Tag: Truck drivers

  • Dangote Salt rewards truck drivers

    The NASCON Allied Industries Plc (National Salt Company of Nigeria Plc) management has said it will continue to accord its staff members due recognition as it rewarded truck drivers in its employ for meeting product delivery target and driving accident free last year.

    NASCON is a subsidiary of  the Dangote Group.

    Its Executive Director, Commercial, Hajiya Fatima Aliko Dangote, who presented various gifts to the drivers, said drivers as critical part of the company’s workforce are the most important assets of the company and NASCON would, therefore, continue to recognise and reward them for meeting targets.

    Underscoring the importance NASCON management attached to drivers, she said the organisation’s business transactions with its customers would not be completed until the final delivery of products to the right destination and are made possible only by the truck drivers.

    “Therefore, no serious organisation would take its drivers for granted. Our drivers are the most important in the distribution chain. They take a lot of risks while striving to deliver products and meet targets and even exceed targets.

    “We are doing this to recognise them; that they matter in our business and we will continue to celebrate them,” she said.

    Fatima Dangote explained that the company has put in place various incentives to motivate the drivers to perform better, pointing out that each driver that meets delivery target and records zero accident will collect N50,000 every quarter, totalling N200,000 a year.

    The NASCON boss disclosed that the yearly performance award ceremony was meant to celebrate the drivers and let them know that their contributions to the success of the company was not unappreciated.

    She urged them and the workforce not to rest on their oars, but strive to exceed 2018 performance, promising them that the company would always live up to expectations by rewarding their hard work.

    The Fleet Administration Manager, Mrs. Augustia Odega, explained that five of the drivers were adjudged best performing truck drivers for last year and all of them automatically became NASCON brand ambassadors.

    According to her, some of the criteria used in selecting the best performing drivers included high trip performance; volume lifted – tonnage; good truck maintenance records; low cost of truck maintenance, i.e tyre and AGO usage; accident free operations; Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and safety compliance and overall driver’s personal conduct in compliance with company’s rules and regulations.

    Overall best driver, Nurudeen Shomuyiwa, is said to be a post-graduate diploma graduate, but chose to be a truck driver because of his passion for driving.

    In his remarks, FRSC Commander, Akporowho Isaac, who represented the Lagos Zonal Commander, described the company‘s gesture of rewarding its drivers as very laudable, but rare in most organisations.

    According to him, most management and individuals treat drivers with disdain, yet drivers’ roles are very critical in the overall success of the organisation. “What you are doing here today is an important event, but which many organisations don’t consider as necessary,” he said.

  • Truck drivers get 48hrs to vacate Lagos bridges

    Truck drivers get 48hrs to vacate Lagos bridges

    ‘They’re easy targets for terrorists’ attacks’

    Truck drivers got yesterday a 48 hours deadline to clear off Lagos bridges.

    The military and the State Government issued the ultimatum  during a stakeholders meeting  at the Apapa Headquarters of the Western Naval Command (WNC).

    At the meeting  were the Flag Officer Commanding (FOC) WNC, Rear Admiral Slyvanus Abbah; Permanent Secretary (PS), Lagos State Ministry of Transport, Dr. Taiwo Salau; Commander, 9 Brigade, Nigerian Army (NA), Brig.-Gen. Adiku Attu; Base Commander, Nigerian Air Force  (NAF), and Air Commodore Mike Olatunji.

    Also present were a  Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) manager, Aisha Ali-Ibrahim,  representatives of Dangote Group, National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG), containerised truck drivers, Apapa Residents Association, the police and the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA).

    Rear Admiral Abbah said the  trucks’ presence on the bridges constituted a security risk, adding that they could be easy targets for terrorists.

    The FOC warned that the bridges could collapse because of the static weight they had been forced to carry for over a decade.

    He lamented the  manhour and resources the navy wasted whenever it  moved personnel for ground operations from Navy Town, Ojo to  Apapa Base.

    Abbah said: “We cannot continue like this. This gridlock from Apapa to Mile Two and then from the stadium up to Eko Bridge does not do anyone good.

