Tag: Third Mainland Bridge

  • Motorists groan over FG’s poor handling of construction work in Lagos

    Motorists in Lagos on Sunday expressed huge dissatisfaction with the Federal Ministry of Works, Power and Housing over the abysmal handling of construction work on Lagos roads, especially on Third Mainland Bridge and Kara bridge, saying that the action called to question the ability of those in charge to handle matters professionally.

    A cross section of the motorists, who spoke to our correspondent about the development, said the negligent manner with which some of the construction works in Lagos were being handled leaves much to be desired of a government that is ready to carry out its responsibilities without subjecting the people to needless and avoidable inconveniences.

    They urged the Minister in charge and the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency (FERMA) to do the needful by going about their duties with utmost regard for the people.

    A motorist, Mr Samuel Arogundade said ever since the repair work started on Third Mainland Bridge some few weeks back, he has been subjected to untold hardship courtesy of the manner the construction is being handled.

    He said: “I think Mr Fashola and his men should wake up from their slumber and scant regard for safety to handle their duties professionally. Look at the other day, a serious accident occurred on the bridge involving about ten vehicles. The accident left many injured and it was because the construction was not handled professionally.

    “The construction company left their equipment on the bridge without any iota of consideration for safety and their negligible action caused the accident.

    “Apart from the accident, many of us who ply the route daily have been subjected to needless traffic gridlock which is not proper in a city that time is very important to all of us being a city with a lot of business activities,” Arogundade said.

    Also speaking, another motorist, Mrs Abidemi Olakunle said it was time for the Federal Government to do things properly.

    “Look for instance, Lagos State Government has constructed four lay-bys in Oworonshoki axis to ease vehicular movement in an out of Third Mainland Bridge. The lay-bys and segregated bus stops have greatly helped to reduce travel time inward and outward Lagos Island but since the Federal Government started repair work on the bridge, they have frustrated all the successes recorded via the efforts of the State Government.

    “Another thing is that the repair work they are carrying out on the bridge has not even yielded positive impact because up till now, they have removed the asphalt of some sections of the bridge and they are yet to put other ones there. They should finish their work on time,” she said.

  • Police foil plot to bomb Third Mainland Bridge

    Police foil plot to bomb Third Mainland Bridge

    The police have foiled an attempt  by a notorious  Niger Delta militant group operating from the creeks of Ikorodu and Arepo on the outskirts of Lagos and Ogun states to  blow up  the Third Mainland Bridge in Lagos.

    A top commander of the group, Abiodun Amos, who is  also known as Senti, an Ijaw from Arogbo, Ese-Odo Local Government of Ondo State, who is also said to be the group’s explosive expert, was arrested  by operatives of the Inspector General of Police Special Intelligence Response Team (IRT), who trailed him to a river bank at Majidun, Ikorodu, Lagos.

    Two  AK47 rifles hidden in a “Ghana-Must-Go” bag were found with the suspect. He led the IRT operatives to a vehicle parked discreetly within Ikorodu, where a large catche of dynamite and  detonators was recovered— from its  boot.

    It was also learnt that Amos’ arrest followed intelligence generated by  the office of the National Security Adviser (NSA), which was passed on to the Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, indicating that the group was at its final stage of carrying out an attack on the Third Mainland Bridge—Africa’s longest at 13 kilometres.

    The IGP, who  was said to have been miffed by the report, directed his operatives at the IRT, led by Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) Abba Kyari,  to investigate the report. It was confirmed  that the group was actually planning to blow up the bridge at the end of November.  The group, detectives discovered, had acquired large quantities of dynamite and several other explosives for the attack.

    In October 2016, the group, which has no known identity and was notorious for pipeline vandalism, kidnapping and bank robberies, demanded for amnesty, threatening to disrupt the economy within Lagos and Ogun states if the Federal Government did not dialogue with it and grant its members pipeline protection contracts.

    The leader of the militant group, known as “General” Ossy Ibori, who coordinated most of the  bank robberies and high profile kidnappings, including that of three schoolgirls at Babington Macaulay Junior Seminary School in Ikorodu, four landlords at  Isheri North, Oniba of Ibaland, Oba Goriola Oseni  and  many others within Lagos and Ogun states, boasted in an interview that his group had over 21 “generals” commanding 7,800 battle-ready boys.

    He added that the group was rich enough to fight the Federal Government as it had acquired  thousands of military grade arms and ammunition, which he said would be deployed in disrupting the economy within Lagos and Ogun states, should the Federal Government fail to dialogue with the group and grant its wishes.

