Oluwasegun Benson, the
Chief Executive Officer of the company, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
on Sunday in Lagos that the bounty would help to de-rat the state.
In a bid to avert
incidences of Lassa Fever and other vector-borne diseases in Lagos State, an
NGO, Phosguard Fumigant Ltd, in partnership with the state government, has
introduced a bounty, ‘kill rats, make money’.
Under the project, rodents
multiplying ubiquitously across the state are to be exterminated from
residential places and markets using hi-tech chemicals and equipment that will
make their decomposing bodies non-infectious.
Vector-borne diseases are
infections transmitted by the bite of infected arthropod species, such as rats,
mosquitoes, ticks, triatomine bugs, sandflies and blackflies.
The World Health
Organisation says vector-borne diseases account for more than 17 per cent of
all infectious diseases, causing more than 1 million deaths annually.
“As part of efforts to
de-rat the state and prevent epidemic from Lassa Fever and other diseases, a
bounty has been placed on rats in the state.
“We will buy off at least
20 rats for a yet-to-be determined amount; in Lagos now it is operation kill
rats and make money.
“A rat has 28 days
gestation period and in the past years, there has not been any solid structure
on ground to curb them from infecting humans with diseases.
“We are already approaching
an epidemic level which can lead to a pandemic level with Lassa Fever and we
must be proactive and launch a more coordinated approach to control them.
“It is war against rodents
and pests in Lagos State,’’ he said.
According to him, the
company is also collaborating with the Lagos State Waste Management Authority
(LAWMA) to either incinerate or bury the rats.
“Incineration is no longer
in practice because of world climate control, however, we can incinerate one
ton of waste at a time or bury.
“We bury with chemicals to
ensure that the water from the dead rats does not sip into ground water that
people drink.
“Everything is going to be
water-tight as we are not just going to kill the rats, we are going to collect
them using our trained and well-kitted personnel,” Mr. Benson said.
Describing rats as
destructive and hazardous to nature, the company’s CEO added: “We cannot
completely eradicate rodents, but we can control it to a minimal and tolerable
level.
“Although, the decomposing
rats can also be important to the ecosystem but not in urban areas, they are
destructive nature.
“Rats had caused fire in
offices and homes by eating electricity cables’’.
Mr. Benson said the project
which would be launched in October would be the first of its kind in the
country.
He noted that with the
cosmopolitan nature of Lagos, if measures were not put in place to exterminate
rats, it might be difficult to control an outbreak of epidemics.
He commended Governor
Akinwunmi Ambode for approving the Vector Control Programme which would start
with the markets and supporting it with a Toyota Hillux van.
He, however, expressed the
hope that in two or three years there would be a massive reduction in the
demography of rats in the state.
On employment generation,
Mr. Benson said the project had the capacity to create about 200 or 300 jobs,
particularly for youths.
NAN reports that the Lagos
State Government had in the wake of outbreak of Lassa Fever in the country
early in the year, made efforts to curb the spread by killing rats.
More than 130 people were
then suspected to have died from the disease, according to statistics from the
National Centre for Disease Control.
The Lagos State Government
on January 22, confirmed the death of one of the three cases of Lassa Fever.
The Commissioner for
Health, Jide Idris, said then that the state had recorded 14 suspected cases of
Lassa Fever as at January 21.
The government then started
de-rating of the state, an exercise in which its environmental officers killed
over 4,400 rats in six of the markets in Lagos metropolis.
The exercise was conducted
at Onigongbo, Oshodi, Oke-Odo, Ikotun Idanwo, Ojuwoye and Mile 12 Markets.
The kill rats, make more
money in Lagos project, could strengthen the government’s effort to de-rat and
save the state of Lassa Fever and other vector-borne diseases.
(NAN)
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