Tag: Nigerian news

  • Airlines’ role in developing airport hubs

    What qualifies an airport as an effective hub? Experts say it is beyond geographical location, population, operational infrastructure and the size of terminal facilities. The role strong carriers can play in achieving a hub for Nigeria has triggered a debate in the sector. KELVIN OSA OKUNBOR reports.

    Nigeria’s desire to achieve hub status for some of its airports in the last few decades has remained elusive.

    The drive to upgrade some of its airport terminals to hub status has engaged the attention of successive administrations with little to show for it beyond rhetorics. Terminal upgrade and remodelling initiatives conceived by many aviation ministers are yet to yield the expected results.

    But, the country is losing billions of dollars  in the West African region and on the continent due to the failure of the government to deliver on its target.

    Experts, including Chief Executive Officer Belujane Konsults, Mr Chris Aligbe; Chief Executive Officer, African Aviation Services Limited, Mr Nick Fadugba; Chairman  and Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON),Captain Meggison  said hub pursuit for Nigeria may take longer time until strong  carriers were put in place.

    Beside strong carriers, they said the government needs deliver modern airports with transit facilities for passengers to connect flight from one corner of the world to another.

    They said Nigeria will be better positioned to achieve hub status for its airport terminals if it takes advantage of its geographical location, population and other attractions.

    Besides geography, they say establishing strong carriers has a role to play in the development of effective airport hubs. They argue that such carriers should not be necessarily publicly owned, but could be private sector-driven, judging by the experience in other climes.

    Aligbe on his part identified the absence of strong indigenous carriers as one of the reasons Nigeria is unable to develop airport hubs. He said though Nigeria is blessed with with a good geographical location, it is not enough to make her airports natural hubs as hub development goes beyond geography encompassing strong carriers to distribute passengers.

    He said other countries in Africa were using their carriers to develop their airport into strong hubs for the distribution of passengers on the airline network they belong to.

    Aligbe said until the government designed policies that would promote strong  indigenous carriers, the ambition to develop some international airports into a hub will remain a mirage.

    In an interview, Aligbe said in some parts of the world, some private carriers assisted in developing their airports into strong hubs.

    He said: “We cannot develop hub in our country. If you look at it globally  it is only two major places that private airlines have developed as hub.

    “You have it in Honk Kong, developed by Cathay Pacific, the airline was owned by a shipping magnate, but now it is a global airline.

    ‘’There is another airline that developed  a hub in Brazil after the collapse of Varig Air. So, airlines have a role to play in developing airport hubs. Other hubs were developed by national carriers. Most American carriers are privately owned.’’

    He further said: “Only national carriers build hubs. That is why Nigeria has not been able to build hubs. Four  or five years ago, there was an arrangement with Lufthansa to help build a hub in Abuja , but it did not happen. It will not happen, no foreign airlines will build hub for Nigeria. KLM built a hub in Schipol, Air France built Paris Airport, British Airways built Heathrow, not Virgin.

    “Nigeria is the best location in Africa to build a hub, yet we have not developed it.

    “The kind of  multiplier  effect a  hub has in economic development in any country is mammoth. Such  hubs as Dubai, Heathrow, France, Atlanta, do wonderful things. Delta Airlines has done a lot to develop hubs and contribute to the development of the economy.

    “We are not in a position to develop  that now, because we do not have a strong national flag carrier that can do this,” Aligbe added.

    Meggison in his view  said airlines have a huge role to play in developing hubs.

    He cited the roles Ethiopian Airlines has played in making Addis Ababa a strong hub in the Horn of Africa region, distributing passengers from all parts of the continent onto its global routes network, using its many global alliances.

    He said Kenyan Airways has also assisted  in developing Nairobi into a strong  hub for East Africa to distribute passengers around the continent.

    Egypt Air, he said, has developed a hub around Cairo just as South African Airways has also developed a hub  for Johannesburg to distribute passengers around the southern part of the continent. He said any country needed more than mere geographical advantage to become a hub.

    He said: “But a country needs more than the advantage of geographical location to become a hub.

    “Now, if you  take advantages into account, Nigeria ought to be a hub. But then what  really determines a hub is the quality and the capacity of the major carrier in that country.

    “It is not the population, it is not even the strategic location as it were. KLM is from Netherlands. How many people are in Netherlands? How many of the KLM passengers are going to Netherlands? But because the country has a very big carrier that has wide network, the airline has made Amsterdam a hub.”

    He said  Nigeria could become a hub if it has strong airlines that could distribute passengers from Europe, Americas, Asia and other destination outside the continent to various parts of Africa.

    “Nigeria can become a hub if it has two or three  airlines that are very strong. Even if one is not strong enough, but an airline  that can create a feeder network for passengers  to different parts of the continent.

    “Ethiopia is not strategically located  as it were, but because they have a very strong carrier, Addis Ababa has become a hub. So, it is the airline or the airlines that make a hub. For Lagos to become a hub, besides the facilities that will enable it to become a hub, like good airport, modern transportation facilities, the airline must be big enough to have network of routes and feed other airlines.”

    Despite its huge population,  Fadugba said Nigeria  lacks terminals that can accelerate seamless transit for passengers on domestic; regional and international flights.

    He said besides facilities for passengers’ transit; Nigerian carriers are not strong enough to attract global partnership to offer passengers reliable services on routes beyond point-to-point.

    Being a point-to-point carrier, Fadugba said was no longer fashionable among global carriers.

