Tag: roads

  • By their roads

    By their deeds, says the Bible, we shall know them.  For some states, however, by their roads we shall know them.  Grim one for travellers, though.

    Hardball, with some other colleagues, had cause to travel, last weekend, for the funeral service of a colleague’s father.  Destination was Kabba, in Kogi State. And most of the distance traversed was between Ekiti and Kogi states, a two-some sharing soaring notoriety in road decay.  Indeed, after the seeming endless travel, a lady among the travelling party joked on phone: we had toured all of the “endless” Ekiti, yet the journey was nowhere near its ending!

    In Ekiti, Fayose’s country, there was virtually nothing happening. As the party traversed the wonderful greenery of what should have been a rustic paradise, what coursed through the perceptive mind was sheer paralysis: no new schools, no new life, no new roads — except, of course, the concrete eyesore that violently bifurcated a section of the Ado Ekiti main artery, a very epitome of flyover-for-flyover’s sake. A government without ideas never merrily exposed itself so starkly!

    But that wasn’t even the main gist. The main story was the Ikole-Oye-Aiyedun-Omuo Ekiti axis, where a long stretch of road, hitherto a relief to motorists, is breaking up fast.  Along the route too, you saw a school block roof completely blown off; and other school buildings, mere carcasses without window frame — again, ample evidence of a government on seeming vacation.

    Indeed, you got that sorry feeling that over here, in hardy Ekiti country, government had taken a break, and there was absolutely nothing the people could do about it. Well, it’s Ekiti country, and Emperor (sorry, Governor ) Ayodele Fayose had taken full time off government work for meaningless stunts. Tough luck for his electors!

    But as dreary and dreadful the Ikole-Omuo stretch had become, it was only a mild dress rehearsal for the hell to come — and that very hell started in earnest from the Iyamoye-Ekirin-Adde-Iffe-Iyara -Egbeda-Kabba axis!

    Geez!  Ever seen a fitting metaphor for once-upon-a-road? This was it.

    “Don’t they have a governor here?” Someone snapped, as the bus lunged and plunged into big craters.

    “As a matter of fact, they do,” another replied, all sarcasm.  “But he only comes home during weekends!” The laconic wit was biting.

    “No wonder,” the lady that initiated the discourse admitted. “How else would the entrance into your state look like this — and you still claim to be governor!”

    Though the bumps and craters would ease off as you eventually approached Kabba, for the traveller, the harm was already done.

    But before you were even celebrating, Kabba soon revealed itself as hopeless captive to water erosion, which has done endless havoc to its roads, many of which appear really old, and untouched for a long, long time.

    At a particular T-junction, the erosion completely washed off the tar, as if bragging who was lord of the manor in the land! The rest of most of the road stock was a canvas of potholes and craters.

    So, when the holy book says by their fruits we shall know them, luckless travellers, put through this daily grind could we ll echo: yeah, by our roads, we shall shall know them!

    It is a sad story of how rot, not life, defines a state — or two.  Sad!

  • Putting roads in better shape

    Putting roads in better shape

    Virtually all the roads in the country are bad. From Abuja to Lagos, Maiduguri, Lokoja, Port Harcourt, Gusau, Ibadan, Ilorin and Enugu. Many blame it all on poor maintenance of the infrastructure, writes ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE

    OWER, Works and Housing Minister Babatunde Fashola’s major headache as far as roads are concerned is how to maintain them.

    Poor maintenance culture, Fashola said, remains the bane of good roads.

    At the just-concluded National Council on Works in Abuja, Fashola argued that roads nationwide suffered from lack of maintenance.

    He said: “The problem with the nation’s road network is not lack of quality, but poor maintenance culture.”

    He added that prompt repairs remain the key, if the nation must solve the crisis of bad roads.

    Fashola insisted that Nigeria  built smoother roads compared to other parts of the world. “Nigeria builds more quality roads which can stand the test of time. If you go to other countries, they maintain even their bumpy roads, our roads are smoother. We build to higher desired specifications. The missing link is maintenance,” he said.

    He also underscored the importance of markings and signages, which are grossly inadequate on roads, arguing that a change is urgently necessary if the government must bequeath safe, motorable roads to her people.

    Stakeholders and experts agree with Fashola.

    For Patrick Adenusi, Founder Safety Without Borders, maintenance is key. “If we want to see real change, we must work on our psyche and maintain our roads,” Adenusi said.

    Adenusi, said lack of maintenance was also affecting the bridges, adding that most bridges, which ought to have lasted for 50 years, are collapsing because of long years of neglect. He cited the collapsed Mokwa-Jebba Bridge, which is going to cost the Federal Government about N2.5 billion to repair as part of the huge cost of neglect of public infrastructure.

    He said regular funding was the key to the neglect of roads. To restore most of the roads there must be new funding paradigm.

     

    Long neglect

    The story of the 193,200 kilometres stretch of roads across the country has been that of age-long neglect.

    The last time adequate attention was given to roads, according to experts, was the pre-independence era, when the Public Works Department (PWD) held sway.

    Across all the major colonial divisions/districts, and later regions of pre-independent Nigeria, the British government established the PWD, which, among other mandates, cleared grasses on road shoulders, cleaning and desilting floodwater ducts and gutters, and patched the roads.

    The PWD until the end of the First Republic got its subventions directly from the colonial government. Its line of funding began to be blurred during the military rule.