    Sources disclosed that the IRT operatives made several arrests within Ikorodu and other parts of Lagos State. One of the suspects is said to have given the police the information, which they used in trailing and arresting Amos, who was on his way into the creeks.

    The 43-year-old suspect confessed that his group was formerly into pipeline vandalism but they resorted to kidnapping when it became difficult for them to vandalise and sell their stolen petroleum products. According to him; “ we went into bank robberies and kidnapping because we wanted to get government attention and all we wanted was for them to grant us amnesty and also offer us pipeline protection contract. We have made several appeals and the government is not listening to us. “General” Ossy said ‘if we don’t blow up the Third Mainland Bridge government’ they would not listen to us. We had concluded plans and we decided to carry out the attack by  November ending. I am the group’s  explosive expert  and before I was arrested we were going into the creek to conclude plans on how to carry out the attack.”

    Police spokesman Don Awuna, a deputy Commissioner (DCP) said: “Yes, an individual was arrested. On sighting the policemen, the second suspect jumped out of his car and escaped into the bush, abandoning the operational vehicle.

    ”On searching the vehicle, two cartons of Gelatine dynamite explosives and hundreds of detonators were recovered in the boot of the car. Efforts are in progress to arrest the remaining gang members”.

  • Accident on Third Mainland Bridge

    Accident on Third Mainland Bridge

    The driver of the mini truck lost control of the vehicle when the rear tire busted and ran into the red car coming from the other lane before it was stopped by the bridge railings.

    One of the occupants of the red car sustained minor injury due to the impact of the collision.

     

     

  • Easing traffic pangs on Third Mainland Bridge

    Easing traffic pangs on Third Mainland Bridge

    Lagos State Ministry of Transportation has introduced laybys on the Third Mainland Bridge to address traffic congestion, especially around the Oworonshoki corridor. Will it work? ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE reports

    For most people plying the Third Mainland Bridge spending valuable man-hour in traffic to and from Lagos Island has been a daily experience. For now, there seem to be no way out of  this nightmare. Living on the Mainland and working on the Island is a daily cross they have to bear because of the terrible traffic on the bridge.

    What they go through everyday has somewhat made some Lagosians to ‘vow’ not to have anything to do on the Island, especially on week days. Going or coming out of Lagos Island could be hellish.

    One of those, who has a phobia for the traffic on the Third Mainland Bridge, is Simon Nwabuike, a business executive, who said nothing could make him go to Lagos Island anytime after 2pm.

    “One place I dread to go is Lagos Island. Except when absolutely necessary, I don’t enjoy going to the Island and even now that I run my own firm, I don’t go to the Island once it is 2pm because of the fear of the return trip. If you find yourself stuck on the Island till after 3pm, you are in for a nightmare,” he said.

    Nwabuike may have had a choice to stay away from Lagos Island, but  others such as Samson Iyere, who lives at Iyana Iyesi, a suburb of Ota, Ogun State, and goes to work in Lekki, has no choice. He leaves home by 4.30am to join the staff bus, which moves by 5am. Most times, he not only takes a nap inside the bus, but ends up eating junk food morning and night. Iyere’s lifestyle typifies how almost everyone that finds him/herself working on the Island lives.

    In a news report some six years ago, the Lagos State government said over two billion man-hour were being lost monthly in traffic gridlocks in the megacity.

    The Commissioner for Transportation, Dr Dayo Mobereola, who, in 2012 was  the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authourity’s (LAMATA) Managing Director, said commuters in Lagos spend an average 40 per cent of their income on transportation.

    According to the 2010 news report, Lagos government said much could have been achieved and the economy improved if gridlocks were addressed and travel time on the roads reduced.

    Six years after, one can imagine the quantum of man-hour being lost to traffic gridlocks in Lagos.

    The Third Mainland Bridge, one of Lagos’ super highways, arguably, has the highest frequency of vehicles in the state, especially during work days. The bumper-to-bonnet experience is a daily occurence that is hellish to the motorists and this seemed to have defied logic and solution until lately.

     

    Congestion cost

     

    Traffic congestion has been identified as a major constraint to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of any economy, as it continues to impact negatively on cities’ economic environment.

    In a paper, “Evaluating traffic congestion in developing countries – a case study of Nigeria”, delivered by Dr Kayode Olagunju of the Federal Roads Safety Corps at the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport (CILT) Africa Forum in Tanzania last year said the consequences of traffic congestion included productivity loss, change in accident frequency and characteristics, increase in air pollutants and emissions, increased vehicle operating costs and increased noise nuisance.

    The resultant effect could include relocation of businesses and homes from the congested areas to more favourable locations, forcing down the values for land and houses in addition to the degradation of other economic values in such areas.