    In an interview in Lagos, Fadugba said the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos and the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja were yet to qualify as hubs for West Africa because they do not command the kind of facilities that would attract global carriers as transit terminals to connect passengers to any where in the world.

    Fadugba said global carriers are attracted to airports with modern facilities where turn around time is swift; services are reliable; airlines could refuel and enjoy economies of scale.

    He said the weak status of many Nigerian carriers with limited aircraft fleet; unreliable schedules and lack of capacity to share interline and codeshare agreements with global carriers continue to undermine the drive for hub status for its airports.

    Fadugba said airports in Accra, Cairo, Casablanca, Dakar, Addis Ababa, Nairobi and Johannesburg have developed modern infrastructure and processes to attract global legacy carriers with intimidating aircraft fleet and network; Nigerian airports needed to be reworked to accommodate attractive hub facilities.

    He said: “Nigerian airports still have a long way to go to become significant hubs in Africa ; because they have inadequate facilities that will facilitate seamless passengers’ transit.

    “The government needs to tear down and build a modern terminal at Lagos Airport with at least three runways that will facilitate seamless connectivity.

    “The government needs to urgently look at land facilities at the Abuja Airport and at least build two runways for easy connectivity.

    “Developing an airport hub is not by accident but through careful planning and strategy. To achieve this, the government should look at airport size, and the readiness of the airspace to accommodate the exponential traffic that it will trigger if modern facilities are put in place.

    “This is what other countries have done by empowering their airlines; modernising their fleet; securing operational agreements and partnership to position them as catalyst for economic development.”

    He  said: “And we do not have any airline to cut on, put together all the airlines we have if we tell them to come together to form one airline, they are still not large enough to contend with South African Airways, Kenya Airways or Ethiopian Airlines.

    “We cannot develop hub in our country. If you look at it globally only two major places that private airlines have developed as hub.Even though most American carriers are privately owned.Look at all the hubs built globally, they were built by national carriers. Only national carriers build hubs.

    “That is why Nigeria has not been able to build one. Because of economies of scale for airlines in terms of fuel costs, insurance and other benefits for airlines that belong to network globally.

    “These are the things we are not benefitting. Aircraft utilisation in Nigeria is low, at least six hours as opposed to 12 hours.”

    Meanwhile, remodelling of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos is aimed at making it the preferred West African hub that would attract more international flights, President of new aviation think tank Stakeholders Square Table, Captain Balarabe Usman (rtd.) has said.

    Usman said when work is completed at the airport, it would meet all the necessary conditions for its certification by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) and would be designated as a regional hub because the highest number of passengers in West and Central Africa still emanate from the Lagos airport.

    According to him, with the expansion of the terminal facility, installation of new conveyor belts for quick dispensation of baggage, upgrading of the cooling system and overall rehabilitation of the infrastructure at the terminal would entirely improve and hasten facilitation and attract more airlines into the country.

    In an interview, President/Chief Executive Officer, Sabre Travel Network, Gbenga Olowo said government could create deliberate policy to support  aviation activities, including airlines, airports, catering, fuel and ground handling services.

    He said: “Nigeria ought to be  a hub with its geographical location in West, Central Africa  with its large population.

    “Lagos could be a formidable hub in West Africa if it has facilities that guarantees  a  functional airport with transit facilities , provision for aircraft leasing , aircraft maintenance repair and overhaul facility , an   aerotropolis and other  supporting amenities built around  flag  carriers or a national carrier.

    “One of the steps to achieving this is ensuring  effective infrastructure management and development  as well as improved air connectivity.”

  • FIDA condemns child abuse, urges government to prosecute offenders

    The International Federation of  Women Lawyers (FIDA), Lagos State chapter has condemned rising cases of child abuse across the country.

    It urged the government to prosecute all suspected offenders as a deterrent to others.

    The group spoke against the backdrop of the recent case of a woman who locked up a 10-year-old boy in a dog’s kennel in Lagos as punishment.

    Its chairperson, Mrs. Philomena Nneji, who spoke for the group, said news reports suggest that child abuse has been on the rise across the country.

    She said: “It is very disheartening that children are seen on the streets hawking, begging and, more often than not, used as house helps in many homes.

    “The 14th day of  August  2019 was a day of horror for Lagos residents as well as other Nigerians when the  video of one Mrs. Onyinye Mbadike torturing a boy of 10 went viral on social media.

    “The video also showed Mrs. Mbadike locking the boy up in a dog’s kennel, thereby subjecting the boy to share space with dogs.

    “This is  not the first time  hapless children have been unjustly maltreated, beaten, or injured by their supposed  relatives or guardians over trivial issues  such as  house chores, eating, hawking, etc.

    “The International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA),  Lagos State chapter, condemns the barbaric and wicked act of Mrs. Onyinye Mbadike, who does not have  respect and feelings for mankind.

    “In matters regarding children, the interest of the child is always of paramount importance under the law and therefore should always be respected by all and sundry.’’

    She  regrettable that “children are easily subjected to  torture, gruesome and inhuman  treatment in the name of discipline.

    “Such treatment, in most cases,  end up leaving indelible marks on children in utter disregard of the provisions of the law.

    “These are heinous crimes against innocent children and, therefore, totally unacceptable.”

    The group, she added, “unequivocally… abhors and condemns such inhuman treatments in all its ramifications.

    “We recommend that concrete steps  be taken to curb this menace in our society.  We are very passionate about women and children and have zero tolerance on issues of  this nature.

