För sin banbrytande kamp för att säkra människors land- och miljörättigheter, samtidigt som hon fört miljörätten framåt.
Phyllis Omido är en kenyansk miljöaktivist som leder kampen för rättvisa och bättre hälsa i Owino Uhuru, ett samhälle som utsatts för blyförgiftning sedan ett smältverk för batterier etablerades där 2007. Omidos påverkansarbete och juridiska kamp i kenyanska domstolar har resulterat i prejudikat som bekräftar människors rätt till en ren och hälsosam miljö, samt statens ansvar att säkra den rätten.
Omido har kallats för “Östafrikas Erin Brockovich”. Till en början jobbade hon på det smältverk som förgiftade såväl henne och hennes son, liksom tusentals andra invånare i Owino Uhuru. När fabrikens ägare och statliga tjänstemän vägrade att agera på den miljörapport som Omido sammanställde mobiliserade hon hela samhället till protest. Efter en demonstration 2012 attackerades Omido i sitt hem av två män. Hon blev också gripen och utan grund anklagad för uppvigling och terrorism.
Tack vare Omidos aktivism har 17 smältverk som förgiftat närmiljön stängts runt om i Kenya. Hon har också varit rådgivare till FN, vilket lett till en resolution kring återvinning av blybatterier i Afrika. Omido har också etablerat ett nätverk av 120 miljöförsvarare i Kenya, Uganda och Tanzania för att sprida kunskap om miljörättvisa och ge kraft till andra att skydda sina samhällen.
Biography in English
Phyllis Omido is a Kenyan environmental activist protecting the environmental and socioeconomic rights of marginalised communities residing near extractive industries and toxic sites.
Her fearless pursuit of justice has led to the closure of 17 toxic sites, catalysed a movement of land and environmental defenders across East Africa and influenced the UN to pass a resolution on lead-acid battery recycling.
Lead smelting's toxic toll on African communities
Lead-acid batteries are used in everything from cars and motorcycles to backup storage for mobile phone towers and solar panels. Their relative affordability compared to other battery technologies makes them popular worldwide. This, coupled with their short lifecycle, has resulted in over 1.2 million tonnes of used and end-of-life lead-acid batteries accumulating across Africa annually.
Smelting plants have opened throughout Kenya to extract the used batteries’ remaining lead for resale. These plants are highly toxic to the people working there and the surrounding environment. Not only do they emit lead-laden fumes, but their untreated wastewater can also enter local communities’ water supply. Long-term exposure to even small amounts of lead causes brain and kidney damage, hearing impairment, reproductive complications and learning disabilities in children.
When one such plant began operations in Owino Uhuru in 2007, residents were told it was a sweets factory. However, it wasn’t long before people fell ill, including Omido, who was hired in 2009 to manage the plant’s human resources and compliance. The same year, Omido conducted an environmental impact report, which revealed that the plant's proximity to the local community posed a risk of lead poisoning.
The plant owners and government officials ignored Omido’s repeated calls to relocate the factory. In response, Omido founded the organisation Center for Justice Governance and Environmental Action (CJGEA) to mobilise the Owino Uhuru community to demand remediation and the plant’s closure.
The Owino Uhuru class action lawsuit
In 2014, after years of advocacy by Omido and CJGEA, the Owino Uhuru plant ceased operations. But the damage to people’s health and the local environment remained. When the government and the plant refused to remediate the damage, Omido got creative. She organised a conference to train local media outlets on human rights and environmental issues to bolster accurate reporting on the Owino Uhuru community. This initiative led to a partnership with KTN, one of Kenya's largest news channels, resulting in an exclusive documentary that included conducting 100 health tests among community members.
The documentary prompted parliamentary discussions and the establishment of a task force by the National Environment Management Authority, which, to Omido’s surprise, found more severe pollution levels than CJGEA’s tests. Despite these findings, the government failed to hold the smelting plant accountable. Frustrated by the government’s inaction, Omido took the case to court, suing state and non-state agencies on behalf of nearly all 3,000 community members.
A 2023 court ruling in the ongoing appeal has established a groundbreaking precedent, overcoming previous legal delays. It holds both state and private entities accountable for harming the Owino Uhuru community. This landmark decision underscores the state's duty to safeguard the environment and its citizens. Omido’s work on the case continues today and focuses on planning remediation efforts to ensure the eventual compensation and remediation benefit the community.
The Owino Uhuru case has become a globally recognised battle for environmental and community rights. Omido’s success in the case led her to consult UN experts on Sustainable Development Goal 3: Good Health and Well-being, offering a grassroots perspective on exposure to hazardous chemicals and pollution. In 2017, the case informed the successful passage of a UN resolution on used lead-acid battery recycling in Africa.
Empowering East African communities and land and environmental defenders
Omido’s efforts on behalf of the Owino Uhuru community have transformed ordinary citizens' confidence in the law, empowering them to defend their rights in the face of powerful interests. Her activism often centres on educating communities on their right to information.
Omido also disseminates her environmental rights knowledge through the Environmental Rights Organisation (EROG), an LED network with representation in every county in Kenya that has recently expanded to Uganda and Tanzania. Omido founded the network in 2017 to foster knowledge-sharing among grassroots activists. Under Omido and CJGEA’s guidance, EROG provides critical support to 120 LEDs, building their capacity to respond to emergencies and developing security protocols for those facing threats to their life. Omido’s vision is for the network to operate independently, which took its first step to becoming a reality in 2022 with EROG's inaugural election.
Alongside CJGEA, Omido’s latest focus is Kenya's plan to establish nuclear power plants along its coast. The government’s limited knowledge and resources for such a complex operation pose significant threats to public health and the environment of coastal communities. As an alternative, Omido advocates for a shift towards sustainable infrastructure and renewable energy and is preparing communities to defend their socioeconomic and environmental rights. Omido recently submitted a public petition opposing the power plant to the Senate, supported by more than 1,000 signatures from the Kilifi community. The petition is currently awaiting review.
Omido, known as “Mama Moshi” or the “Mother against Smoke” by the communities she engages with, is a beacon of hope in the battle for environmental justice. Over the past decade, she has fearlessly challenged forces prioritising development at the expense of human rights and local communities' health. A role model for an entire generation of activists, Omido has strengthened ordinary citizens’ knowledge of their rights and their ability to protect them.