Tag: Federal Road Safety Commission

  • Firm donates six vans to Anambra police, FRSC

    Firm donates six vans to Anambra police, FRSC

    The Anambra State police command and the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) in the state have taken delivery of six patrol vans donated to them by Anheuser-Bush InBev (AB-INBEV).

    The keys to the L-200 Mitsubishi vehicles were handed over to the state police commissioner, Mr. Garba Baba Umar and the state sector commander of the FRSC, Mr. Sunday Ajayi by the group’s managing director in Nigeria and Ghana, Mr. Andries du Plessis.

    The pick-up patrol vehicles, according to AB-InBev, are powered by Mitsubishi’s 4N15 turbocharged and intercooled diesel engines. Also, The Nation gathered that the vehicles detect moisture on the windscreen and activate the wipers automatically.

    Plessis noted that the donation of vehicles was in keeping with AB InBev’s commitment to creating a better world.

    The Legal and Corporate Affairs Director for AB InBev, Nigeria and Ghana, Otunba Michael Daramola said that a responsible organisation will always strive to create a better world in line with its corporate belief.

    He said that their better world policy was hinged on a growing, cleaner and healthier world.

    He said, “This principle has guided us as a company in deciding how to be an active participant in our immediate community, as this policy has seen us meaningfully engage the young people so they would grow and stay out of crime, while growing the economy.”

    Speaking with The Nation, the FRSC sector commander, Mr. Sunday Ajayi, said the donation would help his command in carrying out their duties such as preventing and minimising accidents on the highways.

    Umar, while receiving the vehicles, commended AB InBev for its kind gesture, recognising that the policing community is important and needs help. He said that the command would maintain its collaborative efforts with corporate bodies, government, and citizens just like the company had displayed, as he put it.

    Umar further said that the vehicles would go a long way in ensuring that the communities were safe, especially as Anambra governorship election approaches.

    He lamented that funding had always been a major setback to the police, while enjoining the private sector to always partner with the government so as to have a safe community.

  • Road safety week: FRSC intensifies campaign on speed management

    Road safety week: FRSC intensifies campaign on speed management

    The Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) in Gombe State said it intensified campaign on the need for motorists to manage speed while driving.

    The FRSC Sector Commander in the state, David Mendie, made this known in Gombe on Sunday during a thanksgiving service at St. James Catholic Church, Gombe to mark the UN 4th Global Road Safety Week.

    The UN Global Road Safety Week which started on Sunday has “Managing the speed” as its theme.

    Medie, therefore, said: “Research has shown that if an average speed is cut by five per cent, there is the tendency for reduction of fatality by 80 per cent whenever road crash occurs.”

    The commander added that the command embarked on a motorcade rally, went to parks and organised talks with commercial motorists on how to control speed by installing speed limiting device in their vehicles.

    He said the command had also sensitised people at the Mosque on Friday on the need to reduce speed while driving.

    Rev. Fr John Keant of St. James Catholic Church Gombe said drinking alcohol also contribute to road accidents.

    He, therefore, advised the public to desist from acts capable of destroying their lives.

  • Adamawa inaugurates task force on environmental problems

    Adamawa Government on Thursday, inaugurated a special task force to tackle environmental problems confronting residents of Yola, the state capital.

    Dr Umar Bindir, Secretary to the State Government (SSG), who inaugurated the committee in Yola, urged committee members to stop illegal hawking and trading within the area.

    Bindir also advised the committee to remove all the temporary structures along major roads that were not in line with the township development master plan.

    He also mandated the committee members to maintain and sustain clearing of drains as well as to control haphazard packing of vehicles along major roads.

    Bindir, who directed members to submit their report within three months for implementation, enjoined, advised them to be fair to all citizens in the discharge of their assignment.

    Response, Alhaji Abdurrahman Jimeta, Chairman of the committee, promised that the committee would carry out its duty without fear or favour.

    Jimeta, who is the Chief of Staff to the governor, said that the committee would also make the environment sector another source of Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) for the state government.

    He further said that the sector would be made to create jobs for the youth as well as to create wealth for the residents.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), reports that members of the committee were drawn from the Police Command the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC).

    Others are Vehicle Inspection Office (VIO), Office of the Attorney-General, Ministry of Justice, Ministry of Land and Survey, Ministry of Information and Strategy, Ministry of Commerce and Industries among others.

     

  • Over speeding caused Ocholi’s death – FRSC

    Over speeding caused Ocholi’s death – FRSC

    The death of the late Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Barr. James Ocholi has been majorly attributed to over speeding.

