Anambra governor, Prof. Chukwuma Soludo, has declared a state of emergency on the environment across the State over the indiscriminate obstruction of waterways and rampant sand mining practices currently plaguing the landscape.
The declaration signals a push towards environmental sustainability as the state’s foremost existential priority.
Addressing the Anambra State Traditional Rulers’ Council meeting, the governor mandated the immediate, state-wide desilting of all drainage systems and the cessation of indiscriminate sand mining activities.
He warned that these practices are actively accelerating the state’s vulnerability to flooding and gully erosion.
Soludo emphasised that Anambra is currently facing a dire environmental tipping point, noting that while the state possesses the second-smallest landmass in Nigeria, it is rapidly shrinking due to ecological disasters.
“Let me draw your attention to the emergency that we face: the environment, flooding, and gully erosion. It is Anambra’s number one existential threat,” Governor Soludo stated. “While Lagos is expanding into the ocean, Anambra is shrinking.”
“Whole communities are being swallowed, and we are battling it. If we devote the entire state budget for the next ten years, we will not be able to significantly scratch the surface of this threat,” he noted.
The governor expressed deep concern over the role of human activity in exacerbating these disasters, citing the common practice of channeling residential run-off water directly onto roads and the deliberate dumping of waste into drainage infrastructure.
“We blocked the drainages; there should be a state of emergency in desilting all the drainages. Even people who mine sand contribute to this, because as the sand is being removed, it creates an avenue for erosion. We have our duties to protect our environment.”
Shifting focus to the administrative landscape of the State, Soludo also addressed the implications of the recent Supreme Court judgment regarding autonomous communities. He announced a strategic pivot towards formalising the role of communities within the State’s administrative hierarchy.
“The new Supreme Court judgment on autonomous communities in Anambra State settles the matter. Our community administration law will have a schedule of communities that make up a local government, and it will address most of the issues regarding the tensions currently surrounding town unions,” the governor explained.
He clarified that while town unions have historically served as the de facto governing bodies for communities, their nature as voluntary associations has often led to fragmented governance.
“Currently, our communities are being governed by town unions, but ideally, they are voluntary associations—that is why you have three separate town unions in some places. When we are done, communities will become the fourth tier of government,” he declared.
Reflecting on his administration’s trajectory, Governor Soludo drew a sharp contrast between the challenges at the time of his inauguration and the current state of progress. He reassured the traditional monarchs that the executive branch remains steadfast in its pursuit of development.
“In the first term, I just stood in front of my office and took the oath because we were in a state of emergency then, different from now. I want to assure you that we will keep working to deliver on the mandate. Let’s continue to push for the new Anambra. New Anambra is on the rise; we are on course,” he stated.
As the state government moves to implement these urgent environmental directives and governance reforms, the administration called on traditional rulers to mobilise their subjects to ensure that drainage channels remain clear and environmental regulations are strictly observed across all communities.
Also present at the meeting were the Chief of Staff to the Governor, Dr Ben Nwankwo; Commissioner for Local Government, Chieftaincy and Community Affairs, Barr. Vin Ezeaka; State Chairman of the Anambra Traditional Rulers’ Council, Igwe Chidubem Iweka; among others.