尼日利亚采掘业的挖沙活动:影响、监管和补救

gochukwu Godspower Ehirim, Ufuoma Veronica Awhefeada, Andrew Ejovwo Abuza
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引用次数: 4

摘要

长期以来,在尼日利亚的许多地方都可以看到采掘活动。在相当长的一段时间里,沿着尼日尔河沿岸和尼日尔三角洲的小溪一直在进行手工采砂。然而,采砂企业引进挖沙机(吸沙泵),引起了人们对环境和依赖这种受影响环境的人们的极大关注。这些疏浚活动通常是在没有官僚纪律和完全无视法定治理的情况下进行的。由于根据1978年《土地使用法》(现为尼日利亚联邦法律《土地使用法》第L章第5章),尼日利亚缺乏社区土地所有权,这些疏浚活动的东道社区似乎束手无策,这种情况一直有增无减。挖沙不能被孤立在这个话语中,而是处于环境法的广阔范围内。挖沙活动一直受到恶劣的检控,引起个人和公众的不满,必须由法律制度加以遏制。受害者和受侵害的人能找到正义吗?本文旨在为尼日利亚疏沙活动的受害者提供司法和补救措施。对已确立的“不为罪不为罚”的法律原则进行了重新审视。它评估了法院或其他司法法庭必须同时存在的基本原则,以便有效地审理和确定因违反环境而引起的问题。因此,诉因、所在地、诉讼时效、诉前通知、司法审查和普通法救济等概念受到了重要关注。作者采用理论研究方法,并通过可适用的一手资料和第二手资料断言,在环境(民事)案件中附带传统举证责任的普通法补救办法已不能充分满足当前环境下的司法需要,特别是在挖沙领域。该文件最后建议,除其他事项外,在普通法中发展和认可新的行动负责人,以适应挖沙业新兴的工业技术,将该行业运营商的环境义务编纂成法律,采用“默示保证”原则,使违规者对社会承担更多责任,以及放宽立场原则,以保证受侵害的人更多地诉诸司法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sand Dredging Activities in the Extractive Industry in Nigeria: Impact, Regulation and Remedies
Extractive activities have for a long time been visible in many parts of Nigeria. Artisanal sand mining has been carried out along the coast of the River Niger and the creeks of the Niger Delta for a fairly long period of time. However, the introduction of sand dredging machines (suction pumps) in sand mining enterprise has birthed great concerns for the environment and persons whose livelihood depend on such impacted environment. These dredging activities are oftentimes carried out without bureaucratic discipline and in shear disregard of statutory governance. This has continued unabated as the host communities of these dredging activities appear helpless due to a lack of community ownership of land in Nigeria in line with the Land Use Act, 1978 (now Land Use Act Cap L 5 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria [LFN] 2004). Sand dredging cannot be isolated in this discourse but rather situate within the expansive scope of environmental law. The rascality with which sand dredging activities are persistently prosecuted has thrown up grievances by individuals and the public in general which must be contained by the legal system. Can the victims and aggrieved persons find justice? This paper aims to engage access to justice and remedies for victims of sand dredging activities in Nigeria. The settled legal principle of ubi jus ibi remedium is revisited. It evaluates the basic principles which must all co-exist for the courts of justice or other judicial tribunals to validly entertain and determine issues arising from environmental violations. Thus, concepts like cause of action, locus standi, the limitation of action, pre-action notice, judicial review and common law remedies are given critical attention. The writer adopts the doctrinal research methodology and by applicable primary and secondary sources asserts that the common law remedies with the attendant traditional burden of proof in environmental (civil) cases have not adequately answered to the needs of justice in the present milieu, particularly in the area of sand dredging. The paper concludes by suggesting, among other things, the development and recognition of new heads of action at common law to cater for emerging industrial technologies in sand dredging, the codification of environmental obligations of operators in the sector, the adoption of the doctrine of ‘implied warranties’ to make violators much more accountable to the society and the liberalisation of the doctrine of locus standi to guarantee greater access by aggrieved persons to justice.
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