Tag: Lagos-Abeokuta

  • Three injured in Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway crash

    Three injured in Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway crash

    The Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), Ogun Command, yesterday said that three persons sustained injuries in an accident involving two vehicles at the Toll Gate area of Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway.

    Sector Commander, Anthony Uga, yesterday told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the accident, which involved a truck and a container, occurred in the early hours of the day.

    He said that one of the vehicles coming from Lagos collided with the one coming from Abeokuta.

    The sector commander said that three persons sustained varying degrees of injuries from the crash.

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    “The victims had been taken to the General Hospital, Ota, for intensive treatment while our operatives had been deployed to ease the flow of traffic in the area,” he said.

    Uga attributed the crash to reckless driving and speeding, urging motorists to be cautious and patient to avoid compounding the problem for FRSC personnel and sister agencies in controlling traffic in the area.

  • ‘Address deplorable state of Lagos-Abeokuta expressway’

    ‘Address deplorable state of Lagos-Abeokuta expressway’

    The House of Representatives has urged the Federal Ministry of Works and Housing, in collaboration with relevant agencies and stakeholders, to allocate adequate resources, including funding and manpower, for the repair, reconstruction and comprehensive rehabilitation of the Lagos-Abeokuta expressway.

    The House urged that it be included in the 2024 budget estimates.

    It mandated the Committee on FERMA to carry out rehabilitation on the failed portion of the road.

    It also mandated the Committee on Legislative Compliance to ensure implementation.

    These resolutions followed the adoption of a motion titled, “Need to Address the Deplorable State of Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway from Abule Egba to Sango”, moved by Benjamin Adeyemi Olabinjo.

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    The House noted that the current condition of the Lagos-Abeokuta expressway poses severe safety hazards for road users, due to potholes, uneven surfaces and inadequate road markings, which have contributed to accidents and loss of lives.

    It also noted that the deplorable state of the Lagos-Abeokuta expressway from Abule Egba to Sango has become a death trap for motorists and commuters.

    The House said a swift repair is crucial to restore normalcy, enhance economic opportunities, and improve the quality of life for residents.

    The House was also concerned that the deplorable state of the road had resulted in severe traffic congestion, causing delays and disruptions in the movement of goods and people.

  • Exercise caution on Lagos-Abeokuta highway, FRSC urges motorists

    Mr. Clement Oladele, the Sector Commander of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) in Ogun on Monday urged motorists plying the Lagos-Abeokuta expressway to exercise caution.

    He spoke against the background of complaints by motorists on the slow pace of the rehabilitation work on the highway and the consequent traffic snarl.

    Oladele, who noted that the challenge on the road would end with its rehabilitation, said the command could only interface with the construction firm to complete the project on schedule.

    “With the ongoing rehabilitation, there is now hope that when the project is completed, the hiccups associated with using the corridor would soon fizzle out as soon as the project is delivered.

    “On our part, the FRSC will continue to interface with the construction firm to provide adequate signage that conforms to the relevant UN conventions which Nigeria recently acceded to for purpose of highway safety,” he said.

    Motorists plying the Lagos-Abeokuta expressway have expressed concern over the slow pace of work by the construction company handling the project.

    The motorists, in separate interviews with NAN, on Monday in Abeokuta particularly complained that the construction company was using dividers to block a major part of the Owode-Ijako end of the road, resulting in traffic snarl.

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    Abeeb Ahmed, a commercial driver, said the pace of work was slow and had caused motorists and residents untold hardship.

    “We usually spend hours on this particular axis of the road; for example, this morning, we have already spent almost 50 minutes on a stretch of a journey that is supposed to take between five to 10 minutes.

    “I urge the Federal Government to monitor the activities of the construction company continuously and also give them an ultimatum which it must not fail to meet,” he said.

    Another motorist, Femi George, said there was need for proper monitoring of the state of work done so far, adding that the current tempo was not encouraging.

    “I think the rain that fell over the weekend resulted in this morning’s heavy traffic;  however, I want to beg the construction company to develop another approach that will hasten the  job in order to reduce the sufferings  of commuters and motorists,” he said.