    “We are going through  trying times in the country and the mere presence of these tankers and trucks on our bridges constitute easy targets for terrorists. No one knows where and when terrorists strike from. Their actions cannot be predicted and that is the more reason why we cannot continue to have these vehicles parked on the bridges for two to three weeks. The navy deployed its helicopters on Monday to take aerial footages of the situation and I can tell you it is very worrisome. So many people have lost their lives as a result of this traffic. These bridges were constructed in the early the 1970s to carry moving weights not for static vehicles. The bridges have since carried more than the weight they were built for. Parking trucks on them could lead to collapse because they weaken the bridges.

    “We have heard from NUPENG and I use this opportunity to appeal to the leaders here to call their men to order. We do not want to see tankers and trucks parked on the bridges anymore. They have requested for 48 hours to start phasing off their trucks from the bridges and we have obliged.”

    Salau said part of the problem was that Apapa Port was overstretched.

    According to him, the port was built for 30 million metric tons but was currently importing over 80 billion metric tons, all of which are sent to their destinations by road.

    The PS said the government had completed a holding bay that could accommodate 3,500 tankers at Orile, adding that work is ongoing on another one that can take 2,700 containerised trucks.

    Salau said: “The bridges were built to carry light load and not heavy weights as they have been subjected to. I am afraid that no bridge in Lagos can stand integrity test.

    “I have not seen anywhere in the world, where a port that discharges goods of this capacity does not have rails to move them to loading bays of shipping companies.

    “Another problem is that shipping companies do not have loading bays. After discharging their goods, these containers are supposed to return to the bays. But go to the port and see the quantum of containers there, you will realise that they have turned the port to their loading bays.

    “The NPA is also part of the problem. When they take a step forward, they take two backward. There is also the issue of tank farms. This traffic situation is a national calamity. Lagos State is staking all to solve it because it is not only Apapa that is affected. The vehicles have entered inner routes and virtually all parts of the state suffer from their action.”

  • Truck drivers get 48 hours to vacate Lagos bridges

    •They can be easy targets for terrorists’ attacks, says military

    TO avert terrorists’ attacks on Lagos,  truck drivers have been given 48 hours to clear off bridges in the state.

    The military and the Lagos State Government gave them the ultimatum  yesterday during a stakeholders meeting  at the Apapa Headquarters of Western Naval Command (WNC).

    At the meeting  were the Flag Officer Commanding (FOC) WNC, Rear Admiral Slyvanus Abbah; Permanent Secretary (PS), Lagos State Ministry of Transport, Dr. Taiwo Salau; Commander, Nine Brigade, Nigerian Army (NA), Brig Gen. Adiku Attu; Base Commander, Nigerian Air Force  (NAF), and Air Commodore Mike Olatunji.

    Also in attendance were a  Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) manager, Aisha Ali-Ibrahim,  representatives of Dangote Group, National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG), containerised truck drivers, Apapa Residents Association, the police and Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA).

    Abbah said the  trucks’ presence on the bridges constituted security risk, adding that they could be easy targets for terrorists.

    The FOC warned that the bridges could collapse because of the static weight they had been forced to carry for over a decade.

    He lamented the  manhour and resources the navy wasted whenever it  moved personnel for ground operations from Navy Town, Ojo to  Apapa Base.

    Abbah said: “We cannot continue like this. This gridlock from Apapa to Mile Two and then from the stadium up to Eko Bridge does not do anyone good.

    “We are going through  trying times in the country and the mere presence of these tankers and trucks on our bridges constitute easy targets for terrorists. No one knows where and when terrorists strike from. Their actions cannot be predicted and that is the more reason why we cannot continue to have these vehicles parked on the bridges for two to three weeks. The navy tasked its helicopters on Monday to take aerial footages of the situation and I can tell you it is very worrisome. So many people have lost their lives as a result of this traffic. These bridges were constructed in the early 1970 to carry moving weights not for static vehicles. The bridges have since carried more than the weight they were built for. Parking trucks on them could lead to collapse because they weaken the bridges.

    “We have heard from NUPENG and I use this opportunity to appeal to the leaders here to call their men to order. We do not want to see tankers and trucks parked on the bridges anymore. They have requested for 48 hours to start phasing off their trucks from the bridges and we have obliged.”

    Salau said part of the problem was that Apapa Port was overstretched.

    According to him, the port was built for 30 million metric tons but was currently importing over 80 billion metric tons, all of which are sent to their destinations by road.

    The PS said the government had completed a holding bay that could accommodate 3,500 tankers at Orile, adding that work is ongoing on another one that can take 2,700 containerised trucks.