    The era, however, planted the seed of the neglect of PWD. Successive administrations concentrated on road construction and the opening up of the country in line with emerging National Economic Development Plans (NEDP) of successive administration, from the mid 60s to late 80s.

    With the decentralisation of road maintenance, following the classifications of roads into three trunks in the 60s, the fate of PWD was sealed. Each state merely copied the Federal Government’s template which was to provide intervention fund for the repair of roads, which, in most cases, wasn’t regular.

    Direct funding of the repairs soon became unfeasible because of paucity of funds. With the grim realities of the economic crunch, the government in the 80s introduced tolling on some roads to generate funds for maintenance.

    The toll worked, until the government in 2003 stopped it because of corruption.

    The government resorted to direct budgetary funding and eventually established the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency (FERMA), in 2007, to coordinate the maintenance responsibility of the Ministry of Works.

    An amendment before the National Assembly, however, intends to stop FERMA.

    In order words, policy instability like Dr Joseph Shojobi, a transportation engineer, noted is a key issue to the whole problem.

    He stated that as the government  tackles the long years of neglect, it must think up new and better funding avenues for regular maintenance.

    To the chairman, Senate Committee on Roads Infrastructure, Senator Gbenga Ashafa, the roads have a bad profile because maintenance is capital intensive. He argued, there may be the need for new statutes to regulate activities and provide a window for sanctions.

    According to Ashafa, in a paper presented at a Transportation forum in Lagos recently, six bills, among them; the Nigerian Railway Authority Bill, 2015, the National Transport Commision Bill, 2015, the National Roads Funds Bill, 2015, the Federal Roads Authority Bill, 2015, the National Inland Waterways Authority Bill, 2015, and the Nigerian Ports and Harbor Authority Bill, 2015 are at various stages before the National Assembly since 2015, aimed at addressing virtually all gray areas in the sector.

     

    Way out

    Besides policy instability, Dr. Tajudeen Bawa ‘Allah, pioneer dean, School of Transportation Studies, Lagos State University (LASU), identified two other issues that impact the roads badly. First, according to him, is the number of heavy vehicles on the roads. If the railway begins to work, he insists, the roads would be relieved of their excess load and would last longer.

    The second is the weather. “Our weather does not help our roads. The yearly rainfall weakens our roads considerably. Research has shown that 80 percent of our roads are laterite (earth) base and not stone. What this means is that they are easily washed off anytime there is heavy downpour.”

    This, according to Bawa ‘Allah, means that we must begin to change our roads to stone-base, or ensure that new ones being built have stone base as well, as ensure that we provide adequately for the maintenance of existing laterite-base ones.

    “When you reduce cost during construction and adopt laterite base instead of stone, you must be prepared to provide funding for maintenance every year. The realisation is that it costs more eventually. Government should start constructing more stone-base roads, especially in the Southwest, Southeast and Southsouth. Let government’s attention shift from laterite base. We have enough mountains that could be blasted to generate the stones required,” he said.

    He also advocated that the Federal Government return to tolls of all the highways.

    “Major roads especially highways should be tolled and the funds should be centrally collected and disbursed, the agency should also be responsible for scheduled maintenance of the roads without any interference from the Federal Government or its agencies.”

    For other classes of roads, Bawa’Allah said governments should solely bear the cost of maintenance. “State roads might be difficult to toll, so state governments must brace up to continue to finance regular repair of all other classes of roads, both of the states or local government (inner city) roads.”

    Shojobi, who retired from the University of Lagos in 1976, carpeted the Obasanjo government for abolishing toll gates. “If the toll gates had remained, it would have generated funds that would have been adequate  for the maintenance of major highways.

    Shojobi said before its stoppage in 2002, the government’s revenue from tolls were: N569 million (2000), N742 million (2001) and N779 million (2002).

    He said: “If this had continued, revenue from tolls alone would, by now, have grossed over N1 billion and in the last 15 years it would have made quite a lot and Nigeria would not have been groaning under the yoke of funding the deplorable road networks despite the recession.”

    Noting that Nigeria loses N80 billion monthly on operating cost to vehicular repairs due to bad roads, Shojobi said Nigerians would heave a sigh of relief, if fresh funds were generated and an independent agency saddled with maintaining them.

    Describing the roads as  both national and an international asset, Shojobi said part of the problem is that people don’t think they should pay for using them.

    “Unlike electricity, water or gas usage, which people still pay for their daily use, despite being collectively paid for from the commonwealth, nobody thinks they should pay for using the roads. As a national and international asset, its usage ought to be paid for. That is the way we could all sustain it and continue to enjoy good motorable roads.”

    Bawa’Allah identified the weather as a major debilitating factor that predisposes the roads to incessant failings, but Shojobi said most roads suffer premature failures, largely as a result of usage and abuse.

    He called for the establishment of an agency to be in charge of the maintenance, adding that agencies such as the Directorate of Foods, Roads and Rural Infrastructure (DFFRI) and the Petroleum Trust Fund (PTF) left huge impact.

    Shojobi agreed with Fashola that the roads lacked appropriate markings and signages.

    While Fashola stressed that installing signages on roads was economical, experts said their deployment would make travelling more pleasurable and the roads more beautiful.

    “A lot of Nigerian drivers don’t know anything about road signages. This is a country with over 80 percent of uninformed road users who knew almost next to nothing about road markings. This makes Nigeria a very unique nation. But government should not say it would not install road signages and road markings,” Adenusi said.