    Ocholi died alongside his wife and son on Sunday in an auto crash on Kaduna-Abuja road.

    The verdict was given by the Corps Marshal of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), Boboye Oyeyemi while presenting the accident’s Road Traffic Crash Investigation Interim Report to the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting presided by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He also said that the investigation revealed that the impact of the accident was more on Ocholi and his family members who were seated at the rear seats because they were not using seat belts.

    According to him, the driver of the vehicle was unlicensed

    Six ministers from the geopolitical zones on Wednesday paid tribute to the late Ocholi.

    All cabinet members will also visit Ocholi’s family immediately after FEC meeting.

    The Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Babachir David Lawal gave the tentative burial arrangement for 16th to 18th of March, 2015.

  • Scores feared dead in Benin/Onitsha road crash

    Scores feared dead in Benin/Onitsha road crash

    Several persons were feared dead in a ghastly motor accident that occurred around the Asaba Airport, Asaba, Delta state on the busy Benin/Onitsha highway on Friday morning.

    Eyewitness account said the accident occurred around 10:40am and it involved a trailer and two vehicles – a fully loaded 16-seater bus and taxi painted in the blue/white color of commercial vehicles in Delta state.

    Although the death toll was unknown at the time of this report, an eyewitness, Ignatious Ruke Edjeren in a post said, “The death toll is expected to be high.”

    It was gathered that despite the fact that the accident occurred close to the Asaba Airport rescue effort did commence for at least one hour afterwards.

    Edjeren said, “As at 11.15 am, no fire service or road safety officials have reached the scene. Vehicular movements on the busy expressway have come to a halt.”

    Effort to get detail of the accident at the Federal Road Safety Corp Asaba was abortive.

    The zone’s public relations officer who was contacted on telephone advised our reporter to go and get details from the scene.

  • 20 killed in Yobe autocrash

    The Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) in Yobe has said that 20 persons died in a road accident that occurred seven kilometres from Potiskum on the Kano-Maiduguri highway on Monday.

    The FRSC Sector Commander in Yobe, Alhaji Shehu Umar, confirmed the development in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Potiskum.

    He explained that the accident occurred at about 6 p.m. when a bus rammed into a truck and killed all the 20 occupants in the bus.

    “You know due to the security challenge in Potiskum, we were forced to suspend operations in the area and we could not offer rescue services,” he said.

    The sector commander said that the accident could have been caused by over-speeding.

    He, however, observed that “over-speeding and reckless driving” had been responsible for many accidents on the road.

    NAN learnt that the driver of the18-seater bus coming from Kano was speeding to beat the 6 p.m. curfew in Potiskum, due to the current security crisis in the area.

    Sources said that in the process, the bus rammed into a truck belonging to a construction company, killing all the passengers and the driver.

    NAN also learnt that the suspension of operations by the FRSC in Yobe had left victims of road accidents at the mercy of good Samaritans.(

