagos State.
The lawmaker warned of possible epidemics in FESTAC owing to the near total collapse of infrastructure, particularly the sewage system.
FESTAC Town is a federal housing estate on the Lagos-Badagry Expressway in Lagos,
FESTAC means Festival of Arts and Culture, and the estate was constructed to house the participants of the festival in 1977. It was subsequently allocated and sold to Nigerians after the festival.
But Emma-Egoh, who represents Amuwo Odofin Federal Constituency, complained that in spite of collecting all manner of rates and levies from residents in the area, both the federal and the Lagos governments cared less about the decay in the town and its surroundings.
He recalled that he had earlier moved a motion on the problem on the floor of the House on Wednesday, as part of the efforts to get the Federal Government to rescue FESTAC Town.
The House, in a resolution, had called on the Federal Government and its agency, the Federal Housing Authority of Nigeria, to begin the “immediate rehabilitation of FESTAC Town.”
Emma-Egoh said, “This estate has been built for over 40 years and as we speak, there are no functional infrastructure. Today, the Federal Government collects tenement rates from residents in FESTAC, while the Lagos State Government also collects land charges.
“There is no single firefighting vehicle in the place. If there is any fire incident in FESTAC, it will be a total disaster.
“So, given its importance as one of the oldest housing estates and satellite towns in Lagos, it is important to rehabilitate the area.”
He noted that the condition of roads in the estate had become deplorable, while residents no longer had access to potable water.
The lawmaker said, “The central sewage systems in the estate are no longer functional. They now gush out dangerous wastes into the open at uncontrollable rate and the drainages are no longer flowing and have become the habitat for giant mosquitoes.
“This situation can lead to the outbreak of an epidemic.”
Punch. 

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