    Salau said: “The bridges were built to carry light load and not heavy weights as they have been subjected to. I am afraid that no bridge in Lagos can stand integrity test.

    “I have not seen anywhere in the world, where a port that discharges goods of this capacity does not have rails to move them to loading bays of shipping companies.

    “Another problem is that shipping companies do not have loading bays. After discharging their goods, these containers are supposed to return to the bays. But go to the port and see the quantum of containers there, you will realise that they have turned the port to their loading bays.

    “The NPA is also part of the problem. When they take a step forward, they take two backward. There is also the issue of tank farms. This traffic situation is a national calamity. Lagos State is staking all to solve it because it is not only Apapa that is affected. The vehicles have entered inner routes and virtually all parts of the state suffer from their action.”

  • NPA advises officers, truck drivers on safety standards

    • As new image maker resumes

    The Managing Director, Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Ms Hadiza Bala Usman, has directed officials to ensure that truck drivers at the seaports observed the Minimum Safety Standards (MSS) in their operations.

    Ms Usman gave the directive at the opening of a capacity building workshop for the drivers, organised by the NPA and the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC).

    Represented by the General Manager, Health, Safety and Environment (HSE), Mr. Ahmed Yusuf, Ms Usman said the agency would continue to collaborate with agencies at the ports to build an effective synergy that would ensure that trucks doing business at the ports complied with  minimum safety standards.

    Ms Usman, while commending the organisers of the workshop, urged the participants to practise what they learnt from the event.

    In his welcome address, the Lagos State Sector Commander of the FRSC, Mr. Hyginus Omeje, said the MSS was first introduced in the oil and gas sector when the FRSC commenced the implementation of the scheme

    Omeje, represented by the Legal Officer of the Command, Bonaventure Nnamani, lauded the NPA for the partnership and also enjoined participants to open their minds to safety standards.

    The NPA has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the FRSC on the implementation of MSS for trucks operating at the ports.

    The MoU empowers NPA and FRSC to raise Joint Inspection and Certification (JIC) teams to oversee its full implementation.

    Meanwhile, the new General Manager, Corporate and Strategic Communications Division of the NPA, Alhaji Aliyu Abdullahi Goje, has assumed duties.

    Goje was the general manager, Eastern Zone, before his redeployment to the division.

    He began his  career with the Borno State Government as Land Officer in the Ministry of Land and Survey, shortly after his National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) assignment in 1983, and rose to  Deputy Director in charge of Land Administration in 1992.

    He transferred his service to the NPA in August 1993 as traffic manager, and has since managed the Traffic Department effectively.

    He was senior traffic manager in Lagos Port Complex, assistant general manager at Eastern and Western Zones, and port manager, Onne Port Complex, among others.

    The Borno State indigene attended the University of Maiduguri and Bayero University, Kano where he bagged Bachelor of Science Degree (B.Sc.) in Geography and a Masters in Land Resources.

    He has attended several management courses in and outside Nigeria, among which are Port and Shipping Management, Logistics, Transportation and Port Training in New York; a performance culture in a concessioning system, South Africa; Strategic Management and Policy.

    In an interactive session with the officials of the division, Goje directed his officers to key into the management thrust, which is anchored on “Excellence of Service” prioritising a most“effective synergy with team work as our theme”.

    According to the new image maker, result is key in the activities of the divisions, adding that this must be geared towards the NPA brand appreciation through commendable information management and dissemination.

    “I have high hopes we will deliver on our targets and responsibilities,” he said, adding, “As professionals, we have to think of the best way to ensure we sustain plausible publicity mileage for the NPA and its management utilising technology and innovations.’’

  • Lagos warns truck drivers to stop intimidating motorists

    Lagos State government yesterday warned truck and articulated vehicle drivers to stop intimidating other motorists.

    It promised to intensify the sensitisation of motorists and enforce the Lagos Traffic Law 2012 to ensure accident-free ‘ember’ months.ý

    Lagos State Drivers Institute (LASDRI) Chief Executive Officer Mr Philip Ogunlade and Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) Comptroller for Lagos East Senatorial District Mrs Lateefat Giwa sounded the note of warning at a sensitisation workshop for drivers in Ikorodu.