  • Of deathways, highways and Onolememen’s N652bn

    Of deathways, highways and Onolememen’s N652bn

    HEADLINE: Four Igbinedion Varsity lecturers die in car crash. If you think the headline is tears-evoking, what about the story. It says that the Audi 80 car bearing the four victims plunged into Ovia River along the Lagos –Ore-Benin Express road. According to eye witness, the driver of the Audi car was trying to avoid a truck whose driver took the wrong lane when the accident occurred. Though the report did not say so, regular users of the Lagos-Benin highway (deathway, more like it) know that commuters often have to resort to driving against traffic to avoid the numerous failed portions of the road.
    The horrific plunge of four university teachers on Wednesday, September 5, 2012 is just half of an infernal, never-ending tale. The accident happened at about 3.30 pm on that day and according to the Federal Road Safety Commission’s (FRSC) report, local divers were only able to find the car in the river at about 7.00 pm. Rescue efforts started the following day at about 8.00am and nearly 24 hours after the accident occurred, which was at about 12 noon, local divers were able to retrieve only two of the four bodies. It is not certain whether the other two bodies were ever salvaged.
    There is more to this gruesome tale of a nation in the throes of death. The photographs from the scene of the crash will surely make you stop and shed a tear for our dear mother land. You see half-clad youths in wooden canoe on the river tugging at the wreckage and another group of men including FRSC officials and perhaps, passersby on the bridge straining to pull the wrecked car out of the river with ropes and raw chimp strength. The photographs and the actions looked as ancient as shots from the black and white movies of the 1940s.
    Lastly, the story says that an officer of the fire service who pleaded anonymity, said that the (Ovia River)  Bridge is in a “very bad state.”  And last November, a Zonal Commander of the FRSC had called for the repair of the Ovia River Bridge. According to him, “the Bridge had claimed many lives in less than three months due to accidents, many of which are avoidable.”
    We want to wager that no day passes on the Lagos – Benin deathway without the blood of hapless Nigerians being spilled, a veritable libation to the gods of Nigeria’s corrupt leaders. Just last Saturday, three days after the Ovia bridge carnage, another crash occurred along this road, this time, near Sagamu and 12 commuters reportedly perished on the spot. Apart from the Lagos –Benin highway, most other roads across the country like the Lagos-Ibadan, Abuja-Suleja, Owerri-Aba-Port Harcourt, Oyo- Ilorin, Akwanga-Lafia and Enugu-Onitsha highways, to name a few, are highly accident-prone because they are in various states of dereliction.
    Ironically, the same day (Wednesday, September 5,) the four university dons plunged to their ghastly end, the Federal Executive Council (FEC) was signing off on an approval for the sum of N652 billion for the repair of the phase three of the Lagos- Benin deathway. That is a huge sum; more than the entire budget of some African countries. The repairs job, under Mr. Mike Onolememen’s Ministry of Works, will be handled by Messrs RCC Nigeria Limited and it has three years to complete it. But one can almost hear Nigerians sneering at this news convinced that the road will never be done. And if done, they would wager; it would never be completed so that at the end of 2015 when we ought to have a near-perfect Lagos-Benin highway, we will remain where we are today, daily evacuating the carcasses of Nigerians from this monstrous road.
    Nigerians are justified in being cynical about Onolememen’s capacity to deliver on this job. They point to his godfather, Chief Tony Anenih, who had a similar opportunity to fix the road when he held a similar position during President Olusegun Obasanjo’s time but he left the highway worse than he met it. Nobody asked questions and no accounts were given. Further, Messrs RCC does not have a great tradition of timely delivery of jobs or the best of quality. At the end of the day, we are ‘comfortably’ ensconced in the cusp of powers that do not stickle for country or the people.
    Lastly, the country is also stuck with an FRSC that is today, neither a bat nor a rat; a body that has been savaged by the system and is merely going through the motion, merely faking at its duties of accident prevention. Like every other MDA, it probably never gets it revenue allocation and whatever it gets, gets mired in the system. It even lacks the capacity to capture all the accidents on our roads; and when commuters careen off the road into the deeps, they are often sentenced to eternal damnation. And ‘life’ goes on, shall we say? And where on earth is the Federal Road Maintenance Agency, FERMA in the face of vanishing highways across the country. FERMA is toady, a mere bureaucracy that has become as derelict as the federal roads it was set up to fix. It has grown into a problem.
    Offshore convictions: what will Adoke do now?
    Why do I have this tinge of sympathy for Mohammed Adoke, Nigeria’s Attorney-General and Minister for Justice? One ought to feel only contempt and disgust for our number one law officer who is seemingly getting lost in his own maze of judicial infamy. Look at the sorry situations:  the Americans convicted their citizens who bribed some Nigerian money mongrels to win NLNG contracts in Nigeria between 1995 and 2004; the French have slammed the companies and officials who bribed Nigerians in the 2003 national identity cards contract scam while the Germans have punished Siemens for its role in a bribery scandal in Nigeria.
    Not one person or company has been prosecuted, not to mention conviction in Nigeria where the criminal acts were perpetrated. Yet our Attorney-General sits on all these sordid, stinking files, unperturbed, unmoved and perhaps dishing out national honours to some of these criminals and damagers of our national honour. Our leaders of today are so, so pathetic in their inability to muster any sense of shame. What a pity.
    LAST MUG: Again, national honours to all comers: after the ruckus that trailed last year’s national honours award and President Jonathan’s promise to improve the process, this year’s list released early in the week shows that nothing has changed. The award has remained a gift for a few and an expensive purchase for many Nigeria’s high and mighty who seek an icing on their mouldy cake. In other countries, it is not enough to be a ranking politician, governor, judge, academic or businessman for everyman can be promoted to a high rank, you must exhibit some acute distinction in your field to qualify for national honours.
    Not so in Nigeria. So we end up honouring hundreds of people who the people know are without any honour or character and the country continues to reek of the stench of odium, criminality and corruption. We say it does not matter but it will matter someday because it all goes around and comes around.