    Olagunju, quoting Kenya’s Urban Decongestion Committee, said traffic jam in Nairobi city costs Kenya 37 billion shillings annually as at 2014. According to him, the same year, going by a report by McGregor and Malingha, a daily traffic cost in Nairobi was $570,000.

    A 2030 World Bank’s report had estimated that Cairo’s traffic congestion at US $8 billion, which is up to 4 per cent of Egypt’s Gross Domestic Product. The cost worldwide, especially in the developing countries, is better imagined.

    As part of its trouble shooting initiatives, the Lagos State government last Wednesday disclosed the construction of multiple laybys at Iyana-Oworo and along the choke points on the routes, which among others, may permanently address the perennial traffic gridlock on the Third Mainland Bridge at peak hours.

    Conducting reporters round the route, it was observed that when the laybys are completed, travel time on the bridge from Island to Mainland would significantly reduce from about four hours to between 16 and 20 minutes during the peak periods.

     

    What’s in a layby

     

    A layby is a place at the side of a road where a vehicle can stop for a short while without interrupting traffic flow.

    On the development, Mobereola said the government, over time, had observed that the Iyana Oworo layby has become inadequate and deplorable. The effect of this, according to him, was the negative impact on the traffic, which reverberates the length of the third axial bridge. It always results in high vehicular volume inward Alausa.

    Mobereola said the traffic is caused mainly by vehicles, which encroach into the highway when disembarking passengers, causing constriction of the road with traffic gridlock backlash.

    This has led to an average of one and half hours or more of travel time from Obalende to Iyana Oworo in the evenings between 4-6pm, which could grow worse as dusk sets in.

    “This informed our decision to redesign the Iyana-Oworo layby, which we now improved into multiple laybys (six in number), completed with the introduction of perimeter light and a Teflon shelter for the comfort of commuters,” he said.

    He noted that the expansion has taken the choke off the road with average travel time from Obalende to Iyana-Oworo being reduced to 15 minutes during the same period.

    “The gridlock was caused by commuters, who drop passengers on the road. We have emergency layby, lay-by for cars, staff bus, LASTMA   park as well as emergency park.

    “The problem with transportation in Lagos is the traffic at the junctions  and we are assessing it in holistic manner. By the time we are done with Oworonshoki, we will move to the other side of Oworonshoki to address the traffic challenges for those moving towards Island,” he said.

    Mobereola described the lay-bys as part of the holistic measures Governor Akinwunmi Ambode led-administration has taken to unlock the gridlock on the bridge.

    He said the laybys are designed to accommodate a minimum of 36 cars; 18 Coster buses/LAGBUS/BRT and 55 commercial buses.

    From the volume study of vehicles entering Oworonsoki layby, he said, motorists would be able to make Oworonsoki from Adeniji Adele on Lagos Island in less than 20 minutes, and from Law School and Milverton Road, in Ikoyi in 45 minutes. Motorists from Kofo Abayomi, Victoria Island can make Oworonsoki in one hour, and from Ajose Adeogun in two hours.

    Besides the improvement in travel time, the laybys also offered an improved linkage to the jetty, improving on the environment’s aesthetics.

    Motorists, who spoke on their harrowing driving experience on the bridge,  commended the government for coming up with a strategy, which according to them, has reduced their travel time on the bridge.

    Adelanwa Peter, a commuter, who works in Obalende, said he left Lagos Island about 5:58pm and got to Oworonshoki around 6:20pm.

    Isaac Okon, a commercial driver, said the layby has reduced  traffic on  the road, adding that the average time he spends on the road is between three to four hours from Island to Mainland, using Third Mainland Bridge.

    Richard Ayenibiowo, another commuter, urged the government to focus on other gridlock-prone joints and areas as it did at Oworonshoki /Third Mainland Bridge axis, adding that traffic gridlock is a major challenge confronting residents in the state.

    “This is because in the morning as early as 5:30am, traffic would have built up on almost every part of the state as a result of the inability of the roads to cope with the current use to which the roads are put,” he said.

    Explaining the project, Director, Transportation Engineering, Mr Bolaji Bada, said the Oworonsohoki layby, which is about 60 per cent completed, would come with two parallel roads at Olopomeji, drainage, interlocking/reinforced concrete pavement, kerb/ retaining wall, street light and bus shelter.

    Mobereola said other laybys would be constructed at Alapere, Berger, the intersection at Ilubirin and at Gbagada axis, to address the traffic congestion that usually occurs along those routes. All of these, he added, are aimed at tackling traffic congestion in a holistic manner.

    “The project content include: Parallel alternative road, Iyana Oworo layby, Berger layby, Lagbus. Layby and panel wall. We are also creating another road at Olopomeji,” he said.