    Ogunlade said the agency was worried by the high rate of human and material losses during the ‘ember’ months.

    This, he said, informed the theme of the campaign “Life is worth Living-Drive safely”, adding that motorists must be safety-conscious always, especially when behind the wheel.

    Ogunlade said: “As you are aware, one of the cardinal policies of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s administration is security and safety of lives and properties. While this administration is continuing in this stride, it has however been observed that human error constitutes a major factor in road accidents. Practice such as over speeding, disregard for traffic rules and regulations and driving under the influence of alcohol, among others, results in road crashes with the attendant loss of lives and properties.”

    Giwa said: “Many motorists can attest to the fact that bigger vehicles such as tippers, trucks and other articulated vehicles and big busesý are fond of intimidating car owners on the road. This is not good. There is need for motorists to consider other road users too.”

  • Navy to tanker, truck drivers: maintain single lane

    Navy to tanker, truck drivers: maintain single lane

    The Nigerian Navy  yesterday warned heavy duty vehicles’ drivers to keep to the single lane agreement reached with them to avoid standstill near the Mile 2 and Apapa in Lagos State.

    The Flag Officer Commanding (FOC), Western Naval Command (WNC), Rear Admiral Raphael Osondu, gave the warning at the command’s headquarters in Apapa.

    He decried what he called the lawless behaviours of some drivers.

    Recalling the incident that occurred at Kirikiri on October 1, among Naval personnel, tanker drivers and some hoodlums, the FOC said the driver would not have crushed his assistant, if he had stayed on the right lane.

    He debunked claims that naval ratings controlling traffic on the road were responsible for the condcutor’s death, adding that no amount of blackmail would stop them from their lawful duties.

    The FOC recalled the difficulty the navy encountered in conveying weapons from the Naval Ordinance Depot (NOD) to other formations.

    He said prison officials could not take suspects to court because tankers blocked the roads.

    According to Osondu, allowing traffic congestion on the road could jeopardise security of critical infrastructure in the area, should there be an attack by criminals.

    While disclosing that directives have been given to all shanty shop owners along the Kirikiri road to vacate the place, Osondu accused them of suppling these drivers and hoodlums alcohol and Indian hemps.

    He said: “There have been incidences in the last 10 days in Lagos, especially along the Apapa, Mile two, Oshodi axis that had to do with tanker drivers who claim to be member of NUPENG.

    “The issue that happened at Kirikiri on October 1, has attracted alot of public concern because of the allegation of high – handedness against naval personnel operating there.

    “But we must remember that that area is strategic because of the institutions, infrastructures located there. First it is a prison complex, housing the medium and maximum prisons. It also houses the NOD, where we have our arms and ammunitions, and it has access to the navy town.

    “Kirikiri also has a lighter terminal and some warehouses, tankfarms.  So, it is expected that because of business activities, the place will experience traffic.

    “It got to a stage that the place became inaccessible, prisoners could not be taken to court because traffic was brought to a halt.

    “The navy had to come in because the police in that location was overwhelmed. Sanity was restored no doubt but with time,  we discovered that some unruly elements among the drivers will always want to take the laws into their hands and invariably we started experiencing gridlock in that area again..

    “It is even not safe to have heavy trucks on parked on the bridges, which means the integrity of those bridges have been compromised.

    “Only God knows what might happen in the near future if this is not addressed properly.”

    Narrating what happened on October 1, Osondu said the driver who drove a Forte Oil tanker left the lane meant for such vehicles and plied the only lane left for other road users.

  • Truck drivers: night movement unsafe

    Truck drivers: night movement unsafe

    To ensure the safety of life and property, Lagos State Government restricted daytime movement of trailers and other  articulated vehicles. The operators have risen up against the government, absolving themselves of blame. ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE and OLALEKAN AYENI report.

    Picture for a minute a container falling from a height. Imagine the fate of whatever it may fall on. This is no fiction. On  Ojuelegba bridge, a container, poorly latched to a trailer fell and crushed a Sport Utility Van (SUV) below, going under the bridge, killing the three occupants. It was a depressing sight, which prompted the government to act fast to stem the recklessness of truck, trailer and tanker drivers.

    With over 200 deaths recorded in the third quarter of the year, half of which were caused by containerised trucks or petroleum tankers, there perhaps may not be any other nation with such a disturbing accident trend.

