After months of pressure, Hon. Betty Maina, Cabinet Secretary, Ministry of Industrialisation, Trade and Enterprise Development finally met with Greenpeace Africa (https://www.Greenpeace.org/africa/en/) to receive the 20,000-strong petition calling for her to take a stand against advocacy from lobbyists from the American Chemistry Council to make Africa a dumping site.
“We are here to represent the voices of more than 20,000 people (https://bit.ly/3nbLuo0) who are concerned about the future of our country and continent at large. We want to send a clear message that we will not allow any lobbyists or the plastic industry to derail us from the progress we have made in the continent. Kenya cannot be coerced into lowering its environmental standards by corporations who put profits before people and the environment,” said Fredrick Njehu, Greenpeace Africa Senior Political Advisor.
Many voices have come together to place this injustice on the agenda. Recently 62 lawmakers from the U.S. Senate and U.S. House of Representatives urged President Trump to oppose the export of more plastic waste to Kenya (https://bit.ly/38vI6A6) and support Kenya’s actions to curb the production of wasteful single-use products.
A recent opinion piece (https://bit.ly/2UauQIK) by the U.S. Ambassador to Kenya, Kyle McCarter, gives a clear indication that the U.S. is willing to proceed with the Free Trade Agreement with Kenya, respecting its environmental restrictions.
“Kenya’s government must conduct an environmental, social and human impact assessment of this trade agreement to inform its position. Such analytical work will enable the government to include provisions which align with the sustainable development objectives in order to improve the livelihoods of its people. With the ban on the use and manufacture of single-use plastic carrier bags and the recent ban on plastic in protected areas, Kenya has made significant progress to reduce plastic pollution. CS Maina should not undo the progress made this far,” continued Njehu.
A group of young climate activists from Kenya formed a coalition during the recent global climate strikes, to try and hand over a petition by one of them (https://bit.ly/2ImWfF7) and call on CS Betty Maina not to allow Africa to become a dumping site for the US.
The proponents of single-use plastics are pushing for more plastic production and exportation into Africa, which could undermine progress made by countries to ban single-use plastic products and combat pollution. The plastics and petrochemical industry plans to use the U.S-FTA negotiations to push for investments in plastics products, market access for recycled plastics in Africa and importation of plastics waste. Greenpeace Africa and its supporters are urging the Ministry of Trade to say no to this deal.
CS Betty Maina confirmed receipt of the petition on behalf of the Ministry of Industrialisation, Trade and Enterprise Development.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Greenpeace.
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Hellen Dena
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