    “As an organisation that promotes, protects, and preserves the rights and wellbeing of indigent women and children, particularly in Lagos State,  we  demand for justice for this  10-year-old boy.

    “Consequently, we appeal to the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice in  Lagos State to use his good offices to expedite action in the investigation, arrest, prosecution  and bringing  the perpetrator of this heineous crime to book  to act as a deterrent to others like Mrs. Mbadike.

  • Overcoming the perennial water scarcity in Yauri township

    Sir: Considering the natural strategic location of Yauri, its economic potentials as well as the rate at which its population continues to grow among several other factors, Yauri Township deserves to be a major focus of attention for any government that really intends to put the state as a whole on the fast lane for rapid socio economic transformation.

    As a concerned ‘Yaurite’ I am obliged to voice out my organised observation as a continued silence has so long proved unwise, an awkward approach and a potential threat to societal norms and values that stipulate growth, development and progressive advancement.

    Yauri, by my personal observation, has not for decades, enjoyed its deserved placement among the sister emirates, several regimes right from the creation of Kebbi State seen not to recognise the fruitfulness of harnessing both human and material resources of the unique emirate and particularly the Yauri metropolis.

    It was just recently when I came to realise the horrible situation of the health care delivery in Yauri community that was when I received a distressed phone call from my brother, a primary school teacher in Yauri local government who informed me of the urgent need to provide drugs for patients of hepatitis especially himself, this situation a complex situation, he is directly affected and yet he is the focal point of attention for the other patient and ‘salt upon injury’, he does not got enough money to by the drugs prescribed for him, I was obliged to assist with the little I had, in fact l had to join him in the ‘self-jihad’ at the medical shop (pharmaceutical store), it was another task as the one has to join a seemingly indefinite queue of people who were there for similar purpose.

    I was forced to require from the store attendant why the crowd was and why was everyone there for treatment of either hepatitis or Typhoid in a brief statement he informed that those were the main health problems mostly affecting Yauri community due to lack of healthy water, this is a surprise as, the water in Yauri, a natural provision, is enough to serve the whole state industrially and domestically if only the natures free gift will be appropriately harnessed.

    Due to Yauri strategic location, it is continuously increasing population potential center for commercial activities which favor more the small scale business. The revenue derived by the local government from the shop owners, hawking traders etc., with suffix the provision of potable water for the Yauri community and end up the perennial problem of both hepatitis and typhoid which has come to stay in the metropolis. This is, as a matter of fact, a serious issue which the authorities and the institution concerned most give priority.

    Yauri metropolis is a home of not less than one hundred thousand people mostly they engage a different commercial activities and contribute immensely to the development of not only the community but the state and the nation at large.

    Among the past regimes some have made an efforts towards ensuring provision of water, when the pipes which were supposed to circulate the water were laid, people were happy and full of hope, unfortunately the effort usually dies off with the burial of the pipes as if the contract was the one literally committed to the mother earth. Now people have to rely absolutely on the barrow pushers and the water peddlers whose water tanks have continued to increase in number as if on daily basis despite their attendant problems-blockage of roads and destruction of water ways (gutters) with every impurity.

    This we suffer today while our ancestors lived in midst of healthy and health providing water, the ruling powers of their time shifted them above to their present location and promised to make good provision of all they would lack in their new environment and save them against environmental harshness that, the government of their time did to facilitate the construction of kainji dam which has served the nation since then and generated apart from the power, revenue for national development at the detriment of the development of their descendants.

    We in Yauri have suffered for years whereas the water is there it has been naturally provided a gift from Allah (S. W. A) The complimentary effort of the appropriate persons, groups or associations is what is required and the community is free from any water borne disease, the ministry of health will also be free from emergency intervention due to outbreak of dangerous diseases.

    I am therefore directing my clarion call to the present government of the state to play its role and fulfill its expectation with regard to provision of healthy water for Yauri community. In an estimation by the World Health Organisation (W. H. O) 12.5 million cases of typhoid fever is recorded annually globally, this results in death of about 12800. Nigeria suffers more from malaria and typhoid fever when compared to other diseases, however, the case of Yauri community is peculiar in that the water is there, but the needed intervention from the policy makers is always the major problem.

    Now that we have once again voted our beloved governor for the second time as the chief executive of the state we are filled with hope, Joy and good will as we are sure Senator Abubakar Bagudu will not fail the promise he made to Yauri community to fix our perennial of water shortage.

    • Hassan Sani Takware,

    Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto.

  • Bamgbose leads NBA Women Forum

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has appointed Prof Oluyemisi Bamgbose (SAN) as the chairperson of the NBA Women Forum.

    Bamgbose, Dean of the Faculty of Law, University of Ibadan (UI), will lead other members of the Forum.

    The NBA stated this in a statement signed by its president, Mr. Paul Usoro (SAN).

    Usoro said: “I am pleased to announce the constitution of the Nigerian Bar Association Women’s Forum with the following distinguished executive members:

    “Professor Oluyemisi A Bamgbose, (SAN) – Chairperson; Mrs. Chinyere Okorocha – Vice Chairperson; Mrs. Nsidibe Aideyan – Secretary;  Hajia Safiya I. Balarabe – Treasurer”

    He thanked the “distinguished  ladies” for accepting to serve.

    Usoro added: “Professor Bamgbose, apart from being a frontline Professor of Law at the University of Ibadan, holds the distinction of being the first female academician to have been elevated to the rank of a Senior Advocate of Nigeria based on her academic work.