    To stem the scourge, government restricted daytime movement of articulated vehicle from 6am to 9pm.

     

    Old wine, new bottle

    The law itself is not new. It  is one of the extant laws of the state. The immediate past administration enforced it somewhat between 2008 and 2009 but soft pedalled on its enforcement in its second term.

    The Akinwunmi Ambode administration is dusting up the law to reduce road carnage. Those who flout the law risk the seizure of their vehicles, or the payment of fine, or both.

    The government’s determination to enforce the law with the support of the security and road management agencies is unsettling the operators.               Rising from the State Security Council meeting, Police Chief Fatai Owoseni said his men would strictly enforce the law.

    But Owoseni’s declaration has led to a protest with trailer and tanker drivers embarking on strike action to protest the directive.

    Though the petroleum tanker drivers under the aegis of PTD have since returned to work and complying by staying off the road, truck/trailer drivers operating from the ports refused all entreaties to return to work last Friday.

    They said they won’t return to work because the restriction has imperilled their lives and the safety of the cargoes they carry.

    Their stance  is already raising the blood pressure of importers whose goods are being delayed by the impasse.

     

    Pleas and arguments

     

    The operators are calling on the government to rescind its decision. They claimed the order did not consider the security of the drivers  and the safety of their cargoes. They alleged that the drivers are attacked at night by armed robbers, and their goods and vehicles stolen.

    Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN), Depot Owners and Petroleum Products Marketers Association (DAPPMA), Petroleum Tanker Drivers (PTD), unit of the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG), and their counterpart in the containerised business, Association of Maritime Truck Owners (AMATO), urged the government to reverse the order for the security of their drivers and the products they are conveying across the country.

    AMATO’s National President Chief ‘Remi Ogungbemi said the security of the drivers and the products are not guaranteed at night.

    The insecurity, Ogungbemi added, is worsened by the deplorable condition of roads across the country, and poor road visibility.

    He urged Governor Ambode to consider these factors and rescind the restriction order to enable articulated vehicle drivers like other motorists enjoy their profession like other colleagues at day time and without harm.

    The AMATO chief also challenged the Federal Government to encourage operators by facilitating loans for the purpose of purchasing new vehicles instead of importing fairly used.

    This, he said, will make the phasing out of aging trucks by the union and the FRSC easy.

    The operators also demanded a park for trailers/tankers, adding that this would enable the drivers to rest.                Ogungbemi, said stress and fatigue contribute immensely to accidents. “A parking space would among other benefits, guarantee access to the FRSC, Vehicle Inspection Officers (VIO) and other security agencies to inspect vehicles before allowing them to proceed on their journey,” Ogungbemi said.

    PTD National Vice-Chairman Mr Solomon Kilanko, challenged the Lagos State Government to tackle the hoodlums and Area boys scourge before enforcing the order. He said it would amount to double jeopardy if the drivers, who deserves to be protected by the government are exposed to danger from hoodlums who lurk in the dark to attack them and hijack their vehicles.

    He said: “Bad roads and threats of attacks at night make the new directive more harmful than helpful to drivers.”

    MOMAN Executive Secretary, Mr Obafemi Olawore,  said major marketers would strengthen the training and retraining of their drivers on safety standards as part of measures to reduce incessant accidents.

    Expressing worry over the spate of accidents, Olawore pledged the association’s readiness to improve the checking of both mechanical and human factors of their members right from the loading point to complement the efforts of the FRSC.

    The Secretary, Depot Owners Association of Nigeria (DOAN), Dr Mark Anamali, said the association would ensure that rickety vehicles are phased out of the roads before the end of the year.

    A medical doctor, Ibiyemi Olusoji,  said the order restricting movement of articulated drivers to night travels would cause more harm than good as fatigued drivers on long distance trips are most likely to fall asleep on the wheels and crash the vehicle.

    “Ordinarily the night is designed for sleeping. A driver who is banned from moving at daytime and did not rest till he begins his trip at night, won’t be able to get to Ibadan, Oyo State, before fatigue will set in and this could cause accident,” Olusoji said.

    A safety expert and founder of Safety Without Borders (SWB), a non-government organisation, Mr Patrick Adenusi, said the order banning road movement by truckers is wrong headed.

    According to him, the order has inadvertently isolated the truck drivers as the cause of accidents.