    Patrick Jones, a resident of Owode, said the Owode /Ijako axis of the expressway was becoming a nightmare to travelers using the route.

    “I spent over four hours from Onihale to Tipper garage about two weeks ago.

    “The pace at which Julius Berger is working on both sides of the road is slow,’’ he said.

    NAN reports that the Federal Executive Council had on April 12, 2018 approved the revised contract for the construction of the Lagos-Ota-Abeokuta Expressway to the tune of N56.70 billion.

    The project is being handled by Julius Berger Nigeria Plc.

  • FG offers two-month free ride on Lagos-Abeokuta train

    …Osinbajo flags of test run Wednesday

    The federal government is offering free train ride for commuters on the Lagos-Abeokuta section of the Lagos-Ibadan standard gauge rail for two months with effect from Wednesday.

    The free ride will be flagged off on that day by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Transportation Minister Rotimi Amaechi announced on Friday in Lagos.

    Amaechi who was on a routine inspection of the project expressed satisfaction at the standard of work done by the contractor, the China Civil Engineering and Construction Company (CCECC).

    He said two coaches would be deployed from Itakpe-Warri railway station to make four coaches which would run the free ride for two months.

    His words: “I am impressed. The Vice-President will ride the train on February 6. He is coming to flag off the passengers’ use of the first phase from Lagos to Abeokuta which would reduce travel time from 1 hour 30 minutes to 45 minutes.”

    The minister said that work was in progress on the various train stations within the numerous corridors.

    He said efforts were being made to expedite work between Agbado and Apapa axis of the project.

    ”The level of work would have been faster in Lagos but due to some challenges of right of way in the city,” he added.

    According to the minister, the rail project will further bring about economic development in the area and Nigeria when ready.

    The minister inspected, among others, the Bolade-Oshodi, Iju-Fagba, Ijoko rail tracks to assess the laying of rail tracks on the axis

    Mr Fidet Okhiria, Managing Director, Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC), had said that the track laying of the project was moving towards Lagos, adding that 1.5 kilometres tracks were laid everyday.

    ”They have done a lot in laying of tracks between Abeokuta, Itori, Papalanto, Kajola, Ijoko towards Lagos corridor.

    ”Within seven days the track laying will reach Iju towards Agege corridor of Lagos State.

    ”From here to Iju its 10 kilometres, and we are laying 1.5 kilometers on daily basis and by first week of February we will do a test run to Abeokuta from Lagos.

    ”All the formations have been put in place to expedite the tracks laying,” the NRC boss had said on Wednesday.

    Mr Jerry Oche, the NRC Lagos District Manager, said that the train, when completed, would be travelling by 150 kilometres per hour on the 156 kilometres Lagos – Ibadan trip in less than two hours.

    ”With the new standard gauge you can reside in Ibadan and be working in Lagos which is a very good development to people and for our economy,” he said.

  • Tension mounts as thugs attack Ogun Deputy Speaker’s Office

    … Destroy four buses, others

     

    Deputy Speaker of the Ogun State House of Assembly (OGHA), Hon. Kunle Oluomo, escaped unhurt on Tuesday morning when dozens of armed gang suspected to be political thugs, invaded his constituency office in Ifo, demanding his whereabouts.

    The suspected thugs who were furious for not seeing him after thoroughly ransacking the constituency office located near Ifo market along Lagos – Abeokuta road, vandalized the window panes of campaign office, items and four buses that convey school children to and fro schools within Ifo Local Local Government.

    The Nation gathered that Oluomo representing Ifo constituency 1 at OGHA, and who sighted the approaching hoodlums in good time and hurriedly hid himself, escaping them before they surged into the office ransacking and smashing items.

    As at 4:pm, tension still pervaded the volatile Ifo town because of the hoodlums even as heavy presence of armed Policemen and soldiers were sighted keeping vigil at the area to forestall a major breakdown of law and order.

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    The Nation called the state lawmaker on phone and he confirmed the attack on his office and four buses when the hoodlums could not locate where he hid, but disclosed that the Police has taken him to the Sango Divisional Police Headquarters along with the vandalized buses.

