Tag: NRC

  • Abuja-Kaduna rail service receives 10 new coaches, others

    Abuja-Kaduna rail service receives 10 new coaches, others

    The Abuja-Kaduna trains service has received a boost with the arrival of 10 new coaches and two locomotives to be deployed by the Nigeria Railway Corporation ( NRC ) in January.

    A source in Abuja said that the new locomotives and coaches had been installed for test run ahead of their inauguration on January 15.

    Confirming the arrival of the coaches and locomotives on Thursday in Abuja, the Station Manager, Idu Train Station, Mr Victor Adamu, said that the new coaches and locomotives had been installed at Idu.

    Adamu said that NRC would deploy them immediately after their inauguration, adding that preparations were already on for the ceremony.

    According to him, the station expected the additional coaches and locomotives earlier, but could not receive them for logistic reasons.

    “I am happy to let you know that the new coaches and locomotives have arrived here in Idu and have been installed awaiting inauguration.

    “One locomotive and five coaches would be installed at Rigasa Station, while another one will be here in Idu so that our teaming passengers can enjoy the convenience.

    Read also: Abuja residents spend Christmas in petrol queues

    “As you know, the ability to cater for the number of passengers here every day has not been met before, but with the new coaches and locomotives we are good to go.

    “What this means is that in every two hours, passengers are sure of moving to and from Kaduna from both Idu and Rigasa stations,’’ he said.

    Adamu also disclosed that a total of 6,287 passengers travelled through the station and from Kaduna between December 21 and December  26.

    He said that 3,224 passengers travelled out of Abuja, while 3,063 passengers came to the city during the period, adding that highest number of 1,422 passengers was recorded on December  23.

    According to him, 1,351 passengers travelled on December  21, 1,325 passengers travelled on December 22, 751 passengers on December 24, 607 passengers on December  25 and 833 passengers on December  26.

    Adamu said that lowest number of passengers was recorded between Dec. 24 and Dec. 26 due to the weekend and the Christmas holiday, saying that the corporation usually operated only one trip on Sundays and public holidays.

    He assured that there would be excellent train services from 2018 with the arrival of the additional coaches.

  • MD of NRC honored 

    Managing Director, Nigerian Railway Corporation, Freeborn Okhiria was yesterday honoured by Nigerian Institution of Civil Engineers(NICE).

    He was conferred with  and Excellent Performance Award by the association in Abuja.

    The conferment was part of the highlight of NICE’s three-day International Conference and Annual General Meeting tagged: Unity 2017.

    The  conference had “Civil Infrastructure Development in a Challenging Economy,” as its theme.

    NICE’s National Chairman, Mr Andem Ekpo-Bassey, said that the award was deserving as Okhiria had creditably acquitted himself.

    He said the awardee had recorded outstanding performances and great achievements in service and hard work.

    Ekpo-Bassey regretted that 57 years after Nigeria’s independence, it had yet to construct roads that would link all parts of the country no matter how remotely located.

    According to him, unity and trust is crucial for the institution to grow and impact on the nation’s infrastructural development.

    “As a foundation is important to the stability and safety of the infrastructure, so is trust important to the unity and growth of a nation.

    “This is the best time for us as civil engineers to apply a little of our intellect, professional skills, intuition which we use in building foundations to build trust.

    “Our knowledge and experience are very much needed now than ever,’’ he said.

    He said NICE would unveil alternative methods of construction that would be cheaper and durable.

    Ekpo said  the institution had to constitute committees to research and come up with low cost method of construction as Nigeria wriggled out of recession.

    According to him, high cost of construction materials militate against infrastructural development; hence the need to research on the way forward.

    “We choose the theme because we are just coming out of recession and infrastructural development is key to national development.

    “We have to research to make sure that construction goes on in the midst of economic challenges.

    “We are in a challenging economy and we have researched on how to engage less expensive material,’’ he said.

    Okhiria, in his response, expressed his delight for being chosen for the prestigious award.

    He said that the Nigeria railway services had evolved over the years and currently expanding and improving its services.

    Speaking with reporters at the sidelines of the event, Mr Kashim Ali, President, Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN), urged the Federal Government to tackle the nation’s infrastructural challenge.