    For him, as part of investigations meant to curtail accidents, truck drivers rather than being vilified, ought to be questioned on the challenges they coped with  before the accident occured.

    Listing the Area Boys as “a major unidentified agent” of road accidents, Adenusi, painting a scenario said: “These boys would swoop on a truck driver and demanded to be paid, as if such fees are sacrosanct. If the driver refused, these boys would go behind the driver and remove the air hose, which controls the braking system and if this happens, the driver in trying to avoid being attacked by the boys, would accelerate and if he got to a point where he might need to apply the brake and it fails, an accident results.

    “Most times, we do not talk to the truck drivers. We need to talk to them, we need to know, as only this would indicate our readiness to stop accidents.”

    Adenusi equally advocated for aggressive driving education among Nigerians.

    Describing Nigerian drivers as “one of the most unruly around the world,”Adenusi said statistics has shown that over 90 per cent of Nigerian drivers are “grossly indisciplined.”

    In Nigeria, less than 10 per cent of drivers stay on their lanes and this has been identified as a major cause of accident.

    “Imagine a reckless driver swerving in front of a trailer loaded with Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), or a fully loaded containerised trailer, any attempt to avoid such sudden swerve could spell disaster but that carnage could have been avoided, if every driver had been fully sensitised about responsible driving.

    “It is standard global practice, when you are on a single lane, you remain on your lane, if you are going on two lanes, you stay on the second lane and if you are travelling on the three-lane road, you stay on the third lane, but here, you see drivers move indiscriminately without any regard to lane discipline,” he said.

    Blame should also go to the truck owners, many of who left their vehicles unmaintained. “It is left to imagination what can begin to happen if the state government fully implements this law, with over 60 percent of all articulated vehicles on our roads lacking headlight and virtually all roads in the state poorly lighted by street light.”

     

    Restriction, no solution

     

    Adenusi and other experts believed that the restriction is not what the state and indeed the country needs to get out of the woods in terms of crashes of articulated vehicles.

    Citing other parts of the world where all manners of vehicles were allowed to make use of the road at all times, the SWB chief said the law could be contested as it precludes the right of some certain group of people who are professionals in their own right to safety, a right, which the government duly owes them as citizens.

    “If we say trucks can’t move on Lagos roads at daytime, what happens to those trucks carrying sands to and from the Eko Atlantic City, most of which plies Western Avenue at daytime?”

    “Let government tackle the menace called Area boys, and you are likely to see a dramatic reduction in the rate of accidents especially ones involving articulated vehicles,” he said.

    Adenusi called for the declaration of emergency on the state of road network in the country. If the road network is fitted with adequate infrastructure, there would be a reduction in accidents.

    He urged the government to revisit the truck road – Apapa-Oshodi Expressway, saying most drivers take alternative roads like the Western Avenue because the truck road is bad. If this road which had collapsed is fixed, it would reduce the stress on alternative routes and this would result in a reduction in accidents, he added.

  • Photo: FRSC’s free medical check for drivers in Benin

    Photo: FRSC’s free medical check for drivers in Benin

    FRSC'S FREE MEDICAL CHECKS AND PHYSICAL EXAMINATION FOR DRIVERS OF ARTICULATED VEHICLES AND TRUCKS  AS PART OF ACTIVITIES TO MARK THE FEDERAL ROAD SAFETY CORPS (FRSC) "OPERATION SCORPION" IN BENIN ON MONDAY
    FRSC’S FREE MEDICAL CHECKS AND PHYSICAL EXAMINATION FOR DRIVERS OF ARTICULATED VEHICLES AND TRUCKS AS PART OF ACTIVITIES TO MARK THE FEDERAL ROAD SAFETY CORPS (FRSC) “OPERATION SCORPION” IN BENIN ON MONDAY
  • Lawmakers to Fashola: Curb menace of truck drivers

    Lawmakers to Fashola: Curb menace of truck drivers

    Lagos State House of Assembly has called on Governor Babatunde Fashola to check the menace of truck and trailer drivers on bridges and highways in Apapa Local Government Area.

    They also urged the governor to ensure that tanker drivers patronise their terminal and holding bay on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.

    These were part of the resolutions passed by the House following a motion co-sponsored by Hon. Mufutau Egberongbe (Apapa 1); Wahab Alawiye-King (Lagos Island 2); Sanai Agunbiade (Ikorodu 1), Olumuyiwa Jimoh (Apapa 2) and Moshood Oshun (Lagos Mainland 2).