  • I’ve performed better than all my predecessors, says Okorocha

    I’ve performed better than all my predecessors, says Okorocha

    Imo State Governor and the Chairman, All Progressive Peoples (APC) Governors Forum, Rochas Okorocha has declared that his achievements in the last six years has surpassed those of his predecessors put together.

    The governor, who spoke with State House correspondents in Abuja, also said that his record will be difficult for his successor to beat.

    According to him, his administration has impacted positively on the lives of Imo citizens.

    “A good Governor that impacted positively on the lives of the people. I’m in this job not for the profit of it but for the honour and glory of the job. So I want to leave a legacy.

    “I want  Imo people to miss me and they will definitely. Believe you me they have not seen such developmental works before now and they will miss it. The only problem I have is that anybody that comes after me and does not perform will be stoned.

    “Because you cannot come to Imo State now and say you want to abolish free education from primary to university, they will not accept. I have spoilt Imo people believe me. You cannot come to Imo State and say you want to give them a single lane road when they are now used to eight lane road in the city, they won’t accept it.

    “You cannot come there and tell the children to go to schools that the floors are not tiled they will not accept because all the schools have been rebuilt. I have rebuilt 450 schools. You can no longer take them to those ramshackle hospitals, those shanties they called hospitals because I have built ultramodern 27 to 200 bed general hospitals. You can no longer tell them those stories. All the infrastructures are there.

    “You cannot tell them that there are criminal activities any more and that your hands are tied they will not accept it because we know where we brought Imo from, from unsafe place to a safe place right now. And you can no longer tell our workers to dress shabbily they will not, they will want to dress in their suits and tie and white shirts. So Imo has changed believe me.

    “I stand to be challenged and corrected by anybody that what we have done in Imo State in this six years can be comparable to what any governor in that state living or dead has done. And whether if we put all of them together can match what we have done. Have you seen me sounding boisterous? That is the truth. But the point is I don’t make media noise, I don’t make foundation laying stones Programme, I don’t bring women to dance because I want to lay foundation project.

    “I don’t commission projects because for me it doesn’t make sense. They say that is the only way to get the media to know what we are doing but to me it doesn’t make sense. What is the most important is that people are benefiting and people are happy.”

    He stressed that there is no area in human existence that his administration has not touched.

    “I can only give credit to God almighty. There is just no area we have not touched and Owerri is now the fastest growing city outside Lagos and Abuja and I stand proud to say so. Ease of doing business is at the highest level. So is not major is just passion and vision at play,” he stated.

  • Roads: Overcoming the funding challenge

    Roads: Overcoming the funding challenge

    The Lagos-Ibadan Expressway is a critical project. So also are the Second Niger Bridge and the Okene-Lokoja-Abuja road. But work may be stalled on these roads because of the slashing of the funds for their execution by the National Asssembly. The lawmakers have since denied the charge against them by Power, Works and Housing Minister Mr Babatunde Fashola. Where can alternative funds be sourced for these projects? ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE asks.

    FOR many, the planned repair of the Apapa Ports access road by some private concerns and the Federal Government came as a cheery news.

    The road has been in a bad state for years, leading to a gridlock in which motorists suffer for hours and even days. But the nightmare may soon be over.

    Trending now, is the allegation that the National Assembly has slashed funds for some critical projects. These are the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, the Second Niger Bridge and the Okene-Lokoja-Abuja road. The Lagos-Ibadan road has been under repair for 15 years.

    With the slashing of the funds for the projects, where lies the hope for their completion? Could it be in Public-Private Partnership like the arrangement for the Apapa Port road or are there other alternatives?

     

    Genesis

    The Lagos/Ibadan expressway is the artery of the nation’s economy. As a major link to the Apapa seaport and other parts of the country, the road. No doubt, it is Nigeria’s major international trade road. Since the twilight of the ’80s up to late ’90s, the road had been begging for remediation. And that was despite the huge revenues coming from the three toll-gateways at Lagos, Sagamu and Ibadan, that served then as its cash points.

    But the state of the road got worse at the turn of the millennium, when theObasanjo administration,ordered the closure of the toll gates because of corruption.

    As an alternative, the government established the Federal Roads Management Agency (FERMA), to directly intervene in road repair and rehabilitation across the country. It worked, but only for a short period.

    Few years after, the road “practically collapsed,” as it becomes the deathbed of many unfortunate victims of avoidable accidents as the Lagos/Ibadan journey that was hitherto one hour, became unnecessarily long, lasting between 10 and12 hours, adding to the trauma and stress level of many travellers on the road.

    Concerned about the state of the road, the government in 2004 concessioned it to Bicourtney Construction Company to Build, Own, Operate and Transfer (BOOT) platform of the Public Private Partnership, an initiative that enjoyed  international support at the time.

    Despite the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) loaded with  promises to deliver a 10-lane world class road network that would confirm Nigeria as a serious nation, the contract could not fly until it was revoked by the late Umar Yar’Adua administration. It was fine-tuned by the Goodluck Jonathan administration and later re-awarded for repairs after much national outcry to the present contractors – Julius Berger and Reynolds Construction Company (RCC), which divided the repair into two lots where Lagos to Sagamu becomes the first lot, and  Sagamu to Ibadan becomes the second lot, between Julius Berger and RCC.

     

    Aborted dream

    Interestingly, one of the projects inherited by the Buhari administration and slated for delivery by May had been the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway. Anxious Nigerians who have been wondering the reasons behind the delay now have a clearer picture. Like Patrick Adenusi succinctly puts it; “the National Assembly is clearly out to cripple the nation’s economy and complicate life and living for Nigerians.”