    “I should add that she has deep passion for gender-related issues which, with her other outstanding accomplishments, place her in good stead to steer the affairs of the Forum diligently and aright.

    “Professor Bamgbose will be assisted in the leadership of the Forum by Mrs. Chinyere Okorocha, the Vice Chairman of the Forum and a very cerebral and accomplished private practitioner who serves as a Partner in the upscale commercial  law firm.

    “Chinyere is a woman of passion and drive, with over-whelming interest in the upliftment of women, qualities that she brings to bear on her various leading roles in the NBA Section on Business Law and also at the recently concluded NBA Annual General Conference where she served as the co-chairperson of the Finance Sub-Committee of the Technical Committee on Conference Planning.”

    He explained that A “blue-ribbon Council” has been constituted to assist the Forum’s executive in an advisory capacity,

    The council comprises Mrs Anna Isiyaku, wife of the Taraba State governor; Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari, Mrs. Maryam Uwais; Dean, Faculty of Law, University of Nigeria, Nsukka and activist, Professor Joy Ngozi Ezeilo; Mrs. Dorothy Ufot, SAN; Chief Registrar, Borno State Judiciary Hajia Hadiza D .S Magaji; Solicitor-General and Permanent Secretary, Rivers State Ministry of Justices, Florence Fiberesima,  academician, gender activist and NBA 2nd Vice President; Dr. Foluke Dada, and Chief Compliance Officer, Oando Plc, Ms. Ayotola Jagun.

    “I must finally state, on behalf of the National Officers of our Association, that we would do all that is necessary and required to assist the Forum in its workings and activities,” Usoro added.

  • Mugabe: Garlands for the old wizard of Harare

    The Iroko tree has fallen and there was tremor in Harare and the entire Zimbabwe stood in awe.  The echoes reverberate the length and breadth of the globe, the old wizard of Harare has gone home.  Comrade Robert Mugabe, the charismatic and eloquent  former President of Zimbabwe, un-arguably an accomplished revolutionary and about the only  pan- Africanist of the 20th Century still living has bowed out.  He has just been declared a national hero in Zimbabwe which is well deserving.  He came, he saw and he conquered.

    He was undoubtedly one of the most cerebral and educated Presidents the world has ever known.  He was brave, courageous, fearless, and confronted the colonial imperialists without consideration of his personal safety.   He paid the prize for it when he was jailed and remained in prison for over a decade and came out to become the first Prime Minister of Zimbabwe.  He was a founding member of the Zimbabwean African National Union Patriotic Front (ZANU PF) which was the arrow head of the liberation struggle that fought for the independence of Zimbabwe; formerly Rhodesia.  Mugabe was therefore, a product of an ideological driven organization that was to pilot the affairs of his country.

    At independence, it was the determination of the ZANU PF to dismantle and drop the vestiges of the colonial heritage and named their  country Zimbabwe.  Zimbabwe took off on a very high note in the 1980s pricing education very highly and with Mugabe himself having a doctoral degree.  The country had almost 100% literacy rate becoming an example to many other African countries which to date has not been matched.

    Like every revolutionary with human frailties, Mugabe did not feel that anybody was capable of replacing him.  He became infected with African leadership malaise like a feudal overlord and did not groom any cadre for seamless succession.  Mugabe became too obsessed with power.  This became his albatross, diminishing his stature in the history of the greats in political leadership not just in Africa but the world over.  He became too obsessed with power.  His failure was the failure of the leadership cadre of the ZANU PF who did not find courage to give honest and objective advice to sustain the momentum of what the party represented.

    Comrade Mugabe remained inflexibly principled to the end as he was noted to have told his family members that whenever he dies, he would not like to be buried in the Heroes Pouch in Zimbabwe given what he perceived was a couple against him in 2017 when he was edged out of power through the military wing of his party.  He also became too gerontocratic with amnesia and started scheming for his young wife, Grace Mugabe to succeed him in defiance to the succession plan of the party which caught the ire of the hawkish element in the party; also hungry for power.

    Where other African leaders capitulated, Mugabe stood firm against the stormy sanctions of the west which virtually paralysed the economy of Zimbabwe.  He did not give up; he was loud.  He took a solo campaign to fight western conspiracies which made Zimbabwe a pariah state for many decades making the country’s currency to become worthless that workers started demanding their wages and salaries in United States Dollars.

    Mugabe rejected the hemlock of structural adjustment programme and other alien economic policies of the World Bank which the imperialists prescribed as remedy for African politico-economy.  We may not have found an alternative African economic model,  but the truth remains that you cannot transport the reality in one clime to another lock-stock-and-barrel.

    Of the few notable African revolutionaries, Mugabe was about the only one that succeeded in leading his country to independence and this remains to the credit of his uncompromising leadership quality. Apart from the African National Congress (ANC) in South Africa, ZANU PF remains one of the longest political parties in Africa that fought for the liberation of their countries from colonial oppression.

    There is decline in global leadership index.  There are no internationalists any longer who could stand for human essence and defend the atrocious onslaught of perverse leadership who slaughter their people to remain in power.

    Mugabe was in power for about 37 years of his country’s independence. It was a failure that he could not develop the health sector in his country after three decades in power and had to die in a hospital in Singapore.  I am not sure many of his countrymen and women other than the pilfering politicians could afford medical tourism in any Asian country like him.  Mugabe showed remarkable disdain to the imperialists west to the end of his life and did not bother to take solace in their health facility for whatever it represented.

