A Nigerian man has been sentenced to three years in prison for hoarding human faeces in his Lagos apartment, a case that has drawn attention to the country's sanitation crisis. The court cited the United Kingdom's Environmental Protection Act 1990 as a model for tackling such public health hazards, marking a rare instance of cross-jurisdictional legal precedent in waste management.
The defendant, identified as 42-year-old Emmanuel Okafor, was arrested last month after neighbours complained of a noxious stench emanating from his flat in the Surulere district. Upon entry, authorities discovered over 200 plastic bags filled with faeces, some dating back several years. The waste had attracted vermin and posed significant risks of cholera and typhoid outbreaks, according to Health Ministry officials.
Prosecutors argued that Okafor's actions violated Nigeria's Environmental Health Act of 2005, which mirrors the UK's legislation in establishing a duty of care for waste disposal. Justice Adebayo Ogunlesi, presiding over the case, stated that "the defendant's conduct represents a deliberate disregard for public health, akin to the wilful neglect observed in similar cases under English law." He referenced the UK's Environment Agency v. Craddock (2018), where a hoarder was jailed for creating a public health nuisance.
Nigeria faces a severe waste management crisis, with only 30% of urban solid waste collected and even less treated. The country's population of 220 million produces an estimated 32 million tonnes of waste annually, but infrastructure lags behind. The case has sparked debate about the need for stricter enforcement of existing laws. Dr. Amina Bello, a public health researcher at the University of Lagos, told Reuters that "this sentence is a step forward, but it highlights systemic failures. We lack the capacity to monitor and intervene before such situations become extreme."
Okafor's defence argued that he suffered from untreated obsessive-compulsive disorder, which drove his hoarding behaviour. However, the court found him fit to stand trial. The case has parallels with UK hoarding incidents, where mental health assessments often inform sentencing. Birmingham's Hoarding Intervention Service, for example, works with councils to divert offenders into treatment programmes.
The verdict has divided opinion in Nigeria. Some applaud the tough stance, while others question the applicability of British standards in a country with different socioeconomic realities. Professor Chidi Nwachukwu, an environmental law expert at the University of Ibadan, cautioned against "legal colonialism" but acknowledged that "the UK's Environmental Protection Act provides a robust framework. What we need is the political will and resources to implement it effectively."
In a broader context, the case underscores the challenges of urbanisation in developing nations. Lagos, Africa's largest city with 21 million residents, produces 12,000 tonnes of waste daily. Only 40% is collected. The rest is burned or dumped, leading to air and water pollution. The UK's approach to waste management, while not perfect, has reduced landfill reliance from 80% in 1990 to less than 10% today. However, per capita waste production has increased, highlighting the complexities of behavioural change.
For the biosphere, such cases are microcosms of a larger crisis: the global waste trade, plastic pollution, and the carbon footprint of decomposition. Methane from rotting waste accounts for 3% of global greenhouse gas emissions, and Nigeria alone contributes 7% of the world's open waste burning. The sentence against Okafor, while seemingly minor, points to a growing recognition that environmental health laws must be enforced with zero tolerance. As our climate warms, sanitation and waste management become frontline defences against disease and ecological collapse.
The full impact of this case will take years to assess. But for now, it stands as a stark reminder that the physical reality of our world demands action, not just aspiration. Whether Nigeria can translate this judicial moment into systemic change remains to be seen, but the example of UK law offers a template. The planet watches, and the clock ticks.