    Adenusi, a safety expert, was reacting to the stormy revelation from the Minister for Power, Works and Housing Babatunde Fashola, alleging that the National Assembly had slashed a whopping N21 billion from this year’s allocation for the repair of the road. “Contractors are now threatening to leave the site,” Fashola declared last Friday.

    He said while the ministry’s budget for the project is now N10 billion, the contractors were owed N15 billion. “We owe the contractors about N15 billion and they have written to us that they are going to shut down,” he further disclosed.

    With a N10 billion budget, the minister was expected to perform near magic, a deed Fashola claimed he is not most suited for.

    From his revelation, he was not only meant to pay off contractors, he is expected to do much more. Despite inheriting 200 projects in various stages of completion, the National Assembly handed to him 100 fresh ones, even as he is expected to deliver on the second Niger Bridge.

    Fashola said most of the 100 new road projects, are without engineering design. This is beside requests for the construction of primary healthcare centres and boreholes.

    The slash of the allocation of the ministry is not limited to the Lagos/Ibadan expressway as disclosed by Fashola, also affected was the second Niger Bridge from which the National Assembly slashed a whopping N5 billion from N15 billion hitherto, while the Okene-Lokoja-Abuja road budget was also reduced by N3 billion.

    According to the minister, these inexplicable manipulations by the National Assembly were the reasons behind the prevarication of the Acting President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo in signing the appropriation bill, despite being passed by the National Assembly since May.

    The National Assembly denied the allegation on Saturday. Spokesmen for the Senate, Senator Aliyu Abdullahi, and that of House of Representatives Hon. Abdulrazak Namdas said the Works budget was slashed because the road had been on a private finance initiative.

    “It was agreed that we should give the Private Finance Initiative a chance to complement government’s resources in the delivery of critical infrastructure assets across the country,” Abdullahi said.

    He said the Federal Government cannot continue to fund through direct allocation the repair and maintenance of the 34,000 kilometres of road network in the country.

    Namdas regarded Fashola’s revelation as “a calculated mischief and an attempt to blackmail the legislature and portray it as insensitive to the plights of the Nigerian people.”

    Citing recent court pronouncements, Namdas said the legislature has powers to alter the appropriation bill presented by the executive.

    They both insisted that as a critical stakeholder in the task of fixing Nigeria, the National Assembly acted in national interest, and had an understanding with the Acting President to meet any shortfall in the allocations, including that of the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway by the instrument of variation.

     

    Inexplicable

     

    Without attempting to be malevolent, Fashola’s disclosures have raised same issues that experts and concerned stakeholders in the transportation and logistics sector have continued to harp – need for fresh funds dedicated solely to repair, maintenance of roads, and other road infrastructure such as bridges, and road infrastructure.

    A cross section of experts said at the weekend that the nation would continue to suffer such convolutions year-on-year- out for as long as it denies the obvious – need for the creation of fresh avenues to raise funds to address the deplorable road crisis.

    A former university don, Dr Joseph Shojobi, said the low pitch to which the Lagos/Ibadan expressway as well as other projects in the country as exemplified by the minister has fallen was a clear fallout of policy inconsistency.

    Fashola just touched a pinch of the impunity with which the nation has been starched over the past decades, Shojobi, a former Unilag teacher said. Even when the allocations were not touched by the lawmakers, were they expended as allocated, he queried.

    “Time there was when we had a toll regime, then for whatever reason, government cancelled it, decided to embark on a tortuous lane of concessionning, only to return to the drawing board and tinker with returning the toll. Inconsistency rings out loud as a major bane that I can see here and it affects every sphere of our life as a nation.

    “To fix our roads, we must begin to get serious and be consistent. We must return to the toll regime. High roads are not to be maintained with yearly allocations, but with funds generated from users of such roads. Such tolls must be managed by a statutory body different from the ministry and these must be peopled by incorrigible people,” he added.

    Similar thought was shared by Dr Tajudeen Bawa’Allah. Bawa’Allah, the pioneer dean of the School of Transportation, Lagos State University, said government needs to address the issue of policy inconsistency if it wants to solve permanently, issues of bad roads in the country.

    “I will support tolling. If they can return to the regime of tolling some of these roads and ensure they utilise the funds generated positively for the repair and rehabilitation of same, I can say Nigerians would begin to experience good and long lasting road repairs. Doing otherwise would run counter to global best practices. Highways are among roads that are usually tolled to generate funds to fix them regularly’’.

    Like Shojobi, Bawa’Allah equally feared the operators. “Nigerians must come to the realisation that we need to be truthful. Because those who are going to man the tolls would be Nigerians and not foreigners. We need to fix our values and address why we are mindlessly after illicit wealth and corrupt enrichment over free money,”

    He said while the Federal Government should not be afraid to return to tolling, an agency must be established to manage the revenue that would be generated therefrom.

    He said the nation must make use of the lessons it learnt from the failed Bicourtney’s concession arrangement, for the purpose of achieving the best for the nation as according to him, concessionning remains one of the platforms to bequeath good road infrastructure to the people.

     

    Way out

     

    Both Bawa’Allah and Shojobi agreed that the new bill – National Roads Funds Bill which was almost shut down by a national outcry when it passed a second reading at the Senate early June remains the way to go.

    They urged the government and the Senate to be bold to bring back the bill as it remains the way to go. The bill among others seeks to provide tolling and other avenues to generate fresh funds to finance the regular needs of the road networks in the country.