    Today, just like Comrade Mugabe, there is hardly any African political leadership that has made deliberate and conscious attempt to build human capital and infrastructure to reduce capital flight and develop African economy and health sector.  Our leaders have gone beyond medical tourism to developing appetite for exotic foreign gastronomy to the neglect of the abundance nature has endowed us with.

    With the kind of political leadership that we have which has become an anathema, our youths will continue to die in the Mediterranean Sea and victims of xenophobic attacks even  in the back waters of African countries that were beneficiaries of our generosity and largesse in the recent past.  History may not judge Mugabe so harshly as he cannot be said to be a villain although he may not have been a hero to all.   The name Mugabe has since become synonymous with resistance, stubbornness and opposition to imperialist dominion.  Today, we are struggling with local insurgency that has blossomed into full fledge terrorism because of leadership lethargy.  Today, banditry and insecurity are the defining features of our countries across Africa and our leaders are busy cringing from coast to coast begging for aids to fight crimes and criminality that they have become complicit.

    Today, malaria is killing our people because of poor leadership that does not see the need to invest in infrastructure, human capital and healthcare.  Today, our leaders deliberately promote divisions amongst tribes and tongues and fuel ethno-religious tensions.  Today, the lives of citizens are not worth more than a cow as we slaughter ourselves at the slightest provocation.  Today, tribal leaders and activists   give evacuation orders to our brothers and sisters who had hitherto lived with them in harmony in their regions.

    While we send garlands to Comrade Mugabe, the old wizard of Harare, there should be a peer review mechanism of what leadership should be like to save the next generation of Africans from the infantile leadership that dots the continent.  Adieu comrade Roberts Mugabe ad infinitum.

    • Kebonkwu, a lawyer, writes from Abuja.
  • Motorists suffer as work stalls on Lagos-Abeokuta highway

    The rehabilitation was meant to last only 18 months. But the contractor, Julius Berger, is no longer at the site, leaving rot and pain for motorists and residents, writes ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE

    • We don’t abandon projects once they have been given to us. But we also must work with the funding schedule of the project. Our people are there – Contractor
    • Maybe they submitted their certificate of work of certain sections and they are yet to be paid, due to budgetary constraints and are forced to stop work – Govt
    • The contractor has stopped the job and we are suffering…the last time it rained, over 354 houses were submerged – Resident

    Nothing but huge sandcrete B busts at Joju and Ota, Ogun State are the only signs of Julius Berger’s presence on the Lagos-Ota-Abeokuta Expressway. Yet, the project is supposed to be completed in December.

    When Minister of Works and Housing Babatunde Fashola inaugurated the road repair on May 14, 2018, he gave one and a half years completion mandate.

    The reconstruction of the expressway was meant to reduce the travel time of hundreds of thousands of commuters and was awarded to Julius Berger at a sum of N22.38 billion (equivalent to $61.380 million).

    The project was divided into two sections, Section I being the Lagos-Ota, (from Ile Zik to Ota), while section II is from Ota to Abeokuta. The project is expected to terminate at kilometre 80.

    Fashola, at the inauguration of the reconstruction at kilometre zero, Ile-Zik, said the road had been abandoned many times and contract variations in the past, owing to the paucity of fund.

    He, however, said the Muhammadu Buhari administration prioritised the road and assured that it would be completed on time. Fashola, represented by Director of Highway Construction and Reconstruction in the Federal Ministry of Works, Olalekan Busari, said the Federal Government was committed to the completion because of its socio-economic importance, and as an alternative to Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, Ilorin-Ile-Ife, as well as a gateway to the Benin Republic.

    Fashola emphasized that the rehabilitation signifies a new vista as the contractor had been mandated to recover the failed portions.

    He said the project would generate tons of direct and indirect employment. He was happy the contractor has commenced anticipatory palliative work mostly on the damaged portions and directed that it should focus on critical portions that have failed.

    Busari declared that the contractor had been mobilised to site with a 15 per cent down payment (representing about N3.8 billion).

    He demanded the complete overhaul of the drainage system occasioned by new developments, especially the inclusion of a Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) corridor being constructed by the Lagos State government.

    Head of Julius Berger, West Division, Mr. Wolfgang Loesser, who spoke at the event, expressed readiness to complete the project on schedule.

    Loesser’s promises have become what it is – empty promises. Motorists and residents could swear that the contractor had left the site since February and there are no signs that they will return anytime soon.

    Abidemi Balogun, who lives at Sango, said the residents’ hope which had risen sky-high when Julius Berger resumed rehabilitation work had turned into ashes. From the Lagos end, the distressed points have remained the same.

    “Some sections of the road at Amje, Ojokoro, Salolo, Meiran, Araromi, Abule Taylor Abule Awori, and Ijaiye had remained in their bad state and gradually getting worse,” Balogun said.

    He said several sections on both carriages of the expressway, are in different stages of disrepair, from mere distressed to multiple potholes, and craters.

    According to him, while residents and motorists are expecting a super rehabilitation befitting the image Julius Berger had carved for itself, what is emerging is far short of the standard for which the contractor is well known.

    Ismail Eboda, a driver that plies the Abule-Egba-Abeokuta Expressway, wondered why the contractor would be taking the Federal Government for a ride. He wondered whether the contractor is already constipated by the many projects that are falling on its laps unsolicited across the country and wondered why local contractors could not be trusted to deliver world-class jobs.

    Eboda said the last time he saw Julius Berger work on section II of the Lagos- Abeokuta road repair was in October last year, when they carried out palliating work at Joju, in Sango Ota, and the Ilogbo –Ojuerin axis.