    The House urged the governor to “expedite action on the revitalisation of rail transportation system of the state to help reduce the influx of trucks and trailers plying the route to ease the hardship being experienced by commuters on a daily basis on the road”.

    It also called on the National Assembly through the Committee on Works to direct the Federal Ministry of Works to expedite action on the reconstruction of the road to avoid practical shut down of the road.

    In arriving at the resolutions, the lawmakers noted the indiscriminate parking and abandonment of trucks and trailers on bridges and highways in Apapa Local Government Area causing traffic jam with their attendant loss of productive man-hours and posing serious danger to the bridges built to ease vehicular movement in the area.

    The House also pointed out the health hazards to commuters and residents plying the route because of emissions from the trucks and trailers which constitute nuisance to the environment.

    The House expressed worries that the perpetual parking and abandonment of articulated vehicles on the roads and bridges had resulted in serious traffic gridlock that had taken a toll on the economic activities of the axis.

    It said the situation had worsened the state of federal roads, thereby posing further serious danger to lives and property in the area.

    Also, the House expressed worries that the deep potholes along the roads have turned into death traps, thus giving hoodlums the opportunity to attack commuters and vehicles plying the routes.

  • ‘Truck drivers, ‘commercial’ sex workers more susceptible to HIV/AIDS’

    Truck drivers and “commercial” sex workers (SWs) are more susceptible to HIV/AIDS than other members of the society, says a study.

    The study tagged: Abidjan-Lagos Corridor (ALCO), was carried out in West Africa’s five major ports: Apapa, Cotonou (Benin), Lome (Togo), Tema (Ghana) and Abidjan Cote (D’Ivoire).

    It was entitled: ‘Sexual transmitted infections (STIs), HIV and AIDS integrated biological and behavioural surveillance survey in ports’, sponsored by Abidjan-Lagos Trade and Transport Facilitation Project.

    The aim, Assistant Director, Lagos State AIDS Control Agency (LSACA), Dr Dayo Lajide, said this is to help reduce incidence of HIV and AIDS and alleviate its effect on those infected and affected.

    She said the study would help governments to provide intervention in the ports.

    The targets, she said, are the truckers and sex workers because both by virtue of their profession have a higher risk of contracting the disease, especially because of the mobile nature of the former’s job.

    Lajide said: “This study has helped us to understand what the prevalent rate is. It has also helped us to know the kind of behaviour they exhibit or knowledge that they have about the disease.

    “By this, we can know the type of programme to design to prevent the transmission of the disease.”

    She said it was discovered that major roads and borders crossing help to accelerate the transmission of the virus due to the high mobility of people, goods and services among the countries.

    The road transport workers are at risk because of the highly mobile nature of their work.

    She said their job makes them to be away from their relatives a lot.

    “Sometimes when the call of nature is upon them they have the urge to engage in sex with commercial sexual workers or even young girls who sell food and other items to them when they have stopovers,” she said.

    She explained that the sex workers who were studied generally work in the cities, adding: “And they are the preferred targets for AIDS prevention interventions as was shown not only by the exposure indicator but by behavioural and knowledge indicators”.

    The level of the indicators, she said, shows the programmes implemented in the different countries, are producing results.

    LSACA Prevention/Focal Person, Mr Michael Essien, urged the five countries involved in the study, to scale-up prevention activities to hasten the declination of prevalence which has been initiated in all the countries.

    Essien said the prevalence observed in the port areas is identical to national prevalence estimated during the national Integrated Biological and Behavioural Surveillance Survey (IBBSS) and is influenced by many factors.

    “The development of an appropriate strategy and the strengthening of activities towards this objective which is the main target fuelling the epidemic will enable countries to control the epidemic in the coming years” he said.

    He said two major concerns were identified in this study and requires the necessary action. They are drug used by sex workers (SWs) and sexual exploitation of minors.

    “Over a quarter of sex workers use drugs and it would therefore be pertinent if each country establishes a system of fighting against drug use among SWs. “Sexual exploitation of minors in the sex trade has been noted in all ports. It is desirable that countries design a recovery and rehabilitation system for minors involved in the sex trade,” Essien said.