    To address the ever growing needs to fix the roads and avoid national embarrassments that issues raised by Fashola in his recent diatribe against the National Assembly, there may be need to shed the weight to the consumers/users of the road.

    They agreed that apart from the Road Fund Bill, which seeks to introduce a N5 fuel tax increase on every road user, the country needs a roads funds bill that is meant to bring bring into one basket all initiatives aimed at bequeathing motorable roads across the country.

  • Ramadan: Conoil urges caution on roads

    The nation’s foremost petroleum marketing company, Conoil Plc, has wished Nigerians accident-free celebrations, as Muslim faithful celebrate the end of the 30-day fasting period.

    It enjoined motorists as well as passengers to exercise caution on the roads as they travel far and near to join their loved ones in celebration.

    The company urged motorists to keep a rein on their speed, obey traffic rules, wear seat belts, read caution signs and ensure their vehicles are in good condition, electrically and mechanically, before embarking on their trips.

    The oil major also enjoined the citizens to continue with the lessons of love and tolerance learnt during the fasting period to promote peace and unity in the country.

    As a way of moving the country forward, it encouraged Muslims and Nigerians to ensure that they put into practice virtues such as sacrifice, forgiveness, care and love, which are key ingredients to nation-building.

  • Residents hail Ambode’s roads repair

    Residents hail Ambode’s roads repair

    Some residents of Abule Egba yesterday lauded Lagos State Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode for fulfilling his pledge to repair the inner roads used during the construction of Abule Egba Bridge.

    Contractors have moved to site to begin the rehabilitation of the inner roads in Abule Egba including Charity Road.

    The rehabilitation of the roads is expected to further enhance traffic flow in the area, which since the opening of the flyover has improved movement around the axis.

    A resident of Ile-Ogbo in Abule Egba, Mrs Temitope Oyekunle, praised the governor for keeping his words, saying the development has brought relief to people of the area.

    “On the day of the commissioning of the Abule Egba Bridge when Governor Ambode made the pronouncement that our roads would be fixed, personally I expressed doubt judging by the number of projects that have been carried out in our axis by his administration but true to the Governor’s words, contractors moved to site as announced and they are working at a fast pace.

    “I just want to commend the Governor for this and urge him to keep up the good works,” Oyekunle said.

    Another resident, Mr Olakunle Joseph said the quality of work being done on the inner roads was commendable, and it shows the seriousness of the government of the day to truly transform all parts of the State.

    Mrs Tolani Festus, who is a shop owner in the area, said the transformation being witnessed in Abule Egba and its environs was unprecedented in the history of the state.

  • Logic of roads construction and maintenance

    The Federal Roads maintenance Agency (FERMA) placed advertisements in The Nation of Tuesday May 9 apparently to demonstrate to those of us who are asking if the agency has folded up or has been wound up by the federal government that created it that it is alive. This agency seems to exist in the minds of those who created it and in the minds of the hordes of civil servants earning their living without doing anything to justify the salaries being paid to them. Even the advertisement referred to is full of lies.

    The agency claims to be rehabilitating Ife-Ibadan “Express way”. I travel on this road every week and I can confirm no work has been done on this road. In fact, the approach to Osun River Bridge near Asejire is so bad that a few vehicles have plunged into the river because of the bad approach to the bridge. The road from Ikire to Ilesha is hardly motorable. I also noticed that what the agency calls South-west zone apparently does not include Ondo and Ekiti states whose federal roads have been abandoned and the people there left to their own fate and yet those neglected two states produce the bulk of the cocoa Nigeria still exports and from which some billions of dollars are earned annually.

    I recently travelled from Lagos to Sagamu following the blockade of the Lagos-Ibadan express way as a result of religious activities on the express way. I was sad about what I saw on that road. It is perhaps correct to call the “road “a bush path. Driving on the road was like driving on the moon. Yet this was the first road the British constructed in Nigeria. I saw thousands of trailers and other kinds of vehicular contraptions whose drivers took their lives in their hands to drive through the road. It took me five hours to ply a road of perhaps 60 kilometres. I kept asking myself – where is the federal government? Where are Lagos and Ogun state governments?  This Ikorodu-Sagamu road is so strategic to the economy of not only the South-west but the whole country. It is not just the economy that this road is vital to; it is also strategic in defence consideration. What if Lagos suffered a sea invasion and it was necessary to move troops from the hinterland to the coast in case the enemy blocks the express way?

    The major power generating station of Egbin is along this route. Sagamu is a major cement producing hub, necessitating movement of huge articulated trucks to and from Lagos for construction.  Ikorodu itself is a putative port waiting for development. There is an army barracks on the road as well and Ikorodu area has witnessed incessant attacks and challenge by terrorists in recent times. If one may say the area is part of the Niger Delta which is increasingly becoming the soft under belly of Nigeria. If all these are not enough to attract government attention, there are innumerable small factories of iron and steel makers converting used and discarded vehicles into useable iron implements. There are also secondary and tertiary institutions in the axis.

    Planning roads construction and maintenance should not be done haphazardly or merely on federal character basis but on its utility value to the economy and security of the nation. I know our resources are limited but this is why there must be some kind of rationalization in the use of these resources. I lived in Germany for about five years and as many people know, Germany has the best network of roads in the world. The famous Autobahn (express roads) run from north to south and from east to west. They were largely constructed like their old railways to move troops from east to west and vice versa to confront their enemies on two fronts. Adolph Hitler may conveniently be forgotten by the Germans and the whole world, but he left a legacy of these roads and the small affordable people’s cars (Volkswagen) to ply them. Walter Ulbricbht, the communist leader of East Germany (DDR) came up with the plastic car the “Trabant “in a miserable mimicry of the NAZI dictator. No one can deny that the efficient transportation network of Germany is a major factor in the economic miracle Germany witnessed since the end of the Second World War.