  • At the mercy  of new wave  Lagos traffic robbers

    At the mercy of new wave Lagos traffic robbers

    It seems the bad old days are back on Lagos roads, as the city recently applauded for its relative safety from crimes, seems to be receding fast. Gboyega Alaka reports.

    Some fifteen odd years ago, Tunji Bello, the current Secretary to the Lagos State Government, had a most scary experience in the perennial Lagos traffic. He was on his way to work at the Thisday Newspaper office in Apapa, where he was a member of the editorial Board, when a certain young man, loitering in the traffic popped out a gun and ordered his driver to wind down in an obvious robbery attempt. But rather than comply, stories had it that his driver decided to play a movie hero, and instead stepped on the acceleration pedal and tried to maneuver his way through the thick traffic. Seeing that it was an effort in futility and one that might cost them their lives, Bello ordered his driver to stop and they promptly complied with the gunman’s request.

    The gunman made away with cash, a heavy suitcase of papers and valuables, but at least the now high-profile public officer had his life intact and is forging on.

    In another horrifying case, Toyosi Johnson, then a reporter with a leading glossy lifestyle magazine was driving back home on the Lagos Third Mainland Bridge, when she was attacked a gun-toting robber. She had just learnt to drive, having only recently bought her Opel car and couldn’t have attempted any stunt, as the gruff-looking guy pretending to be selling in the long traffic, popped a short pistol at her. Scared stiff, she handed over her bag, her phones and virtually every valuable object around her. Not satisfied, her assailant ordered her to pull up her blouse, so he could see her plum laps and undies, to which Toyosi immediately complied. One could only imagine how far the robber would have gone if it wasn’t for broad daylight and the moving traffic. The above incident took place about ten years ago.

    At the old Oshodi end of Lagos, before the administration of former Governor Babatunde Fashola liberated the area and made a thoroughfare out of its old gridlock, stories abound of broad daylight and early evening robberies. In fact, it became foolhardy for any Lagosian with his senses intact to attempt driving through the Oshodi-Isale end of the Agege-Motor Road in the early evening, much less in the late evening, because often, they get chastised and blamed, rather than pitied for any misfortune that befell them. A passenger in a public bus once narrated a story of how he was robbed in traffic, right under the Oshodi flyover and how when he finally got to a police point further down the road and complained, hoping for some action or pacification, only to hear the officers on duty telling him “Oga, why you self go pass Oshodi for night?”

    Deadly dangerous

    If the victims in the above instances were lucky, a middle-aged woman, Clementina Saduwa, who was a manager at one of the Ericson Lagos offices, was not so lucky a few years back. Her assailants, who had laid siege at the gallop spot right at the Leventis end of the Eko Bridge around 8pm in February 2007, pounced on her and gruesomely shot her dead, in what many initially thought was a case of paid assassination. A member of the gang of five that attacked her car, wasted no time in shooting Saduwa dead, as she struggled to explain that she had no money on her, while her driver escaped narrowly. The story heard it that the robbers had laid in wait at the end of the bridge, knowing fully well that vehicles inevitably slowed down at that spot.

    Lagosians would however learn four months later, when the police cracked the gang, that it was indeed a case of traffic robbery and not assassination.

    Saduwa’s case was highly publicised because the media latched onto it, but there are several others that never made media headlines, but which were equally gruesome. Some have escaped with bullet wounds, while those who have been fortunate narrowly escaped the criminals’ bullets, but not without serious emotional trauma.

    That incident also caused the Lagos State government to smoothen out the bump on that end of the bridge and ensure smoother and faster drive through the hitherto dangerous spot for motorists.

    The safe era

    Aside cases of robberies in traffic, Lagos had always lived with its share of outright armed robberies and car-snatching at gunpoint on highways; but these dropped significantly at the onset of Governor Babatunde Fashola’s regime in the state and especially during the tenure of the erstwhile Inspector-General of Police, MD Abubakar, then Commissioner of Police in the state. Many would recall also that probably due to the state government’s doubled effort on security, made largely possible by the Lagos Security Trust Fund, the police were duly equipped and motivated, such that even visitors testified to the strategic positioning of the police at suspicious locations in the state, leading to a relative peace, hitherto alien to the commercial city.

    Night life gradually returned and businessmen could afford to stay out late at night, holding business meetings and dinners and confident that they would still get home in peace.

    Olaseni Ayinde, a Lagos Businessman who relocated from the UK to Lagos around 2010 recalls that he was surprised to see that his business partners confidently stayed out late into the night, whenever business so required, and not a single case of violence or robbery was recorded.