    “When you have civil infrastructure, your health bills will come down; if you have portable water, diseases will be eliminated; if you have roads, people are willing to move.

    ‘It creates interaction and economic development; farmers will be able to take their produce to farm.

    “The challenges are mainly the lack of political will on the part of government because if you have priorities, you will put all your efforts toward actualising them.

    “The Federal Government should make the development of infrastructure a priority,’’ he said.

    He urged the Federal Government to adopt the new policy guideline for the development of infrastructure and also enforce the local content law in projects in order to reduce the cost of construction.

  • NRC ready to lift petroleum products from Apapa

    The Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) has restated its readiness to lift petroleum products, especially diesel, by tank wagons.

    It said the 40 pressurised tank wagons of 45,000 litres capacity each, had been purchased by the Corporation with the intention of moving petroleum products across the country at a cheaper, faster and safer ways.  The corporation has tank wagons that can take 1.8 million litres of fuel, with each gang, of 20 tank wagons taking 900,000 litres.

    Its Director of Operations, Mr Niyi Alli, told reporters in his office that the biggest challenge to lifting petroleum products by rail is the unpreparedness of industry operators to move their products by rail.

    “The industry, the tank farm owners need to make up their mind to patronise the railway. We have the capacity and reliability to meet the demands of the industry if and when they are ready to patronise the corporation,” he said.

    He also debunked speculations that the wagons have been rotting away since their purchase five years ago. He said the wagons are used regularly to deliver its diesel needs across the country, adding that they are parked at the Ebute Metta Work yard, in front of the Railway Police Command in order to assure its safety and security from vandals.

    He said: “Since we took delivery of the wagons, we have demonstrated that we have the capacity to lift liquid cargoes, especially petroleum products, as we have been using the tank wagons to move our diesel needs across the country. Our customers are beginning to see that it is cheaper to move this commodity round the country by rail.”

    He said freighting fuel by railway is at least 30 per cent cheaper than using articulated petroleum tankers.

    He said though the memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN), has not materialised, the corporation has signed MoU with a number of private operators and lifting of products may begin by November.

    “We are still discussing with a number of the oil operators and gradually, they are beginning to see the beauty of moving the product by rail,” he said.

    He said the corporation has rail siding into the five major oil tank farms in Apapa, adding that what needed to be done was for all the operators, especially those that have no such facilities to enter into agreements with those with presence on how they could use their tank farms to load for onward shipment to other parts of the country by rail.

    He said the corporation has not been lifting petrol because it is more combustible and requires more security precautions to be taken to ensure safety.

    “Unlike freighting of other products and even diesel, which is less combustive, petrol needed much more precautionary strategies. Operators needed to have more massive tank farm facilities to warehouse the product and be ready to lay the sidings on which the wagon would use to access the tank farms for loading and off loading of the products,” he said.

    He said the pressure by the Lagos State government to address the congestion on its roads, especially around Apapa is again driving attention back to the corporation. “If any operator approaches us that they need the wagons to lift their product, and support infrastructure are in place, we would make our wagons available,” he promised.

     

     

     

    Alli said already, the corporation has sealed an agreement with a tank farm owner in Minna to lift three million litres of petroleum products. “If we have such demands we can build our facility just to prove our readiness to increase our share He said to lift petroleum product, our customers must be ready to invest in ensuring the safety of the product because the corporation would not be involved in loading and offloading of products from its tank wagons.

    Addressing the challenges experienced by passengers on the Abuja – Kaduna Standard gauge railway, Alli said the perceived shortcomings would soon be over, as the federal government has ordered more locomotives and coaches to improve services along the route.

    “What we have been using to power the route until now are construction locomotives. We have been using only one rig to run that route seven days a week all through the last one year. The Federal Government has taken delivery of two locomotives and these would be put into use in the next two weeks. About seven coaches are also already on their way to the country from China. When these arrive, our services along the area would significantly improve our reliability and availability, and most of the problems occasioned by inadequate coach services would be reduced,” Alli said.

     

     

  • NRC begins Lagos-Kano rail services

    The Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) said it has commenced operations on Lagos to Kano rail services after two months of Jebba-Mokwa washout out as a result of heavy rainfall.

    Its Director of Operations, Mr Niyi Alli, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday that the corporation has resumed both passengers and freight services along the routes.