    The point I am trying to make is that roads construction reflect a strategist worldview and goals he hopes to achieve and not just constructing roads as social welfare scheme.

    We need to take a holistic view of our road network and seriously plan what we hope to achieve. I will give a few examples .There is a need to have four arterial roads running from north to south in this country. One road should run from Sokoto through Kotangora to Kaiama, Iseyin, and Abeokuta to the port of Badagry. Another road should run from Kano to Kaduna, Abuja, Lokoja, Okene to Benin.  Another should run from Abuja to Minna, Mokwa, Ilorin, Ibadan, Lagos while the fourth should run from Maiduguri to Yola, Jalingo, Makurdi, Ogoja to Calabar.

    Then there is a need for an East-West road from Lagos, Sagamu, Ijebu-ode, Benin, Asaba, Onitsha, Enugu, Aba, Port Harcourt. There is also a need for a coastal road from Lagos through Igbokoda, Warri, Yenagoa, Port Harcourt, terminating in Calabar. This may appear a gigantic order but it is always better to plan big. In China, the country initially relied on harnessing its huge human resources rather than its technological know-how to build roads, dams and houses. I do not see why with a serious government, Nigeria cannot do the same.

    We are told that we have a population of 180 million people. Of course, I remain sceptical about this apparently exaggeratedly fabricated figure! To challenge the demographic cheaters, those who inflate population of their states should be asked to mobilize such population figures for development. The factor of economic necessity rather than the nebulous federal character determining what roads to construct and maintaining should be paramount. If the federal government were to stick to this kind of strategic conception and planning, then roads construction and maintenance will begin to make sense.

    Other feeder roads will have to be devolved into the zonal authorities in a hopefully restructured Nigeria with devolved resources and responsibilities.  But in the meantime, something has to be done to fix roads that are vital to economic recovery. I do not see what will be wrong if Lagos and Ogun states governments were to collaborate in fixing this Sagamu – Ikorodu road and then jointly billing the federal government or getting private entrepreneurs in to reconstruct the road and toll it.  This terrible state of most roads in Nigeria would have to be addressed as a matter of urgency because as I write, people are dying on these dilapidated roads.

    This road master plan should go hand in hand with a new railway age in Nigeria in which road transportation should not be the major way of moving people and goods around the country. There is no major developing country that depends on one mode of transportation. If we are aspiring to be one of the 20 biggest economies in the world, we cannot be enduring this primitive and almost primordial transportation system that even our grandparents would recognize especially the fact that our roads follow the same footpaths established by our illiterate ancestors.

  • Nightmare on the roads

    Nightmare on the roads

    Traffic snarls, something residents of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) were once spared, have since caught up with them, putting them in foul mood, reports GBENGA OMOKHUNU

    All it once took to cruise from one end of the city to another was scarcely more than 15 minutes. Now, commuters in the nation’s capital get locked up in traffic for hours. It hurts.

    If there was any refreshing relief Abuja offered its residents and visitors, it was the atmosphere of order and calm, which was lacking in some other parts of the country. Not anymore. Traffic jams in the city are giving residents nightmares.

    Road users in Abuja are experiencing frustration in strategic areas of the city especially very early in the working hours. According to findings, checkpoints mounted by the territory’s Road Traffic Service (RTS) and bad traffic lights contribute to the sad situation.

    Motorists who spoke with Abuja Review expressed dissatisfaction with the traffic control situation, which they say was badly affecting their daily activities.

    Time was when Abuja roads were not only very decent and neat, but also largely free of heavy traffic. Major junctions were then serviced with functional traffic lights or traffic wardens. The streets were well paved. High sanitary standards were also maintained. The city smelled fresh. Now traffic snarls have crept in and made driving through parts of the city a horrible nightmare.

    A commuter, Kadijat Abu said she had witnessed several checkpoints either by the RTS or the police.

    She said: “Recently, a cab I boarded to Area 3, Garki almost had a head-on collision with another vehicle close to the National Defence College. The traffic lights showed green on all the stands at the same time, resulting in a maddening rush.”

    A transporter, who shuttles between Berger and Wuse, said the deteriorating traffic situation is not making transportation business lucrative anymore as so many traffic lights in major areas of the city are no longer in working condition, adding, “This has led to constant gridlock, especially during morning rush hours with or without the presence of traffic wardens. Motorists feel more obliged to obey traffic lights than the wardens.”

    John Odo, a commuter said: “Here at Bolingo Junction, traffic lights are not working and we have to wait for direction from the wardens who are not accurate sometimes, the situation is just very bad. The problem is not only that the traffic lights are not working but that the ones working are not strategically positioned. Where is the wisdom in putting about three traffic lights on a street? For example, Mississippi Street in Maitama has about four traffic lights. The traffic situation there coupled with the many intersections can only be imagined.”

    It is not only the malfunctioning traffic lights that are making driving on Abuja roads an ordeal.

    For those entering the city from the airport at night, the expanse of Umaru Musa Yar’Adua Road, otherwise known as Airport Road, is only lit by head lamps of moving vehicles.

