Health specialist , Prof. Peter Katchy has called on Anambra state Government, religious bodies and corporate organisations to minimize the rate of street begging in major cities across the state.
Katchy said the rate at which beggars migrate into the state had become alarming, especially those with serious health challenges including cancer and glaucoma.
The professor of Alternative Medicine, made the call in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Onitsha.
According to him, many of these beggars, who roam around the streets of Onitsha, Awka, Nnewi and Ekwulobia are homeless which suggests they are not from the state.
“Go to Upper Iweka in Onitsha and Unizik junction in Awka, you will see them. In fact, check them in major motor parks across the state; many of them are living without shelter.
“They defecate and take their baths in the open and sometimes on pedestrian walk ways and on federal high ways; these are the situations we have found ourselves today,” he said.
The professor noted that beggars had increased in number due to the kind and compassionate nature of residents of the state, who were always willing to render help.
Katchy, who is also the Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Red Cross Society in the state, blamed the spate of begging on the failure of various state governments to provide basic needs of citizens.
“I am not saying that people should stop being compassionate because that is a religious injunction but I am against these persons with disabilities, high levels of cancer, leukemia and other diseases, who roam the streets to beg.
“It is the responsibility of government to take care of the economic and social wellbeing of its citizens; where government fails to do this, it has ceased to be a government.
“We know that state governments are admitting some of them for special care, but many of them are still on the streets frustrated, unemployed and depressed.
“Some of them have gone ill due to drug abuse and neglect,” he said.
He urged state governments, religious bodies and corporate organisations to look into the menace by donating homes for the motherless babies, mentally sick, old people, destitute and disadvantaged persons.
“These people need rehabilitation and treatments; they do not deserve to be abandoned to their fate,” he stressed.
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