    The state also received positive reviews on safety. According to a report released by travelstartblog, an online tourist sight in February 2014, Lagos remained the safest city in Nigeria in recent memory, coming first on a list of top 10 Safest Nigerian cities. And that was despite its over 20 million population and dense business concentration.

    According to the site, “The state government spends huge sum on its security, providing well-equipped response and different security units around the city. Thousands of tourists and visitors visit the city every year and they appear to be at ease  anytime they are around. It has low crime rate, no religious crisis, wonderful parks, environmental supporters and friendly people.”

    The city fondly dubbed ‘city of aquatic splendour’ by its inhabitants and visitors, also made it on the site’s list of Top 15 Safest cities on the African continent, coming in on a comfortable tenth position.

    Bankole Johnson, who used to work on Lagos Island, put that achievement at the feet of a well-funded, well-motivated and organized police command. He recalled how a few years ago, armed policemen used to be stationed on the Iyana-oworo exit of the 3rd Mainland Bridge during the evening rush hours, right into the night. He said “That gave road users a sense of safety and immediately eliminated all cases of traffic robbery, which that part of the city had become notorious for. I do not know if that pattern still plays out as we speak, because I no longer work on the Island, but I can tell you that it is just what we need in Lagos, and it will be nice if the police can replicate that strategy in other crime hot-spots.”

    It was therefore no surprise that Lagos continued to attract investments from foreign interests despite the unsavoury  reputation of insecurity been fostered on Nigeria as a whole by the Boko Haram insurgency in the Northern part of the country, kidnappers in the Niger-Delta Region and numerous ethnic clashes in the North-Central and other parts of the country.

    Even Nigerians from other troubled parts of the country trouped into the city in droves, in search of prosperity and peace of mind.

    Turn of event

    Unfortunately this situation seems to be changing for the negative, much to the chagrin of the state’s citizenry and its government that has invested so much towards its low crime rate and safety.

    More recently, reports of gun-point robberies and phones and other valuables-snatching incidents in traffic have been on the rise in the city, bringing back, as it were, a preferably forgotten past. Hardly does a day go by these days without one case of robbery occurring in one heavy traffic spots of the state or more, or all. Some of the emerging crime hot-spots according to our investigations include Oshodi-oke, Oshodi-isale, Mile-2 Oke, Mile-2-Isale, the Badagry Expressway currently under construction, right through maza-maza, through to the Agboju-Amuwo end, the Ketu-Mile 12 traffic, the Olopomeji entrance to the 3rd Mainland Bridge, and the Apongbon end of the Eko Bridge.

    The Apogbon end of the Eko Bridge seems to have become the hottest spot for crime in the city, with horrifying stories emerging on a daily basis. Just last Wednesday, a Lagos motorist narrated on a popular blogsite the unfortunate story of how his car was brazenly attacked and its occupants that included himself and his sister were robbed just about 9pm.

    Wrote the victim: “This evening, around 9pm, myself and my sister were robbed on Apongbon Bridge in traffic. The robbers didn’t even give us a chance to wind down the mirrors. They just broke the glass with all of us in it and dragged out our bags.

    “It’s unfortunate that in a country like this, with all the news every day from a common spot that there is robbery ever day, nothing has been done about it. Hopefully, one day, something would be done to protect our lives n property.”

    During the past week, a popular television channel did a special news package on the rising incidents of brazen robberies on the Badagry Expressway, complete with interviews. The motorists and commuters raised their voices against what they say has become a daily occurrence, with nearly everyone falling victim at one time or the other. They therefore called on the Lagos State government to speed up the ongoing reconstruction, while also appealing to the police and other security officers to live up to their responsibility and protect Nigerians on the road.

    A young man, Uche, who spoke to this reporter, said the situation has become such that everyone going down the other end of Lagos between Mazamaza, Agboju and Iyana-Iba would prefer to cross over before dusk. “We always want to close early from our shop before it gets dark, because these boys become more deadly at night, and there are hardly any police or soldier around to fend them off.”

    He called on the government to pay more attention to the safety of the people on that axis by deploring police and even soldiers to the road, saying ‘It is not only Boko haram that needs government’s attention. Even dangerous criminals like the ones we’re talking about need to be attended to.”

    At Mile 2 Oke, a newspaper vendor told this reporter how the area, right down to Alaba Express have become a regular spot for traffic robberies. He said this normally takes place at the early hours of the morning, when Lagosians are struggling to beat the nasty traffic on that axis of the road to get to work, or in the late evenings, when it has become dark. He said he knows this because “Usually in the morning, we see people who had been robbed either in the night or ealier in the morning, coming to look around to see if they could recover their vital documents that might have been dumped by the roadside after the robbers would have helped themselves to the cash and other things like phones and jewelries, which they could turn to cash.”