    For months, some of the street lights on this major road that serves as the gateway to the city centre have not been working.

    Abuja as the federal capital city, was created 40 years ago on February 4, 1976. It became Nigeria’s capital on December 12, 1991, when Ibrahim Babangida, Nigeria’s then military president, took the seat of government from Lagos.

    Abuja is divided into two parts. The entire territory is made up of 8000 square kilometres: 250 square kilometres of this is the federal capital city including Garki, Maitama, and Asokoro.

    The remaining portion is made up of satellite towns where the majority of residents reside.

    It can be recalled that a few weeks to the end of the President Goodluck Jonathan-led administration, the capital City witnessed what most residents called an 11th hour’ fresh installation of traffic lights, in a move which seemed very suspicious.

    Some of the new installations were at Jabi, Utako, Kado, Gwarimpa, Garki, Maitama, Asokoro, Kubwa and some satellite towns. The project was commissioned by the then FCT minister, Mohammed Bala.

    However, since Muhammad Musa Bello assumed office as the 16th minister of the Federal Capital Territory, little has been done to improve the street and traffic light situation.

    In fact, many of the existing ones broke down or started malfunctioning.

    Abuja, ‘the fastest growing city in Africa’, as modelled by its creators, is gradually becoming a sharp contrast of its original plan. The infrastructure and public utilities in the city are deteriorating as the authorities seemed helpless.

    According to the 2006 census, the city of Abuja had a population of 776,298, making it one of the ten most populous cities in Nigeria.

    According to the United Nations, Abuja grew at the rate of 139.7% between 2000 and 2010.

    With this development FCT Minister Malam Muhammad Bello said a solution to the traffic congestion in the Federal Capital City has been found.

    Bello told Abuja Review during one of his functions that part of the solution is the construction of the southern part of the Abuja Parkway in 2017 while vowing that the traffic light issued will be looked into and rectified.

    According to him, this 10-lane six-kilometer road will reduce the traffic problems in the city.

    He also highlighted the many reasons for the construction of this project.

    He said, “The Abuja Parkway project will be included in the 2017 budget because it is a very critical road that can reduce traffic problems in the city. One of the major concerns I share with you is the fact that I’m very worried about the condition of the road leading to your office. As a matter of fact, two nights ago, I went through the road quietly just to assess it and see the situation of things. We are trying to work toward ensuring that the 2017 budget takes care of that road.

    “It is our intention is to continue the road that is under construction from the National Christian Centre, cross the Goodluck Jonathan Expressway, going by the side of your premises through AGIS and bursting out in Ring Road I by Gudu District. That is a very critical road within the city that we hope if it is completed will ease vehicular movement and also give people an option so that we can reduce the traffic congestion that we experience currently in the city centre,” he said.

    It is the hope of residents that things will change as time goes on in the nation’s capital.

  • New roads to travel in Edo 

    New roads to travel in Edo 

    Confucius – that renowned Chinese sage of many catchphrases – was, no doubt, high as a kite when he said: “Roads were made for journeys, not destinations”. The idea here is not that he snuck and took some opiate to heighten his creativity, or that he went and indulged in the fruit of the vine.

    The idea is that he was, of imagination, on an intellectually elevated pedestal and was seeing things that were as sound in concept as they were poetic in expression.

    In Edo State, the appositely lauded technocrat governor, Mr. Godwin Nogheghase Obaseki, leaves no one in doubt of his unfeigned understanding of the importance of roads to the socioeconomic wellbeing of the people of Edo State. If the road is unduly rough, the governor understands, the journey surely will be unpleasant, and the desire for the destination may wane.

    It explains why Governor Obaseki reiterates his unambiguous commitment to the development of road infrastructure in the state. During his recent commissioning of the newly constructed 500km Nevis Street Road, which links four major roads in Benin City, the governor reaffirmed his administration’s resolve to make certain that within the four years of his first term in office he completes 3000km of roads.

    To be sure, all of these roads will not only enrich the development of infrastructure and make life more meaningful for the people in the state, they will equally generate decent jobs for all categories of people especially youths who will be given requisite training in road designs and constructions using concrete technology.

    One of the things that will stand out the roads to be constructed across the state under this administration is the use of concrete technology. The newly reconstructed Nevis Street Road is the first road to be reconstructed in the state using concrete materials.

    Constructing roads with concrete rather than asphalt will facilitate durability. Road construction experts have maintained again and again that rigid concrete is more durable than asphalt; it has a lifespan of between 20 and 40 years. Such roads are less likely to have potholes. The surface of concrete is also better at preventing automobile skidding, it ensures the safety of people and in that connection helps reduce the frequent spate of accidents necessitated by poorly constructed roads.

    Besides, concrete roads do not drain the coffers like asphalt roads when it comes to maintenance. Asphalts are money guzzlers when maintenance is considered. If heavy spending on road maintenance is out of the way, money will be available for other equally important programmes. With concrete pavement, it is a win-win for both government and the people. Already in many advanced societies of the world, concrete roads are more increasingly in vogue. The reason for this inheres in the great benefits it offers.

    Of the significance of constructing roads with concrete, Mr. Ashif Juma, the Managing Director of AG-Dangote, the company contracted to refurbish the Nevis Street Road with concrete, noted further that, “Concrete has always made most sense in the long run. No other paving materials match concrete’s strength and durability in standing up to heavy usage and truck traffic. Concrete lasts longer without the need for resurfacing, patching or surface sealing. Concrete delivers structurally, financially and environmentally.”