    “We have resumed operations after the unfortunate washout incident along Jebba-Mokwa road. The normal services have resumed between Western Line and the North in terms of haulage of freight and passengers. Necessary steps have been taken by the corporation to ensure such disaster be prevented in the nearest future,” he said.

    Alli said not only the railway way affected by the disaster but also the major road between Jebba to Mokwa town.

    He said adequate measures have been put in place to ensure the rail services were improved on a daily basis.

    “Adequate supervisions have been put in place on the tracks to prevent any disaster in future. The development would prevent further incident in order not to have much impact on the train services.

    “We are looking at the various washouts prone areas and ensuring necessary steps taken to prevent future occurrence at the same time minimise the impacts,” Alli said.

    The director said continuous rain has affected the quick execution of the project since June.

    NAN reports that NRC Managing Director Mr Fidet Okiria, had told the newsmen on June 16 that heavy rainfall had flooded and damaged railway line linking Jebba to Makwa routes.

  • Tank wagons: Railway asset rots away

    Tank wagons: Railway asset rots away

    Five years ago, the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) spent millions of naira on tank wagons. Two years ago, it struck a deal with marketers to lift their products. Nothing has come out of the deal and the wagons are rotting away, writes ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE

    They were the pride of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) when they were acquired five years ago.

    The Corporation ordered 40 tank wagons; 20 of which came in 2012, and the remaining a year later.

    The 40 wagons were to complement the corporation’s efforts in moving petroleum products nationwide.

    In 2015, oil marketers signified their intention to have the NRC lift their products.

    But four years after, the agreement has remained on hold; and  the wagons have been overgrown with weeds where they are kept. Those moved to Apapa ahead of freighting by some marketers are littering the place, others are rotting away at the works yard at Alagomeji, Yaba.

    With the capacity to carry 45,000 litres each, the 40 wagons could have been conveying 1,800,000 litres of petrol or other related products across the country from Apapa. That would have equalled 550 petroleum tankers with conveying capacity of 33,000 litres of fuel, taken off the road during each movement of the train.

    This could have brought relief to the roads, as the tankers would have been shuttling from  inland cargo ports or train stations to sales points.

    What happened to the initial enthusiasm about the wagons and their capacity to change how wet cargoes, especially petroleum products, are being moved?

    What happened to the September 2015 letter by the Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria to the NRC on cargo freighting? In the letter signed by its Executive Secretary, Mr. Obafemi Olawore, MOMAN hoped that the partnership would be mutually beneficial.

    The agreement was in reaction to the incessant accidents involving petroleum tankers in which lives were lost and properties destroyed.

    Even though the deal has not seen the light of day, MOMAN still believes in using rail to freight its cargoes.

    According to Olawore, rail haulage will make the roads safer.

    Checks revealed that the wagons may have been grounded by the system on which they should run. The corporation’s network of narrow gauge tracks have become derelict. The tank farms from where they should load the cargoes for transportation to the north, via Kano, NRC’s major commercial trunk route, are unconnected by train tracks.

    To the NRC, Apapa remains inaccessible.

    By not having rail access into their facilities, many of the marketers flouted planning regulations.

    Although the marketers refused to comment, a top NRC official  who did not want to be named, said virtually all the tank farms in Apapa have no rail access.

    Only Mobil and Oando, it was gathered, are accessible by rail. Of the two, Oando was a long time customer of the corporation before it stopped patronising railways.

    “Of all the oil majors operating tank farms in Apapa, only Mobil and Oando are accessible to the rail and Oando has been a long time customer,” the source added.

    Sadly, the failure, which was noticed in 2015, has remained, delaying the hauling of petroleum products by rail.

    In 2015, NRC’s then Director of Mechanical, Electrical and Signals, Mr. Fidet Okhiria said the corporation would lay the tracks to connect all tank farms.

    “By the time the tracks are laid into these tank farms, thousands of tons of cargoes and oil would be lifted weekly and this will assist in decongesting Apapa and take the pressure off the roads,” he said.

    Asked why the wagons were still grounded, Okhiria, who is now the corporation’s Managing Director said: “The wagons had been enmeshed in what you can describe as the Nigerian situation. All the oil majors seemed to have reverted to the old way of transporting their products and none is looking the way of the Corporation again.”

    He urged the marketers not to shut the window opened by the partnership with the corporation, adding that oil can be moved twice a week from Lagos to Kano within 72 hours.

    Invariably, 3.6 million litres of petrol or diesel could be moved by train weekly by the marketers, a development he described as huge, compared to how much it presently moves by road.

    “We believe our customers would have more confidence in us after upgrading these tracks. This is because it would assure them that we have reliable tracks and wagons, and can better safeguard their commodities,” Okhiria said.

    He said the corporation was yet to complete the laying of tracks into tank farms in Apapa. The corporation, he said, would continue to pursue that objective because all the tank farms are built on its land and “the agreement is that they should carry their products by railway.”

    Okhiria could not confirm the status of the track laying contract awarded in 2015, which should have been delivered in November of that year.

    The tracks, he said,  have been upgraded from 60 pap to 85 pap, which means the tracks are stronger and could withstand the pressure associated with cargo services.

    “We are changing the tracks from 60 to 85 rail pap. So, instead of the rail tracks breaking off as a result of heavy load or pressure, it will endure,” he said.

    Since it came to power, the Buhari administration has shown its determination to make the railway a major segment of transportation.

    Last year, Power, Works and Housing Minister Mr Babatunde Fashola urged marketers to patronise the rail.

    Why have the tank wagons been lying prostrate for five years, tying down funds that could have been deployed to better use?

    If the wagons could be of greater benefit on the long run, why has the sub-sector not been developed? Why has the corporation not taken steps to deepen its engagement with stakeholders in the petroleum industry, especially the marketers? Why has the Okhiria management not improved on what Adeseyi Sijuwade left in 2015?

    Okhiria however said the corporation has not abandoned the project.

    The government, he said, is deepening investments in the rail sector.

    Between 2015 and now, the government has completed the Abuja-Kaduna Standard Gauge rail line; broke the Lagos-Kano Standard gauge construction into lots and launched the Lagos-Ibadan standard gauge construction which is the second lot in order to lay a solid foundation for a  modern train infrastructure.

    According to Okhiria the wagons remain a strategic opening for marketers to make products available nationwide.

    With more investment aimed at boosting rail’s capacity, Okhiria hopes the country would soon join the one-billion cargo tonnage club, adding that countries with a billion tonnage rail cargo yearly, such as China, Russia, India, and United States also have the highest truck count.

    “We have been clamouring for inter-modal transport where some cargoes will be moved by road and others by rail. In fact, more than 50 per cent of the containers and other cargoes ought to be moved by rail,” said Tony Olabanji, a logistics expert.

    The snag is that the rail lines are  old and may not be compliant.

  • NRC to block illegal level crossings in Lagos

    The Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC) has said that all illegal level crossings within its Lagos District would soon be blocked, to stem incessant accidents.

    Mr Jerry Oche, the NRC’s District Manager for Lagos, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday that efforts had been put in place to block all the illegal level crossings in Lagos, to enhance safety.

    Oche said there were only 26 legal level crossing within the district, adding that many illegal crossings had been created by people which affects the operations of the NRC and was responsible for increased accidents in some places.

    “We only have 26 level crossings in Lagos State, from Ebute Meta here to Ifo Junction (FOJ). But if you have taken a train ride around these places, you will discover more than 26 level crossings.

    “In fact, the number of illegal crossings created by people in various areas triples that of the authorised ones. So what we intend to do is to block the illegal ones because they are another cause of accidents between motorists and our trains,” Oche said.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Labour warns against ‘secret’ concession of NRC

    Labour warns against ‘secret’ concession of NRC

    Labour has backed the Federal Government’s plan to concession the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC), demanding transparency in the process.

    It, however, kicked against the privatisation of the Federal Housing Authority (FHA), calling for its effective funding. It regretted that the FHA has been neglected by the government.

    Senior Staff Association of Statutory Corporation and Government Owned Companies (SSASCGOC), President Comrade Mohammed Yunusa, who addressed reporters in Abuja, warned against secret concession of the NRC.

    He pointed out that the union will support the planned concession of the NRC, only if there is a high level transparency in the process. He also added that privatisation of FHA will take away the ability of low-income earners to own houses of their own.

    The SSASCGOC chief warned against the government picking a favoured company behind the door, saying that the earlier attempt by the government to singlehandedly pick a company from the United States as a the concessionaire was not acceptable.

    Comrade Yunusa explained that the ideal thing to do is to advertise the concession and make it open for interested people to apply before the highest bidder with capability to run the corporation is picked.

    He said: “SSASCGOC is not averse to the change mantra of the present administration, particularly in its effort to bring back the rail networks in Nigeria to its lost glory.

    “It must be noted that Nigerian workers contributed immensely to the glorious performance of the rail sector up till 1984 before it started having problems. It must also be noted that workers of NRC were not in any way responsible for the demise of the then rail sector.

    “As a matter of fact, some of our members patriotically worked to the point of death.

    “We salute the courage of our heroes in the railway sector some of whom lost their lives in the quest to making the railway a pride of place for the nation. No thanks to irresponsible leadership.

    “Nobody should therefore attempt to discredit staff of the NRC just because of the failure of successive governments and its managers in NRC. To this end, we make bold to say we shall resist any form of reform aimed at discrediting and sending staff of NRC into the labour market, under whatever guise be it concessioning, franchising or public private partnership.

    “We have learnt our lessons from NITEL’s experience. Never shall we allow such again. According to Albert Einstein, we cannot solve our problems using the same thinking with which we created them.”

  • Pain as NRC demolishes illegal structures

    Pain as NRC demolishes illegal structures

    These people (NRC officials) have finished me. There is nothing my children and I will eat again. As you can see, my source of livelihood has just been destroyed by the Railway Corporation. I don’t know where to start again. As I am talking to you, I don’t have anything again…We are not aware of any rent paid by the occupants of the illegal structures.

    So, everything has ended today,” Mrs Adijat Olowonyo, 76, uttered in hushed tone as she sat hopelessly on the rubbles of her wooden shelter demolished by a task force working on the orders of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC).

    Her son, Monsuru, 32, and three grandchildren, who lived in the shanty with her, burrowed through the debris to pick any valuable materials left under the heap of logs and plywood. Looking dazed and forlorn, Mrs Olowonyo, a petty trader, wept in silence as the bulldozer ripped through a row of shanties, leaving a trail of wreckage in a neighbourhood she has lived ‘comfortably’ for 35 years.

    “I don’t know where to go from here,” Mrs Olowonyo retorted when the reporter asked what her next move was.

    Apparently helpless, she said: “I knew this place does not belong to me, but I did not know I will leave railway line in this (embarrassing) manner.”

    Mrs Olowonyo, who is a native of Ifo Local Government Area in Ogun State, said: “I will return to my village.”

    Had she been given ample time to prepare for the demolition, she said she would have suffered minimal loss, because she would have moved her belongings out peaceably to a safe location. But, the notice was short, just as the loss she suffered was incalculable.

    This aptly described the tears, pain, agony and anxiety of residents of railway, following the demolition of illegal structures and shanties built along rail track. No fewer than 2,000 shanties have been demolished in the exercise, which began from railway corridors in Mushin to Yaba, Surulere, Oshodi, Ikeja, Iju-Ishaga, Agbado and Alakuko, among others.

    The demolition was carried out by NRC Committee for Removal of Illegal Structures led by Mr Anthony Ochuko Onyokoko.

    At Mushin axis, the demolition started at 8:00 a.m. when many of the traders were yet to open for business.

    The exercise is to pave the way for the commencement of the 155-kilometre Lagos-Ibadan standard gauge modern rail project of the Federal Government, which was launched in February by the Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo.

    Managing Director of the NRC, Fidet Okhiria, at a press conference said no “illegal structure” built within 50 feet from the railway line would be spared by the corporation’s bulldozers, pointing out that only property owners with valid documents would be compensated.

     

    Victims’ painful laments

     

    Before the demolition, the railway corridors were dotted with brick and wooden structures, which served as shelters for deprived families and vagabonds. The entire perimeter of the railway corridors used to be separated from the residential area by iron fence placed 50 feet away from the rail track.

    As human activities increased around the corridors, the iron fence was pulled down and shanties were raised along the track, leaving a dangerous distance of about four feet away from the rail track. Crimes also thrived in the neighbourhood, because it housed criminals and smokers of Indian hemp.

    Some of the residents converted the space for trading, building makeshift shops and kiosks. However, the residents did not just move to occupy the space illegally. They claimed the NRC gave them “informal approval” to build the structures along the railway corridors.

    Southwest Report gathered that some of the residents began living on the railway line in the early 1960s and paid regular rent and lease to the railway corporation.

    Pa Ebenezer Ogunyemi, whose three-room wooden shelter, was pulled down by the NRC’s bulldozer, claimed he usually paid rent to “designated official” of the corporation. In tears, Ogunyemi was hapless when the structures were pulled down by the NRC.

    A 39-year-old single mother of four, who identified herself as Iya Ibeji, said railway line became a new abode for her after she was ejected from her one-room apartment in nearby Akinbode Street. She said she paid rent to the railway corporation through a third party, which initially got NRC’s approval to build the structure.

    Iya Ibeji said: “I have been rendered homeless. There is no place in which my children and I will sleep again. Since my husband abandoned us many years ago, we have been surviving on the profit I made from my petty trade. I was ejected from a one-room apartment and I moved to this place some four years ago to start another life. Now that they have demolished everywhere, I don’t know where to go from here. I can’t afford to pay rent for a single room, because houses in Mushin are expensive.”

     

    Traders count losses

     

    Traders along the demolished railway corridors could not be consoled as they counted their losses. Mrs Kabirat Adeniji, 48, who operated a wholesale store of assorted drinks, rolled on the ground as her three concrete shops were pulled down by the bulldozer. She said she had recently stocked her shops with goods worth N500, 000.

    Mrs Adeniji, who said she rented the three shops 18 years ago, said: “These people (NRC officials) have finished me. There is nothing my children and I will eat again. As you can see, my source of livelihood has just been destroyed by the Railway Corporation. I don’t know where to start again. As I am talking to you, I don’t have anything again.”

    Mrs Bola Jacob, another trader, who opened a grocery shop in the railway corridor the previous week before the demolition, put her loss at N380, 000, because she did not have the opportunity to move her wares to a safe place.

    She said: “I moved to this place in early April, after paying two sets of rents; one to the landlord of the house which my shop is attached to and the other to a railway corporation official. If I had known the government is ready to demolish the structures on railway line, I would not have paid for the shop. I have lost close to N380, 000 worth of goods, because the demolition happened suddenly. I appeal to the government to help me, because I have lost everything I invested in the business.”

    Pelumi Aluko, a hairdresser, was lucky. She had moved all her machinery and other handy equipment out of the wooden shanty before the NRC’s bulldozer got to the spot. She, however, regretted paying rent to an NRC official days before the demolition.

     

    Fifty-Four-year-old

    mosque, churches gone

     

    While traders and residents lamented their losses, members of religious houses built on the railway corridors gathered to take stock of cost of the demolition. No fewer than eight churches, three mosques and two preparatory schools were reduced to rubbles in the exercise.

    Imam of a 54-year-old Orire Mosque demolished at Tinuola axis of the railway line, Alhaji Abdulazeez Ajetunmobi, said the mosque was built on the approval of the NRC.

    He said: “This mosque was built in 1963 and there was no prior notice for the demolition. We only saw the NRC officials a day before the demolition was carried out. They came to mark residential buildings and shops along the rail track for demolition. We were not told the demolition would be carried out the second day. Had we been notified, we would have started to relocate the mosque’s properties.

    I could not quantify in cash the amount we lost after the mosque was pulled down. Only last month, we spent N2.5 million to renovate the mosque and carried out some capital projects. We bought new sound system and mordernised the ceiling. These cost the mosque’s worshippers millions. Everything is gone now.”

    Coordinator of a demolished Sunday school of a Pentecostal church adjacent to the mosque, Mr Israel Komolafe, said the exercise took the church by surprise. He said the church had been occupying the space for 16 years and had been paying monthly rent to NRC officials. He said the corporation did not give notice to vacate the space.

    Prophet Eri Atobatele whose Cherubim and Seraphim (Ijo Temidire) Church was marked for demolition said he paid N275, 000 six months ago to rent the property. He appealed to NRC not to demolish the church, since it is far from the rail track.

    Arguments ensued between the NRC officials and a septuagenarian, Pa Madamidola Aremu, whose property, leased to Cherubim and Seraphim Church, was marked for demolition. Aremu, who claimed to have Queen’s Conveyance approving the perimeter of the property, accused NRC of encroachment on his property. He threatened to sue the corporation if the property is demolished.

     

    Notorious crime spot pulled down

     

    The demolition is probably a blessing in disguise for those living around Mushin Train Station. What is known as HQ – a dangerous smokers’ spot – was pulled down during demolition. Until it was cleared, HQ used to be dangerous corner for unwary passersby. It was den of narcotics abusers, smokers of Indian hemp and notorious bandits, who carried out their nefarious activities in broad daylight.

    Southwest Report learnt that the Lagos police taskforce had cleared the crime site many times in the last 20 years, but the effort was not successful because of the connivance of property owners around the axis whose houses were used as safe haven to store the unlawful items.

    The clearing of HQ may have excited the residents and frequent passersby, but it may be a temporary relief until the NRC permanently barricades its corridors from the buildings around the axis.

     

    ‘They gave us short notice’

     

    The victims complained that the railway corporation did not give them enough time to remove their properties and relocate before the demolition. Some of them could not pick their belongings while the bulldozer cleared the illegal shanties and concrete structures.

    Southwest Report gathered that the occupants got notice to vacate the shanties less than 24 hours before the exercise was carried out. It was also gathered that the NRC officials were in the area the previous day to mark the illegal structures for demolition. It took many of the traders by surprise when the NRC officials led a contingent of riot policemen to carry out the demolition the following day.

    While they admitted the corridors belong to the NRC, the affected persons accused the corporation of insensitivity, saying NRC was wrong not to give them time to relocate after its officials collected monthly rent from them.

    Some of them said the NRC’s Station Manager in Mushin, whose name was identified as Mr Ojo, collected rent in cash on behalf of the corporation.

    Mrs Aluko, a hairdresser, said her shop was demolished a day after she paid N2, 000 to the NRC official as rent. She wondered why the occupants were not notified of the demolition before they paid the rents.

    In protest, some of the traders besieged the Mushin station of the NRC to get back the rents paid to Ojo, who allegedly ran away on sighting the crowd.

  • Five firms shortlisted for NRC’s narrow gauge concession

    FIVE multinational companies with requisite experience in railway have so far indicated interest and bided for the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) narrow gauge system, its Managing Director, Mr. Fidet Okhiria, has said.
    Okhiria said any firm which is eventually selected by the Federal Government will manage the assets of the NRC western line (Lagos-Kano) and the Eastern line (Port- Harcourt-Maiduguri) and improve on their services for the benefit of Nigerians.
    Okhiria, who spoke at this year’s Fellows and Corporate Members Forum of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport (CILT) Nigeria, at the weekend, was represented by the NRC’s Director of Operations, Mr. Niyi Ali.
    He hailed the Federal Government for its commitment to the rail rehabilitation and modernization, which he said, has started yielding positive results.
    Describing the railway as the backbone of the economy and the artery of the transportation system, Okhiria said rail transport remains the way to go if the government was serious in diversifying the economy and finding solutions to problems of mass transit for passengers and freights.
    He said from its glorious years in the 60s, when the NRC accounted for over 11 million passenger traffic and about three million metric tonnes of freights, the railway as at 2008 could hardly boast of carrying 1.996 million passengers, while the freight nose-dived abysmally.

  • NRC suspends Abuja-Kaduna train service

    The Nigerian Railways Corporation (NRC) has suspended its passenger train service from Abuja to Kaduna on Monday and Tuesday because of the Eid el-Kabir public holidays.

    Alhaji Yakub Mahmood, the Deputy Director, Public Relations of the NRC, made this known in Lagos on Saturday.

    Mahmood said the period would also be used to carry out comprehensive maintenance of the train.

    He assured passengers that the Abuja-Kaduna train service would resume on Wednesday.

    “The corporation highly regrets any inconvenience this may cause our esteemed passengers,” he said.

    The Abuja-Kaduna passengers train inaugurated by President Muhammadu Buhari move from Idu in Abuja to Rigasa in Kaduna.