    They were also at Itori where they carried out some rehabilitation work on Itori to the Temidire Cow Market axis.

    He said: “At these places what Julius Berger did was to apply the stone base, and especially at both carriageways at Joju where there was usually some ponding on the road as a result of the depression of the road, they had dumped some truckloads of hardcore. Though this provided initial relief to motorists, it soon went bad because of the huge volume of vehicular movement, especially trucks. Today the road has relapsed and the pond is bad right in the middle of the road, just because the contractor is not doing what it should.”

     The Nation checks revealed that while the contractor’s palliative works from kilometre zero at Ile Zik, all through to the old toll gate, inward Sango still subsists making the road ‘motorable’, the reverse is the case at Section II, from Sango Ota inward Abeokuta, where Julius Berger seems to have abandoned the people to their fate.

    Worst hit is the Sango Ota axis, a major industrial zone in Ogun State. Both carriageways at Sango are in an extremely bad state. A Youth Corps member, Demilade Adeneye, who graduated from the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta (FUNAB), described the Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway as the rot of a nation. According to him, many lives and properties have been lost on the road while the government and its contractor continue to play with “high power economic politics” with the project.

    “I can say without equivocation that the contractor is never on this site at all. They have not and have never done anything meaningful here outside palliative works and it is sad that the government claimed to have facilitated their movement to site with close to N5 billion.

    “What is happening here is similar to what is going on the Lagos-Ibadan expressway where the same contractor has continued to behave as they liked, delaying the execution of projects that are critical to the nation’s economy and yet despite its attitude to work, this same contractor continues to win more juicy contracts to the detriment of local contractors,” Adeneye said.

    Busola Thomas, who works in the Ota Branch of the Nigerian Breweries, said the Ota axis despite being a huge economic net for the nation has continued to be the most neglected and abandoned.

    She said despite the huge losses being recorded by companies along the corridor, the state as well as the Federal Government have continued to look towards them to generate VAT, Company and Income Tax, the withholding tax and several others on which the health of the nation’s economy is benchmarked.

    Titus Oku, who works in Lafarge Cement Plc, said companies on the Ota-Abeokuta corridor, deserve a better deal from the Buhari government.

    He said because of the peculiar mixed nature of traffic pattern on both sections of the road – which would be serving light as well as large capacity and articulated vehicles, the repair ought to reflect this with a lane dedicated as a truck route to address such peculiarities.

    A frequent traveller on the road, Chidinma Okoro, said the road disrepair has worsened the motorists into worsening travel experience.

    He said the preponderance of traders and growing population of Okada and tricycle operators are not only worsening the deplorable traffic situation but have thrown insecurity into the mix.

    According to Okoro, many now dread coming into Sango and environs and many more dread using the road to link Abeokuta especially during peak periods.

    “Terrible traffic has become the known feature of Sango as a result of the abandoned project. Motorists are usually caught in the terrible traffic and some drivers complained that besides the stress being encountered, the road made their vehicles rickety.”

    A trader, Maryam Idrisu, said she would appreciate the government fixing the Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway.

    While recounting her ordeal, she said: “The only thing that can make me pray for this government and make me enjoy the dividend of democracy they promised us is for this road to be reconstructed.

    “I have been rushed to hospital on two occasions after being injured while trading in the area,” she said.

    A resident, Timothy Ebhoroghe, said living in the area had been hellish. He said his three kids never had any better experience since their birth.

    “Sometimes in our attempt to compete with motorcyclists, many have been knocked down and died. May God save us from this hardship and neglect we are been subjected to by the government and its contractor.”

    A commercial bus driver, Sadiu Salaau, said his job had been made difficult since the road went bad.

    He said: “Since this road went bad, I have been taking a pain reliever (drugs) after every meal to subdue my body pain. Even my bus, which I bought last year, is already looking very old. The painful part is that passengers are at the receiving end because they will always pay more.”

    Mr Habib Kazeem complained about the abandonment of the construction. He said the abandonment is causing a huge crisis to the people.

    He said: “The contractor has stopped the job and we are suffering. For instance, the last time it rained, over 354 houses were submerged in a flood because the canal in this area was filled up and that was because the construction company constructed the drainage and channelled water into the canal without expanding it.”

    Residents living close to the bad portions of the road described the situation as capable of discrediting both the federal and state governments.

    “From indications, work started on the project before the elections and stopped after the polls,” a bus conductor,” Jamiu said.

    Besides the Owode axis, other bad portions of the road include Iyana Onigbedu, Iyana Egbado and Lakatabu to Osofin Estate.

    When one of our correspondents visited the office of the Federal Ministry of Works at Oke-Mosan, Abeokuta, a senior officer in the ministry declined comments. “We will get back to you,” the officer, who refused to leave his name, said.  But the contractor handling the rehabilitation of the road, Julius Berger Plc, said it had not abandoned the project.

    The spokesperson for the company, Moses Duku, said the contractor work rate is affected by “funding crisis.”

    Duku said: “The project is ours. We have a tradition, which is that we don’t abandon projects once they have been given to us. But we also must work with the funding schedule of the project. Our people are there.

    “For every project we have, we work with the funding schedule, and if it is low, then it may reflect on the project.”

    The Special Adviser on Media to the Minister of Works and Housing, Mr Hakeem Bello, expressed shock at the development. He said the minister still had the impression that work is still ongoing at the site.