    He added that the road was constructed in compliance with Governor Obaseki’s directive that the materials must be sourced locally, noting that what the governor’s directive enabled his company to prove is the fact that concrete roads could be built within a short period.

    Doubtlessly, it is the habit of leaders who are prudent and are irresolute in their commitment to the progress of their people to make sure that they maximise resources and achieve the best with what is available. Governor Obaseki demonstrated that he belongs in the fold of such uncommon leaders when he noted that given the success recorded in the use of concrete technology, about 45 roads that have been awarded for construction and reconstruction would be done solely with the use of concrete. The roads would be constructed, he observed, with raw materials sourced from within the state.

    In his view, Edo State does not need to depend on foreign exchange for road construction as all materials and human capital could be sourced locally. It is to this end that the governor encouraged youths in the state to take advantage of the opportunity for employment available in the Edo Jobs Initiative by registering for it. As he emphasised at the referred road commissioning ceremony, there would be a beneficial, enduring road infrastructure revolution in Edo State, for among other things, he has “come to change the face of politics in Nigeria.”

    In other words, he has come to change the narrative of road infrastructure in the country setting his state up as a model. And this is no mere sweet talk. Hear him: “The construction of this Nevis Street within seven weeks showed that this government can make promises and fulfil them. This is a revolution in our road construction. We will design our roads, and we will train our youths on roads design and construction without waiting for foreign exchange. We have all the raw materials here.”

    As of now across different areas in Benin City about 29 roads are in different stages of reconstruction and rehabilitation, with some being remodelled with concrete technology.

    For Edo residents, the revolution springing up in road infrastructure in the city centre in the state is no fluke. It is in view of this unmediated reality that some of them have expressed their heartfelt delight and satisfaction. The summary of their experience in this regard is that life is surely getting easier. They feel really happy that their socioeconomic undertakings will be greatly enhanced by the reconstruction and rehabilitation of roads. Indeed, the journeys for which the roads are made will be more pleasurable, even as their desire to achieve the goals of their varied activities become more boosted.

    Reporter who went round the state capital last Friday on a tour of some ongoing projects coordinated by the Office of the Chief Press Secretary to Governor Godwin Obaseki captured the infectious gladness of the people in response to the vast improvement taking place in road infrastructure.

    A resident and fabricator working along Wire Road, Iyoyin Shekiri, expressed joy over the development, saying that Obaseki had started following the developmental footsteps of his predecessor, Comrade Adams Oshiohmole, in ensuring that Edo people have access to good roads.

    He said Wire road had never had it good in terms of access to good roads until Governor Obaseki assumed office “to redeem the people from the road that had suffered years of abandonment” and had become a death trap.

    The situation at Nevis Street was not different as residents came out in their large numbers to applaud the Governor Obaseki on his determination to improve the socioeconomic wellbeing of the people through massive road construction and rehabilitation across the state.

    Daniel Ohenhen, who was among the residents that spoke to reporters at Wire Road, thanked the governor for doing a good job, and appealed that more of those works be replicated across the state.

    The Director of Construction in the state Ministry of Works, Mr John Obanor, explained that from the total 29 roads of over 50km earmarked for rehabilitation, 15 have been completed with either flexible pavement or rigid pavement.

    At Ikpokpan Road in the Government Reservation Area (GRA), Obanor said rigid pavement with concrete was used on the road to check areas susceptible to erosion. According to him, lkpokpan Road, which was about 60 to 70 metres of rigid pavement, was expected to stand the test of time for a minimum of 25 years.

    Other roads include Oba Eweka/Ogbetuo Oni Road, Osabuihien Close GRA, Wire Road, Nekpenekpen, Nevis Road, Ugbor, Nekpenekpe, Oni Street, and Jemide/Akhiobare.

    Explaining the technique behind the constructions, Obanor said: “We have done quite well as regards reconstruction and rehabilitation of the roads. In fact, we are sure of completing all these roads before the rains set in proper.

    “As you may have noticed, we adopted quite a number of measures to ensure these roads last longer. These measures are the combination of rigid pavement and flexible pavement. For areas that are prone to environmental condition, we used rigid pavement while we used flexible pavement for the areas that are not prone to flooding.”

    In Governor Obaseki, Edo has got itself another bright mind willing to modernise the state for the overall good of a greater number of the people. The rising tide of road infrastructure, among other laudable programmes, is an eloquent proof of this.

    • Osadolor writes from Benin City.
  • Govt to build N50b roads in Bauchi

    The Federal Government is to build roads across Bauchi State, worth over N50 billion, the Speaker of House of Representatives Yakubu Dogara has said.

    Dogara, who spoke on Saturday while launching road projects in his Dass/Tafawa Balewa/Bogoro Federal Constituency, said the project is a joint effort of members of the National Assembly from the state.

    He said the roads to be built are Bauchi-Gombe Federal Highway, Kano-Bauchi North and Bauchi Central, up to Maiduguri.

    According to him, if the roads were to be done by the state government, it would take 10 years.

    “I want to say these are not the only roads we will do, there are others and by the grace of God, we will finish them in the next two years.

    “The contractor hired to build the roads is here and he will start work soon. We will ensure the highway from Kano-Bauchi, North-Bauchi Central, down to Maiduguri, attracts the appropriate funding to finish it in time.

    “The roads will be built at about N50 billion. If we were to rely on the state government alone, this cannot be done in 10 years. So who says there’s no benefit in representation?”