    The Police Public Relations Officer in Ogun State, Abimbola Oyeyemi, said he was not aware of the incident, promising to call back upon inquiry but never did as at 4:54 pm despite reminder calls placed to his mobile line.

  • Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway logjam: BRT to the rescue

    Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway logjam: BRT to the rescue

    Troubled residents and motorists on the Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway will heave a sigh of relief following the introduction of Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) by the Lagos State government on the route. But as the project progresses, motorists groan, report TAJUDEEN ADEBANJO and OLATUNDE ODEBIYI.

    Traffic wardens at different interchange points battle to ensure free vehicular movements; impatient commercial motorcyclists otherwise called Okada riders beat traffic light at every given opportunity; bus conductors call their destinations and some touts working for the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) chase commercial bus (Danfo) drivers picking passengers on the road instead of queuing in the garage.

    Welcome to Oshodi, the biggest terminal for commercial bus operators in the country hosting over two million passengers daily.

    The craze that traffic in this axis is will soon give way with the Akinwunmi Ambode-led administration’s Bus Rapid Transit (BRT). It will move between Abule-Egba and Oshodi. The passengers estimate on the corridor is about 230,000 per day, but it can go up to 300,000.

    BRT is a transport option, which relies on the use of dedicated ‘interference’ free segregated lanes to guarantee fast and reliable bus travel. It is a high performance public transport bus service which aims to combine bus lanes with high-quality bus stations, vehicles, amenities and branding to achieve the performance and quality of a metro system, with the flexibility, cost and simplicity of a bus system.

    The BRT buses run on physically segregated lanes and thus make them faster in a situation where there is traffic congestion. It is one of the major options available to the Lagos State government to tackle the huge public transport predicaments in the state.

    The regulator of the BRT scheme, the Lagos Metropolitan Transport Authority (LAMATA), has boasted that the heavily congested Oshodi-Iyana-Ipaja-Abule-Egba route would reduce by 40 per cent after the completion of the project.

    The road, the prototype erected at Iyana-Ipaja, shows that it would have two BRT lanes to run in the middle, starting from Abule-Egba towards Oshodi. The service lanes of the expressway are also to be repaired and made more motorable for the Danfo buses.

    A driver, Jide Oni, believed that it would have adverse effect on Danfo drivers’ business.

    But a passenger, who simply identified himself as Segun said, it would ease traffic gridlock on the road.

    “The way the construction was going, we might be left with just one lane. Imagine hundreds of buses packed on a single lane. The traffic might be worse than what government could think of,” Oni said.

    Segun doubted his conclusion, believing that government must have done her homework well before venturing into the project.

    The driver told our correspondents to look at the partition.

    “This is what I’m saying Oga journalist,” he said.

    After alighting at Iyana-Ipaja, the erected prototype for the project before the bridge showed two lanes for the commercial bus operators.

    After speaking with some Danfo drivers and passengers at Iyana-Ipaja, who lamented the logjam at Super Bus Stop near Abule-Egba, The Nation correspondents joined another bus to the place.

    There (Super Bus Stop), work has reached advance stage. Workers in LAMATA branding reflective jacket were working on drainage and demarcating concrete for the BRT lanes.

    Efforts to speak with the workers on site proved abortive. They mentioned one Julian as the only person allowed to speak with press. Julian was unavailable at every spot The Nation correspondents were directed to go and see him, trekking for over 30 minutes from Super Bus stop to Abule Egba Bridge and back to the bus stop.

    Some of the Danfo drivers lamented that big drainage dug at Super Bus Stop has made the place a no-go area.

    “We had to look for alternative route to get to our destinations. That of course added to the already hours wasted in the traffic. It’s also affecting our delivery,” Ola Akin, a Danfo driver said.

    Another Danfo driver, who did not mention his name, hailed the government for embarking on the project.

    A resident in the area, Oyewole Ogunbanjo, lamented that the construction work has increased traffic in the area.

    Ogunbanjo said: “Moving from Oshodi to Iyana-Ipaja is now tripled the number of hours we usually spend on the road side. The transport fare has also increased, because the traffic has made the drivers to increase the fare. The traffic is usually worse whenever it rains and it makes our journey tiring. I wish government can do something fast to ease the traffic in the area while the BRT lane construction is ongoing. There is nothing that we can do as residents to make the journey better for us, we just have to cope with it and I hope the construction would not take forever.”