    “Maybe they submitted their certificate of work of certain sections and they are yet to be paid, due to budgetary constraints and are forced to stop work. I think the Controller of Works in Ogun would be able to explain what is going on. I thought work was even going on there,” Bello told The Nation on the phone.

    For now, it is the people that are suffering and from the look of things, their pains are not about to go away.

  • Questioning LADOL’s indigenous status

    It is no longer news that a company called LILE (LADOL Integrated Logistics Enterprise) which is a duly registered company in the British Virgin Islands owns the Lagos Deep Offshore Logistics Base (LADOL).

    The shareholding structure is substantially made up of two foreign companies namely: SABLE OFFSHORE INVESTMENTS and ALSBA Ventures Group. Both companies are registered entities in the British Virgin Islands otherwise known as the safe haven for tax dodgers.

    SABLE Offshore Investments commands a whopping 53 per cent stake in LADOL while ALSBA Ventures Group takes an impressive 31 per cent of the shares. This only leaves a share percentage of 16 per cent for the remaining shareholders, which includes key characters currently at the helm of LADOL.

    This unprecedented development is baffling to many industry experts in Nigeria as for many years LADOL and its affiliates have flaunted the perception of being a company which stands for the Nigeria values and interests.

    It is also on record that LADOL and its elements have embarked on several campaigns in the media and the general press both nationally and internationally showcasing themselves as “A wholly Nigeria owned Company”.

    This obvious propaganda has generated endorsements and accolades from many quarters in the industry and the country at large for a company, which when put under the microscope contributes very little, if any benefit to the Nigerian economy or the Nigerian people at large.

    Through its campaign of misrepresentation, LADOL has been enriched to the brim through benefits of local content. This has undoubtedly given them an edge with investments at LADOL at an all-time high; dividends have also been equally handsome for the foreign shareholding companies even at a time the Nigerian economy was in deep recession and many companies in the same sector groaning under the yolk of lack of jobs throughout the industry.

    How can a company, which its majority shareholders are abroad, command a strong position in any decision-making, which can be based on the local needs and the development of the local economy in Nigeria?

    As Nigeria tirelessly continues to promote local development and enhance job creation in all its industries, some of her citizens who have benefitted from such initiatives have decided to avert the benefits of these policies. This diversion of the benefits away from the local industry continues to hemorrhage the backbone of the Nigerian economy.

    As a nation should we allow such actions to continue to take place?

    The disease known as the “enrichment of oneself to the detriment of all others” is one of the biggest players in unemployment, underdevelopment and underutilisation of Nigeria’s workforce.

    On the 7th of December 7, 2015, Dr. Amy Jadesimi while speaking on a BBC world news programme “business Live,” declared that “we are the only 100% Nigerian Private Free zone in Nigeria.”

    But considering the shareholding structure of the company, we can rightly say that this statement was absolutely false as it does not represent the true ownership of LADOL.

    With all the facts available, we can only digest this to be one that has been orchestrated over the years to outsmart the Nigerian people.

    The sheer audacity of LADOL to publicly engage the media in such acts of misrepresentation of their true identity as a foreign-owned company is quite baffling, to say the least.

    Indeed, they have been dishonest to the country, to our people, to our government agencies and to the international community.

    Should Nigeria continue to allow such companies to conduct business activities at the highest level and represent the country as local companies on the world stage in this calculated manner?

    • Adeoye writes from Yenagoa
  • Xenophobia: Evacuation exercise may involve more than one flight

    The evacuation exercise of Nigerians in South Africa may take more than one flight as the number of Nigerians indicating interest to return home is on the increase, it has been learnt.

    Though over 400 Nigerians have indicated interest to return home following the recent xenophobic attacks on foreign nationals and their businesses by South Africans, it was gathered many more may eventually opt for the evacuation exercise.

    Many Nigerians had lost their properties and businesses in the process and have become desolate.

    The management of Air Peace had offered to airlift Nigerians who are willing to return home.

    The Nation learnt on Monday that the evacuation of Nigerians will still go on as planned.

    The Nigerian Missions in South Africa and Nigerian community, it was learnt were still working tirelessly to ensure smooth evacuation.

    Though calm has returned after the Sunday night renewed attacks on foreign national businesses in Johannesburg, President Nigeria Citizens Association South Africa (NICASA), Prince Ben Okoli, said all efforts were geared toward the airlift of the first batch of Nigerian back home.

    Okoli also revealed the possibility of having more than one flight in the evacuation exercise, which is to commence on Wednesday.

    This, he said, was as result of the number of people who have shown interest to return to Nigeria as a result of the incessant attacks on Nigerians and their businesses by the South Africans.

    According: “There may be more than one flight as the number of Nigerians who have indicated interest to go back home is on the increase.

    “Already, we have over four hundred Nigerians who have indicated interest to come back home.”

    He pointed out that the figure may be far more than the aircraft capacity.

    Read Also:  Xenophobia: Buhari orders immediate voluntary evacuation of Nigerians

    On the renewed attacks on businesses owned by foreign nationals on Sunday, he said calm has returned as the police have taken over the situation.

    Throwing light on the Sunday renewed attacks, Okoli explained that there was calm until Sunday evening when the Prince of Zulu Land, and former Minister for Home Affairs, Mangosuthu Gatsha Buthelezi addressed a huge crowed of Zulu citizens on the need to stop xenophobic attacks as it portrays the country in bad light.

    This, he said, did not go down well with the crowd who stormed out of the meeting and went on destruction and looting spree of properties owned by foreign nationals.