    According to him, the tanker concentration on the road, which has seemingly locked down the place in traffic is affecting road users and making virtually everybody vulnerable to robbery. And to make matters worse, he laments the fact that the police are hardly around to arrest the situation, wondering what it would cost the police to station its personnel on such dangerous spots.

    His story was corroborated by a Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) staff, who said what the guys do is attack a car, force the victims to wind down, rob them of their valuables and cross to the other side of the express. “Usually,” he says “they are so fast that within two minutes, they’re gone.”

    He also says “They usually scare the victims stiff (probably with a gun or knife) such that we only hear of the robberies when the assailants have crossed to the other side and gone.”

    Curiously, a banana hawker on the other (Orile) side of the bridge however said he could not remember any case of robbery in recent time. Pointing to an empty police shed by a triangular spot, as one ascends the bridge, he said robberies no longer happen on that side of the bridge, since the police started posting officers to the spot.

    3rd Mainland, Safe as Aso Rock

    A visit to the Iyana-oworo end of the 3rd Mainland Bridge however revealed an impressive scenario that keeps one wondering why the same police cannot adopt the same strategy to police the other parts of the city. A LASTMA official stationed at the Iyana-Oworo Bus stop said there are no incidents of robberies on that end of the bridge. He actually said “It is near impossible for robberies to happen here, because as soon as it is early evening around 4-5pm, you see fully armed eagle-eyed Rapid Response Police team taking positions on the bridge. Usually, you see one at every 100-metre radius, as you approach the end of the bridge and I tell you, it will be suicidal for anyone to try anything funny under that situation.”

    He said if in truth traffic robberies is on the rise in the city, it has to be in other areas and said “probably the guys who used to operate here relocated.”

    A groundnut seller also corroborated his story. Although, he says he does not hawk on the bridge, he said he hasn’t heard of any case of robbery on that bridge in recent time.

    Another gentleman, an Ice cream vendor however said the only robberies that occur now are pick-pockets, who usually operate in the BRT buses.

    Another LASTMA officer, still at Iyana-oworo bus stop however said the only cases of robberies that occur in the area are on the other side of the highway, near the Olopomeji axis, as motorists ascend the 3rd Mainland Bridge in the early morning hours. He said this is usually perpetrated by hoodlums who take advantage of the fact that there are no policemen on the road in those early hours to rob motorists of their money and other valuables. He pointed accusing fingers at neighbourhoods like Oworo, Bariga and Gbagada as the hideouts of the hoodlums and implored the police to extend their operations to those hours.

    One respondent, John Babatunde, who said he had been a victim of traffic robbery once, said the first thing the government and police need to do is ban hawking and any kind of loitering in the middle of traffic on highways outrightly. He said that stemmed from his own experience. “I was driving along Pako bus stop on Okota Road, a few years back, when someone tapped my car on the drivers’ side. As I turned to take a look at what the matter was, another guy, whom I had noticed earlier but didn’t pay any serious attention to, quickly reached for my phone and made away with it.” He said this would never have happened if the government totally outlaws loitering and hawking in traffic and station policemen to enforce the law.

    He also spoke of a major robbery operation in which a top business executive was disposed of his posh Nissan luxury car just about 8.30pm, almost at the same spot around Pako Bus stop, Okota , as one prepares to link up with the Oke-Afa Road, leading to Ikotun. He however said this took place about five years ago. He said he also learnt that the police retrieved the car the same evening, as the robbers made to take it through Badagry across the border.

    Police PRO speaks

    Following the avalanche of stories of robberies, it became necessary to seek the opinion the Police. Are they aware of the sudden rise in traffic robberies in the state? What exactly are they doing; or is it a case of shortage of personnel or equipment? The Nation caught up with the Lagos Police Public Relations Officer, Kenneth Nwosu, who confessed that the police is aware and “concerned about a few incidents of a robberies along the traffic gridlock places including Apongbon.  Because of that, we have increased the security in those places, Apongbon in particular. If you drive pass those areas recently, you will notice increased number of policemen stationed on the road.”

    He said “The idea is to ensure that the area is properly dominated, so that those hoodlums will not have a field day. This strategy is not only restricted to Apongbon, but several other areas identified as crime hot-spots like Ikorodu, Mile-2 axis and co. You would have noticed our policemen on snap checks doing stop and search as they patrol in motorcycles and vehicles.”

    Prodded further on what exactly the police are doing, considering that cases continue to emerge, the Police spokesman said “We will not tell you the strategies we have adopted, but I can tell you that all those areas are under serious watch.”