    He noted that the government needs to think well on some of the decisions taken on road construction.

    “This Iyana-Ipaja road is small, the roads are not wide and they have come to construct BRT lane in the middle of the road. The space that would be left for other vehicles would be small. How would this gesture make transportation better in the area? If all motorists except the BRT have a narrow road to pass through, how would there not be traffic? I think the only option for government is to expand the roads. The expansion would also affect more people, because they would have to demolish some shops and houses on the road side which would make life inconvenient for others.”

    He said that not everybody would make use of the BRT.

    “Someone like me cannot queue for BRT, to and from my office in Oshodi every day. The long BRT queue is not what everyone can tolerate as it amounts to a waste of time. I can’t wait to enter BRT and I don’t think the construction of BRT lane would ease traffic in this area. The only thing that can ease traffic from Oshodi, through Iyana-Ipaja to Abule-Egba is train transport. If government can think of making train available along these routes, it would help to bring an end to traffic and life would be better for all,” he said.

    A passerby, Azeez Bamigbose, said the BRT lane construction is presently affecting the traffic on this road, saying, it has reduced the size of the road and vehicles have to manage the little size roads left.

    “We hope that the traffic on the roads would be reduced when the rods construction is completed,” he said.

    A National Union Road Transport (NURTW) worker, Adegboyega Adekunle, said when the road is completed, there would be no issue between the BRT and the yellow commercial buses.

    According to him, passengers would have more options on which vehicle they wish to board.

    “Usually BRT is cheaper than the yellow buses, but there can be long queue at the BRT bus stops; passengers would have to choose which pays them. The BRT would have their lane while the yellow commercial buses would also have their lane. Business would continue as usual in the area. Both buses would have their own passengers and none would affect the other.

    “The only fear is that government may have to expand the roads for the commercial yellow buses and other motorists, because the space left on the road, after the BRT lane is taken out would be small. Government may have to demolish some of the road side shops in order to expand the roads, else traffic would be built up on the express road,” he said.

    Another passerby in the area, Adewumi Bankole, described the initiative as good.

    She is, however, concerned on how the BRT lane would be constructed on the bridge that leads to Abule-Egba from Iyana-Ipaja.

    A roadside trader, who simply identified herself as ‘Iya Benedict’ pleaded with government not to chase them away from their selling point.

    “When the BRT lane is completed, there may be need to expand the expressway from the look of things. Government should please not make life uncomfortable for us. They should not stop us from our means of livelihood, but should do all its work considering all of us in mind,” she said.

    The Nation learnt that the work would entail an uninterrupted median BRT service, 11 pedestrian bridges, one bus depot and two bus terminals to be located at Iyana Ipaja and Abule-Egba.

    The BRT, according to LAMATA Managing Director Abiodun Dabiri, said: “The Oshodi-Abule Egba corridor is one of the busiest bus corridors in West Africa, with over 5,500 buses moving passengers per day. It is a critical link for millions of people living in Alimosho, Egbeda, Iyana-Ipaja, Ijaiye, up to Tollgate into Sango Ota in Ogun State.”

    He noted that the route was also strategic because Oshodi, with the proposed transport interchange project, was emerging the transport hub in Lagos.

    Acting Commissioner for Transport Prince Olarenwaju Elegushi said: “What we are doing along the Abule Egba axis is in line with the overall plan of the government to change the face of public transportation system in Lagos.”

    Mr Kolawole Ojelabi, LAMATA’s External Relations Specialist, told The Nation that would be completed in about 15 months.

    Reacting to people’s complaints on the traffic the construction is causing on the routes, Ojelabi said that cannot be avoided.

    “This is why we have the officials of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) along the routes and the contractor’s flags men to control the traffic,” he said.

    He appealed to motorists along the routes to drive with caution, obey traffic signs and avoid over speeding.

    In terms of the number of lanes that would be available on for other motorists, he said two lanes would be available to them.

    He admitted that the coming of BRT in the area would affect operators of Danfo buses because the state government Bus Reform Programme (BRP) is meant to take all the informal buses off the roads.