    Okoli however noted that the situation has nothing to do with Nigerians.

    “The looting continued on Sunday night after one of their leaders addressed them on the need to stop the attacks on foreign nationalities and the implication of their acts.

    “They were not interested in what their leader was saying and while they were leaving in their numbers they resulted in looting again and also destruction of foreign-owned properties and businesses but it has nothing to do with Nigerians this time as no Nigeria has suffered lose.

    “Nigerians are following our instructions to close shops and not to do business until situation return to normalcy,” he said.

  • Xenophobia: Buhari orders immediate evacuation of Nigerians

    President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered immediate voluntary evacuation of all Nigerians willing to return home from South Africa over increasing xenophobic attacks.

    The President gave the order as he received report from Amb. Ahmed Rufai Abubakar, Director-General, National Intelligence Agency (DGNIA) over xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa.

    The President, in the wake of the xenophobic attacks, had sent Amb. Ahmed Rufai Abubakar as his Special Envoy to South Africa, to convey a Special Message to his counterpart, President Cyril Ramaphosa.

    The Special Envoy, who was in Pretoria from Thursday, 5th to Saturday, 7th September 2019, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and publicity, Chief Femi Adesina, conveyed: “The deep concern of President Buhari and Nigerians about intermittent violence against Nigerians and their property/business interests in South Africa.

    Buhari also urged his South Africa counterpart to take visible steps against xenophobia in his country.

    “President Buhari stressed the need for South African Government to take visible measures to stop violence against citizens of brotherly African nations.

    “President Buhari is worried that the recurring issue of xenophobia could negatively affect the image and standing of South Africa as one of the leading countries on the continent, if nothing is done to stop it.

    “The Special Envoy conveyed the assurance of President Buhari that the Nigerian Government is ready and willing to collaborate with the South African Government to find a lasting solution to the involvement of few Nigerians in criminal activities, and to protect the lives and property of the larger groups of other law abiding Nigerians and indeed Africans in general, against all forms of attacks including xenophobia.

    Read Also: Xenophobia: Nigerians don’t deserve attacks -Gani Adams

    “President Buhari further assured that the Nigerian Government will guarantee the safety of lives, property and business interests of South Africans in Nigeria.

    “On his part, President Ramaphosa agreed that the violence was most disconcerting and embarrassing, adding that his government completely rejects such acts, which undermine not only the country’s image but also its relations with brotherly African countries.

    “President Ramaphosa reaffirmed his stand against criminality and committed to do everything possible to protect the rights of every Nigerian and other foreign nationals in the country.

    “The Special Envoy also interfaced with his South African counterpart, where they reviewed the situation of foreign emigrants in general and Nigerians in particular. They agreed to work together to find a permanent solution to the root causes of the recurring attacks on Nigerians and their property.”

    The statement said that President Buhari has taken note of the report and instructed the Honourable Minister of Foreign Affairs to continue to engage with appropriate Authorities on the concrete measure the South African Government is expected to take.

  • NURTW crisis: MC Oluomo, Agbede settle rift

    The leadership crisis that many thought may lead to another bloodbath among the members of the Lagos State Council of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) was resolved “peacefully” on Monday.

    This followed the endorsement of Alhaji Musiliu Akinsanya (a.k.a MC Oluomo), who was appointed by the union’s national body as the Lagos State Caretaker Committee Chairman by the immediate past NURTW Lagos State Council Chairman, Alhaji Tajudeen Agbede.

    Akinsanya and 17 others were last Wednesday appointed Caretaker Committee members to run the council union.

    The National Deputy Secretary-General, Kayode Agbeyangi led the national and zonal leaders to swear-in the new state helmsmen at the union state headquarters at Oko-Oba, Agege.

    Agbede, who was said not to have favoured Akinsanya to succeed him, showed up at the swearing-in.

    Many were surprised by his appearance and subsequent peace message to the gathering.

    Agbede declared Akinsanya as the new leader of the state council.

    He urged all members irrespective of the where they belong to support Akinsanya and join him to move the association forward.

    Read Also: ‘MC Oluomo’s appointment will end NURTW Crisis’

    The era of changing leadership of the union through bloodbath, he said, should be jettisoned.

    “I want members of our union in Lagos State to let peace reign and join hand together with the committee chairman to move the union forward,” he said.

    Agbede urged the union leaders to do things in accordance with the union’s constitution.

    Agbeyangi hailed Agbede for ensuring that the leadership crisis is resolved.

    According to him, the immediate past chairman has handed over all the property of the union in his custody to the new leadership.

    He urged other former executive members to toe the same line.

    He warned the new leadership not to discriminate against any member.

    Agbeyangi also enjoined members to stop posting negative materials on the social media.

    According to him, executive members at branches and units’ level have not been dissolved.

    “No one should go and take over any branch because of the new leadership at the state level.

    “You should also stop circulating rumours just to create unnecessary tension,” he said.

    Akinsanya urged the members to sheath their sword and embrace one another.

    “We have won the war but the most important thing now is to win the peace.

    “We are one and we will always remain brothers irrespective of our differences during the struggling for this position.

    “Whoever I have offended should forgive me; I also forgive those who offended me. Be sure that we are going to run this administration together. Let us join hand together to make this union great,” he said.

    The NURTW boss, however, warned that hence force no forceful takeover of the union’s branch, adding that anybody that participated in such act will end up in jail.

    He directed all branch’s chairmen to recall any member suspended during the electioneering period.