    On his advice to Lagosians, he said “Moving forward, we want to assure Lagosians that we have enough policemen on ground, we have our strategies, and we have enough logistics on ground to ensure that they remain safe; but again, we want to advice that anybody who falls victim should please come forward. We need the constant reporting, because the idea is that when we get to know that robberies are happening in certain areas, we move in and map out strategies on how to tackle the area. But what we have noticed is that in such cases, when they attack them, people don’t come forward to make a report. Instead, they complain to you journalists.”

    He said although the police don’t have any problem with people reporting to journalists, but that doesn’t solve the problem. It is by reporting to us instantly that we can recover the things that have been stolen. Sometimes last year, there was an incident like that along Mile 2 axis; we received a call and went into action. Some two hours later, we caught the hoodlums and recovered a pistol from them. The same thing happened in Oshodi area and we moved in immediately. The hoodlums abandoned their loots and ran away; and when the victims came to the headquarters, their belongings were handed over to them. That is the importance of reporting; but when they go unreported, the police are not magicians to know what has happened. So as part of your own responsibilities as journalists, please educated them while writing, to always report to the police when these things happen and as soon as they happen. God willing we will keep dominating our areas for the safety of Lagos and Lagosians.”

    Regarding what the police is doing about hawkers and people constantly roaming in traffic, Mr Nwosu said “The law on environmental is on now; they are mopping all the street of hawkers. That one is ongoing; it is a comprehensive strategy to rid the state of all these menace.”

  • ‘Policeman’ burnt to death on Third Mainland Bridge

    ‘Policeman’ burnt to death on Third Mainland Bridge

    A man believed to be a police officer was burnt to death yesterday on the Third Mainland Bridge in Lagos. But the police said he was not their man.

    The ‘officer’ was said to be on top speed while riding his motorcycle from the Iyana Oworo end of the bridge.

    Sources said he was flagged down by some policemen and traffic managers, who warned him against over speeding. But he ignored them and on getting to the University of Lagos (UNILAG) axis, he fell and his bike caught fire.

    The incident, it was learnt, happened around 6.15am.

    It caused a traffic jam that lasted several hours.

    Commuters wondered what could have led to the traffic snarl.

    According to a Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) official, the officer had a tear gas canister on him, which exploded when he skided off the bike.

    Efforts to rescue him failed.

    Command’s spokesperson Ken Nwosu, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP), said the victim was not a policeman.

    Nwosu admitted that a policeman was injured in the incident.

    The policeman is in hospital.

  • Aborted Lagos bomb: Another good luck for Nigeria?

    Aborted Lagos bomb: Another good luck for Nigeria?

    The country cannot afford any bombing in Lagos

    The Guardian’s front-page story on April 9 about the escape of Lagos from massive bombing of its Third Mainland Bridge must be good news to many of the 18 million people living in the state, otherwise referred to as a megacity of many towns joined by highways and bridges. Apart from the spirit of ‘thank God it did not happen’ that is expected from the lips of millions of indigenes and residents of Lagos State, there must be millions that must have been losing sleep since The Guardian broke the news that the weapons of mass destruction unearthed in Ojora-Badia a few weeks ago were made to bomb and destroy Lagos. There are others who are already saying: ‘How lucky is Nigeria again!’

    Of course, there must be questions on the lips of many patriots about the shroud that has been used to cover the story, especially the magnitude of the intention of Boko Haram terrorists that planned to hit the Third Mainland Bridge. Was the silence intended to keep troubling information from citizens and thus avoid panic? The fact that traffic has been unusually light on the bridge and in Lagos in general since Tuesday is an indication that people are already panicking. Would it have been better for the country’s security minders to have grades of alert about the danger posed by Boko Haram for citizens, the way it is done in other countries bedeviled by terrorism and suicide bombers?

    Even if we succeed in appeasing the current initiates of Boko Haram with amnesty, it may be necessary for the presidency to find ways of warning citizens about the degree of danger facing them, as there is likely to be another group of BokoHaramists after the ongoing amnesty process, should the sect that has confessed to turning the North of Nigeria into an Islamic state agree to monetized amnesty. Has the country not known threats from Niger Delta militants after the first amnesty which has now become a model or precedent to borrow in fighting the greatest threat to the country’s unity since the pogrom in the North in 1966 and the civil war that the killing of Igbos in the North generated.

