Kenyan activist defies harassment to bring anti-pollution case to courts
Eight years after her baby was lead-poisoned
through breast milk, Kenya’s most prominent anti-pollution campaigner is set to
finally get her day in court in a case that the UN hopes will prove a landmark
for environmental defenders across Africa.
Phyllis Omido has been
threatened by thugs, arrested by police and forced into hiding for organising
opposition to a lead-smelting factory in Mombasa, which allegedly poisoned residents
in the neighbouring shantytown of Owino Uhuru. But the NGO she
founded, the Centre for Justice, Governance, and Environmental Action, has
already forced the closure of the plant and is now pushing the courts to secure
compensation for the victims and a clean-up of the community.
They have gathered
thousands of local residents in a class action against the government and two
companies – Metal Refinery EPZ Ltd and Penguin Paper and Book Company (no
connection with the global publishing company) for 1.6bn Kenyan shillings
(£11.5m) compensation and a clean-up of contaminated land. Two years after the
suit was launched, the plaintiffs will be called as witness for the first time
on 19 March in the environment and land court… read more: