Tag: reopens

  • As Third Mainland Bridge reopens

    After a four- day integrity test on the Third Mainland Bridge, the government reopened the facility on Sunday. ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE examines efforts to work on the bridge.

    The Third Mainland Bridge was reopened 5pm on Sunday by the Federal and the Lagos State governments. It was some eight hours earlier than the 00.00 hours (12 a.m.) deadline earlier slated for the exercise.

    The early reopening was received with huge excitement across the state as motorists heaved a sigh of relief at the multiplier effect of the reopening on travel pattern.

    The last 72 hours had been tortuous for motorists, who spent several hours on the alternative routes identified by the state government.

    Despite the huge deployment of policemen and traffic agencies to manage the fallout of the traffic, it remained a major crisis all through the weekend, with many corporate firms with offices on the mainland directing its workers to resume in those offices and avoid the Lagos Island if the bridge was not reopened on schedule by the government at the weekend.

    For a country noted for its horrible maintenance culture, the seriousness with which the government had attended to auditing the integrity of the Third Mainland Bridge has elicited renewed interest.

    The last time the bridge went through a comprehensive maintenance was 2012, when the then government of President Goodluck Jonathan closed the bridge down for four months between July and November.

    The three-day closure, which it said was needed for integrity checks, was  meant to again check all the 11 expansion joints for wears and tears, in order to eventually determine the kind of maintenance that would be needed to be carried out.

    Each of the expansion joints was comprehensively tested during the exercise while required remedial works have been noted, the Permanent Secretary Ministry of Transportation Dr Taiwo Salaam observed on Sunday.

    Assessing the scope and success of the work, Salaam said: “We finished work on all the joints by 2.30pm on Sunday and the bridge was shortly thereafter opened again for vehicular traffic.”

    According to him, it is after the completion of the exercise that experts in the Federal Ministry of Works are going to meet on the reports collated during this three- day exercise to know the type of remedial action that the bridge would need this time around as well as the time duration for such an exercise.

    The Federal Controller of Works, Fred Adedamola Kuti, said the government had returned to the 12 kilometre long bridge because some of the bridge’s expansion joints have started showing signs of stress.

    Kuti further assured that a more comprehensive test would be carried out on the bridge,   that after the surface work, divers would go under the bridge to determine the wellbeing of the foundation, beams, piers and the stanchions.

    On May 4, this year, the Federal Executive Council had approved $53 million (about N18.8 billion) for a comprehensive maintenance of the Third Mainland Bridge.

    The required maintenance, which is expected to last for 27 months according to the Minister of Power Works and Housing Babatunde Fashola, is to be handled by the Italian company Borini Prono.

    Detailing the magnitude of the construction to be carried out and the reason repairs will last for 27 months,Fashola said the project will involve the replacement of 33 piles at the first phase. A total of 177 piles would be strengthened in all and expansion joints linking the bridge together would be assessed with a view to replacing the obsolete ones.

    Happenings in other lands

    Government’s commitment to ensure the wellbeing of the bridge was validated with the recent collapse of the Genoa Morandi Bridge in Italy early in the month.

    Eleven years ago, an eight-land interstate highway bridge over the Mississippi River also collapsed in Minneapolis, killing 13 people.

    The Financial Times asserted after the Genoa disaster that Italy officials knew of the impending disaster six months before it collapsed but did nothing to limit traffic on the sick bridge.

    Like Morandi bridge, which killed at least 38 people, the Minneapolis bridge was opened in 1967.

    Just as the US National Transportation Safety Board  concluded that a design flaw in the bridge had contributed to its collapse in 2007, so are Italian prosecutors investigating whether the Genoa disaster was not as a result of a similar cause. In each case, the volume of traffic passing over the bridge in the years before its collapsed was much greater than had been foreseen during its construction in the 1960s.

    Similar trend, especially in traffic volume, which was fingered in the above instances has started manifesting on the third Mainland Bridge.

    While the volume of vehicles at the point of construction was less than 10,000 vehicle count on the Third Mainland Bridge, as at August it is said to be close to 700,000 per day.

    Disclosing this last week, Salaam said: “On the average, 652,800 vehicles use the bridge daily”, a development which makes remedial work on the bridge extremely imperative to prevent its collapse.

    The $1 billion bridge completed in 1990, and reputed as the second longest bridge in Africa and the longest in West Africa, began to exhibit signs of stress in 2006, when commuters began to report that the bridge was vibrating. Remedial works began on different portions of the bridge, leading to partial closures at different times in 2007 and 2008, while a maintenance work was carried out in 2012.

    The Director of Highways and Bridges in the Federal Ministry of Works, Adetokunbo Shogbesan, assured that the maintenance test on the Third Mainland Bridge is aimed at giving a comprehensive facelift to the bridge.

    He said most of the bridges in the state, built by the Federal Government have between 50 to 60 years lifespan. “If these bridges are better maintained, and human abuses are minimized, they could last even longer.

    Comparing the government’s response to what happened in Italy, Shogbesan said the Italian government neglected maintenance culture. They failed to carry out regular integrity test, which the Nigerian government continued to carry out from time to time.

    “We will continue to assure Nigerians that the government is committed to ensuring that integrity tests will continue on all the bridges every five to 10 years, while we would continue to appeal to the government to help ensure that dead weights on the bridges are evacuated before they endanger the wellbeing of the bridges.”

    Salaam confirmed that the Federal Government has continued to carry out routine maintenance of all its bridge assets in the state. He said Eko Bridge, which was the oldest, construction of which started in 1950, the Carter Bridge and the Lekki-Ikoyi Bridge, are all in stable shape.

    He assured Lagosians that the government is working on a multi-pronged approached aimed at evacuating the trailers and tankers off the roads and bridges, to a much organised holding bay, from where they would move upon a call up system to Apapa to either lift petroleum products or drop their empty containers.

    After the trailers were evacuated from the bridges, the government, he said, would conduct a comprehensive audit of wellbeing on all the bridges to know the impact of these dead weights on them as well as carry out comprehensive repair needed to keep them fit again.

    The Commissioner for Transportation Ladi Lawanson, who thanked Lagosians for their perseverance, said the government would continue to work in their collective interest.

    He disclosed that the government is determined to promote waterway transportation, adding that concrete actions would begin to manifest on the waterways in the next two years.

    He said government is dredging its waterways, cleaning the waterways of all ship wrecks, charting water routes, and bringing in new boats. He disclosed that discussion is at advanced stage with investors to commence commercial passenger operation on the waterways.

    “The Lagos State Government is determined to shift attention from the roads to the waterways. In the next two years, Lagosians would begin to see our actions in this direction, as all negotiations would have crystallised and begin to manifest,” Lawanson said.

    Though both governments, still kept the date of actual repair work on the bridge under wraps, it is almost certain that it would not occur until the trailers and tankers that had seized the bridges were moved out of the roads to holding bays.

  • Epe school reopens as govt builds watch towers

    Epe school reopens as govt builds watch towers

    Twelve days after the kidnap of six of its pupils the Lagos State Model College at Igbonla, Epe yesterday resumed academic activities.

    Commissioner of Police Fatai Owoseni, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education Mr Adesina Odeyemi and Tutor-General/Permanent Secretary Mrs Margaret Solarin witnessed the school’s reopening.

    Watch towers are being constructed in the school to ensure 24-hour surveillance and to keep intruders at bay.

    A statement by the Assistant Director, Public Affairs in the Ministry of Education, Adesegun Ogundeji quoted Owoseni as saying that security agencies were working to free the pupils “but they have been careful with the use of force”.

    The statement said the principal of the Senior School, Mr. Bajo Olugbenga, was optimistic that more parents would bring back their children.

    The statement reads: “Everywhere was calm and serene; teaching and learning were going on. There was no sign of apprehension or anxiety among the staff and students who were seen going about their normal activities. SSS III Science pupils were seen doing their physics practical of the National Examination Council (NECO) exam.

    “Armed security operatives were on patrol; some were on ground to ensure safety. Contractors were also seen working on the construction of watch towers that would work for 24 hours to ensure that intruders could be located from afar before they wreak havoc.

    “Apart from the watch towers, the perimeter wall fence is being illuminated with 40 250 -watt halogen lamps for security survey throughout the night. The bush adjoining the perimeter fence has been cleared while armed security operatives will be deployed permanently to man the school.

    “Governor Akinwunmi Ambode promised during the Children’s Day celebration that his government would stop at nothing to ensure the safe return of the abducted pupils.

    “Represented by his deputy, Dr Idiat Oluranti Adebule, the governor said the state would not be intimidated to abandon his avowed pursuit of academic and physical development of the pupils.

    “Some pupils who don’t want their names in print appealed to the abductors to release their mates unhurt as they are only children who could not have contributed to whatever was the grouse of the kidnappers.

    “They (the pupils) urged their parents to have confidence in the government and God to bring their colleagues back to school for their academic pursuit to continue. The situation in the school they noted is very safe.”

  • YABATECH reopens, kicks off semester examination

    YABATECH reopens, kicks off semester examination

    The Yaba College of Technology, Lagos on Tuesday reopened for academic activities after a four-week break to mourn the death of a final year student, who died on Feb. 10.

    A correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), who monitored the resumption, reports that anxious students trooped in to complete their undertaking forms and collected examination dockets.

    NAN reports that security was beefed-up on the campus, as only students with the institution’s identity cards were allowed in.

    Some students were seen rushing to their various course supervisors to submit undertaking forms and were collecting their examination dockets.

    In a female hostel, ‘`Akada hall’, scores of students were seen queuing up for allocation of bed spaces.

    An ND II, Business Administration student, Miss Adebamigbe Fadaini, told NAN that she was very happy to be back on campus.

    Fadaini said she spent the break to read and prepare hard for the examination.

    “I have completed my registration and collected examination docket, the process is very simple.

    “I just want to be through with the examination once and for all, because we have wasted a lot of time this session.

    “I am very happy to be back on campus,’’ Fadaini said.

    Another student, an HND I, Micro Biology student, Miss Toyosi Adekanye, commended the college’s management for reopening the college.

    Adekanye said that she was ready for the examination but urged the management to provide basic amenities during the examination period.

    “I am happy to be back on campus because back home, there were so many distractions from reading.

    “I have filled the undertaking form and also collected my examination docket, everything is ready for the examination,’’ she said.

    Also, the Head, Public Relations Unit of the College, Mr Charles Oni, told NAN that the management was prepared for the smooth conduct of the examination on March 30.

    Oni said that the interests and welfare of the students were important and that the management would continue to ensure that.

    “We love our students even if they pretend and do not acknowledge it but as parents and management, their welfare is very important to us,’’ he said.

    NAN reports that the Academic Board of the college had on March 16, directed that the institution be reopened on March 29.

    The Board also announced that the 2014/2015 Second Semester Examination would start on March 30.

    It directed all students to fill an undertaking form to be of good conduct during the examination.

    The college was closed following students’ protest on Feb. 11, over the death of a student, Miss Comfort Dazan.

     

  • OOU reopens

    OOU reopens

    The Governing Council of Olabisi Onabanjo University Ago-Iwoye has ordered the immediate reopening of the university.

    Lectures start today to continue the suspended 2013/2014 academic session.

    The university was closed by the management to forstall breakdown of peace following students’ negative reaction to the state government’s reduction of the university’s fees.

  • OAU reopens

    Students of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife are to resume on Sunday to complete the Harmattan (second) semester of the 2013/2014 academic session.

    The university was shut on June 18 following a protest by students over school fees hike.

    In a statement the Public Relations Officer of the University, Mr. Abiodun Olarewaju, noted that the Senate of the University met last Friday to announce the re-opening of the university.

    Lectures are to start Monday.

    The release warned on the students to face their studies and avoid causing trouble that may truncate the re-adjusted academic calendar.

  • Shell reopens oil pipeline

    Shell reopens oil pipeline

    Anglo-Dutch oil group Shell said at the weekend it had resumed production after repairing a sabotaged supply pipeline in the Niger Delta.

    The company shut down the Trans-Niger Pipeline (TNP) on June 19 following an explosion and fire in an area where oil theft has occurred, the latest such incident in Africa’s largest producer.

    The incident resulted in a cut of 150,000 barrels of oil per day.

    “SPDC has repaired the valve point and removed six other crude oil theft connections in its continuing efforts to maintain the integrity of the line,” it said of the incident in Bodo west in Ogoniland.

     

  • Eagles camp reopens first week of March

    Eagles camp reopens first week of March

    The Super Eagles will in the first week of March resume camping for the 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifying match against Kenya, which is slated for the U. J. Esuene Stadium, Calabar on Saturday, 23rd March, 2013.

    Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) General Secretary, Barrister Musa Amadu confirmed on Tuesday that the home boys will hit camp two weeks before the arrival of the overseas-based professionals one week to the crucial game.

    “Now that we are the champions of Africa, we know that every team will prepare much harder whenever they are to play Nigeria. We don’t want to leave ourselves open to any sucker punch. Getting to the top and staying there requires a lot of hard work,” Amadu said.

    Super Eagles’ Head Coach Stephen Keshi is expected to release the list of his pick for the match after a meeting with the NFF Technical Committee.

    African champions Nigeria currently top the Group F of the African series for the 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil, with four points from a 1-0 home defeat of Namibia and a 1-1 draw against Malawi in Blantyre in June 2012.

  • SGF reopens debate on State of Osun

    CONTROVERSY over the name change by the Osun State Government raged on yesterday.

    Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Senator Anyim Pius Anyim said the adoption of the name “State of Osun” by the government is unconstitutional.

    Governor Rauf Aregbesola, who proposed the name for the Living Spring State, argued there was nothing unconstitutional in what his administration did.

    According to him, there is no section in the constitution that stipulates how the component states making up the country should be addressed.

    The constitution, he said, clearly specifies that Nigeria shall consist of 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja. Aregbesola said the Statute Book is silent on where to put the state.

    Anyim’s comment was made during a courtesy/advocacy visit by the House of Representatives Committee on Diaspora, when a member of the Committee, Ajiboye Famurewa, introduced himself as a lawmaker from “ the State of Osun.”

    “That is unconstitutional,” Anyim said, throwing the visiting lawmakers into laughter.

    The SGF went on: “Let me also say that, even though in a lighter mood, that the State of Osun issue should be a serious matter. And for me, it is a very serious matter.

    “We should not trivialise issues regarding our nationhood. More particularly as it could be interpreted anyhow to affect the unity of the country.

    “The constitutional name for each state should be upheld, more particularly by parliamentarians. Ordinary local politicians can try to politick with it, but not those of you who are to keep the country in shape and in firm stand.”