    As scary as the news of plans to bomb Lagos is, security chiefs and the average citizen should not be surprised that Boko Haram finally came to Lagos to deploy bombs. It would have been surprising if it never got to this. The Yoruba have a saying: Aladugbotio n koasoara re siabatako le ma yaasoenielenisiwewe (A neighbour that puts his own clothes in the mud should have no qualms shredding other persons’ clothes). Apart from killing Christians in the North, Boko Haram terrorists also killed fellow northerners in bars. Many of them even killed themselves in the process of suicide bombing. Why would they not attempt to do the same in the nation’s commercial and cultural capital?

    Still on why no one should expect the terrorist sect to stay away from Lagos, Lagos is the most graphic illustration of the impact of Western civilization or education in the country. Why should anyone be surprised that proponents of Education is Sin have planned to destroy the most convincing evidence that western education can also bring as driver of progress to parts of the country that appear to be addicted to western education? It is good for everyone that members of the Islamist terrorist group that came to Lagos to operate have been foiled and their plans aborted. But it is not yet Uhuru. Security and non-security workers in Lagos and other cities should not rest on their oars yet. Boko Haram is not dead yet. The Boko Haram imagination is not likely to die so readily, not even after Boko Haram in all its manifestations: religious, criminal, and political, to borrow the categorization of General Buhari, would have been appeased or assuaged with offers of amnesty.

    Boko Haram illustrates some of the ironies in the Nigerian polity and society. It is an organization that hates western education but relies in its operations on products of western education. Boko Haram was birthed in the section of the country that believes that the unity of Nigeria is the only issue worth paying attention to, even if doing this is at the expense of the happiness of many sections of the country. In addition, the Islamist terrorist group is native to the section of the country that is mortally opposed to multilevel policing and law enforcement in the country. It is the same group that has hobbled the presidency and the country’s mono-level security architecture that is being appeased with offer of amnesty before any negotiation. It is the same sect that is driven by religious bigotry that is being cajoled by leaders of an admittedly secular or multi-religious country.

    It would have been the mother of ironies if Boko Haram had succeeded in bombing the Third Mainland Bridge while the rest of the country was busy bending over backward to appease the terrorist sect with amnesty. There is no doubt that the people of Lagos must be expressing in their private spaces gratitude to the nation’s security group after the news that they were saved from mass murder by Intelligence workers that napped the suicide bombers waiting in Ijora-Badia to hatch their nefarious plans.

    But gratitude to security staff may not be enough to save Lagos or any other city for that matter. What is needed is for every Lagosian to see himself and herself from this moment on as security intelligence staff. The country cannot afford any bombing in Lagos. This may be too dangerous for the unity of the country, as Lagosians and their relations elsewhere are likely to go berserk if any of the three bridges is destroyed with motorists on them.

    This may be the best time to stop sectionalising the call for state and community police as the Constitution Technical Committee did when it reported that it is only the Southwest that is asking for state police. The same trivialisation occurred when leaders of major Nigerian nationalities dubbed NADECO’s struggle for restoration of democracy a Yoruba affair, but the rest about that is now history. Nigeria cannot afford to wait until everybody in the Southwest, Southeast, South-south, and even in the regions of birth of Boko Haram become his or her own police.The process of dialogue and offer of amnesty to Boko Haram must include calling other Nigerian nationalities to a conference to agree on the way to make the nation’s unity sustainable and pleasurable to citizens from all sections and religions in the country.

  • Third Mainland Bridge: Fed Govt explains why N33b repair was rejected

    The last may not have been heard about the controversy trailing the repair of the Third Mainland Bridge in Lagos.

    Minister of Works, Mike Onolememen, yesterday told the Senate that his ministry turned down the request of a firm that asked for N33 billion to carry out repair work.

    Senate Committee on Works had invited the minister to ascertain what his ministry is doing to save the Third Mainland Bridge from collapse.

    But Onolememen told members of the committee that from the report before him, the bridge does not face any danger of collapse.

    He said the N33 billion was rejected because the sea-diver firm that asked for it went beyond its brief.

    The minister added that the firm did not only submit the underwater photograph, it went beyond its brief by going ahead without doing any test on the bridge piles, but arrived at a solution and recommended a particular technology, which cost the ministry N33billion.

    He said they needed about N5 billion to carry out repairs on the most critical sessions of the bridge, the first two sessions that required immediate repair.

    Said he: “From the perspective of the ministry, we have every reason to believe this report is consistent with the report of all the experts we have invited in this matter, because until you carry out engineering test, you cannot get into a conclusion that would frighten people.

    “In the course of maintenance of the Third Mainland Bridge, I told Lagosians at a time that if I have any report to the effect that Third Mainland Bridge was going to collapse, I love my life, I will not be holding press conferences on top of the bridge everyday. I went to Lagos to inspect this project.”