    He said: “We could have medium capacity buses that would be along the axis as well as all over the state. We could have buses that could contain between 22 and 40 passengers. An average Danfo would contain about 14 passengers. If you have a bus that would take 40 passengers, it would reduce the number of buses on the road, which would in turn have an effect on our health. If we have less number of busses on the roads, the level of emission from buses would be reduced. So in a way, all these airborne diseases, including cancer and lung diseases would also reduce.

    “All of these have its evaporating effect on the economy. When we have vehicles that could do turn around in good time, those who come to get jobs would be able to get jobs, one can travel far distance, and this has a lot of multiplier effect.  The Danfo drivers cannot understand this now. If you know the history of BRT in Ikorodu, you would know that it was initially through some acquisition. We are not going to ban the yellow buses; they would still be running on back corridor. The public will have choices and it would be a new situation for everybody.

    “It is going to be on a Public Private Participation (PPP). It is the private sector that would run the buses. That is what we have on Ikorodu road. LAMATA is not the owner of the buses; LAMATA is not the one that pays the drivers, so it is going to be thrown open to the members of the public. Those who have the capacity to run large bus operations are the ones that are going to employ the drivers. LAMATA does not want to be involved in the employment of the drivers or the operations of the buses. Ours is to provide infrastructure and make sure that we regulate the way these buses operate.

    “Lagos is a state with over 20 million population; So what we are saying is that we cannot solve these problems at a go, it is something that has to be done overtime and it is something that we have done on Ikorodu road and we are perfecting it, so that when we are extending it to other corridors, all those mistakes and drawbacks that you have seen on Ikorodu road, they would be not transferred to other corridors. On the attitude of the drivers, we are currently working on it, go and look at the attitude of the drivers of Blue buses on Ikorodu road and now use that to compare with others and you will note the difference. So that tells you that we are taking it gradually. It is not something we can solve in one day.

    “For the Iyana-Ipaja corridor, if you notice that picture very well, you would notice the bus stop area is bigger. There is a passing link. So if a bus is stopping at the bus stop and the buses coming do not need to stop, there is a passing link which the buses would go through.

    “We would install Intelligence Transport System (ITS) to cater for a breakdown on the corridor. The driver would just press a button to alert other drivers that there is a breakdown somewhere.

    “Commuters can also download BRT App.  It would show you the location of different buses at different points in time, that is part of ITS. Lagos BRT that is what you would download, you would download the app and with it you can monitor how the BRT buses are operating. If you are living in Abule-Egba for instance and you want to know when the next bus is coming to Abule-Egba bus station, maybe there are six buses on the queue, one would come in seven minutes, and the other would come maybe 10, another in 15minutes. So you can decide the one you want to enter and you don’t have to wait for too long at the bus stop.”

     

  • Two killed on Lagos-Abeokuta road accident

    The Ota Unit Commander of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Leye Adegboyega, has urged hydraulic vehicle owners to employ smart and responsible drivers.

    The commander noted that majority of truck drivers causing road crashes and endangering other road users’ lives were men with low intellect.

    Adegboyega spoke yesterday on the scene of an accident at the former toll gate in Sango, on the Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway, Ogun State.

    Two persons died in the accident and another person was injured.

    The unit commander said the accident occurred at 11 pm of Wednesday when a Mack trailer, with registration number (Lagos) KJA93XJ, heading to Lagos on high speed, had brake failure.

    He said the vehicle rammed into another DAF truck, marked (Lagos) LSD365XJ, which was parked on the road, following a mechanical fault.

    The DAF truck driver, who died instantly, was reportedly attempting to fix the faults when the trailer hit his vehicle from behind.

    The failed truck’s conductor, who was trapped in the vehicle, later died.

    The accident was said to have caused a gridlock on the expressway as officials of the FRSC and Lagos State Rapid Respond Squad (RRS) attempted to rush the injured to a nearby hospital.

    The bodies of the victims were deposited at the Ota General Hospital’s mortuary.

    Adegboyega attributed the accident to speeding, low mental capacity and overconfidence.

    He urged drivers to always drive with care and within specified speed limits.