For
those who work and live in Apapa or have one form of business
transaction or the other, the last eight weeks have been very harrowing.
Signs that the traffic situation in the port city will soon abate are
still very far from near. Each day, trailers, trucks, fuel tankers and
other container-bearing articulated vehicles line up on every major road
leading up to the Tin Can Port and the Apapa Wharf, making commuting a
herculean, sometimes unfeasible task for other motorists.
Till date, most bridges on Western
Avenue, Ijora and along the Oshodi-Apapa Expressway have been turned to
parking lots by drivers. It was gathered that operations at the ports
have collapsed, making accessibility of the facilities difficult for the
container-bearing trucks.
Though
the difficulty in accessing the area has been on over six years now,
there is no hope that solution is in sight soon. Everywhere looks like a
jungle or no man’s land. Hope that the Muhammadu Buhari administration
would tackle the problems as soon as he came to office has been dashed.
From the look of things, the problems are beyond it.
Present Situation
Everyday
people are meant to go through difficult situation to get to their
offices and homes. Not only have houses been deserted, offices have been
closed down due to the difficulty in accessing the area.
For
those who have access to Apapa from Western Avenue, sometimes the
gridlock starts as far as Ikorodu Road, Alaka or Ijora Olopa. Others who
access the area from the Oshodi-Mile 2 axis, the traffic starts from
Sanya Bus-Stop.
It
is not only entering Apapa that is unpleasant, exiting is as hellish as
motorists and road users are left at the mercy of the elements, with
nobody knowing when it will come to an end. It is common sight these
days to see commuters alighting from buses and trekking down to their
destinations.
Allegations of Bribery
Not
even the security agencies drafted to the area to control the chaos
appear to have achieved success. They seem soundly defeated. On many
occasions, they have ignored the directive for them to create one lane
for cars to have easy access to Apapa due to corruption.
Whether
they are on duty or not, they are constantly seen on the bridges
collecting bribes to pass truck drivers or sometimes escorting them to
block the roads.
Added
to this is fact that all the roads leading the port city have broken
down. While Dangote is seriously trying to construct the Wharf Road, the
Oshodi-Apapa road particularly from Mile 2 to Liverpool Road all
through Creek Road is in a sorry state. Even on top of the bridges
leading to the ports are in a sorry state.
A
worker in Apapa, one Adekoya Aderemi, expressed believe that for as
long as security agents collect bribe from truck drivers, there will
never be sanity on the road.
“What
the Apapa bedlam has exposed is that we are in a complete jungle. For
over seven years now, this traffic has been there without any solution
in sight. What personally pains me is that we have police, soldiers,
navy, civil defence, road safety, all carrying different guns and
sometimes sticks and horsewhips, yet they cannot control unarmed truck
drivers. What a shame! They have sold their consciences. They collect
bribes and allow the drivers do what they like by blocking the roads.”
Helpless Government
From
the look of things, it would appear that motorists and other users of
the ever-busy roads have an endless wait before the nightmare they
experience daily on the road comes to an end.
All
efforts by the federal and Lagos State governments to solve this
seemingly intractable threat to the nation’s economy are to no
avail. The Lagos State Government under Akinwunmi Ambode is completely
helpless. It also refused to take concrete steps to ameliorate the
situation or criticise the federal government unlike when Babatunde
Fashola was governor. Fashola had on several occasions criticised the
Goodluck Jonathan Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led federal government
for allowing the roads leading to Apapa to rot.
What
is even most annoying to many Lagosians and motorists is fact that the
same Lagos State government would allow truck drivers to takeover Eko
Bridge which leads to other important places like Marina, Ikoyi,
Victoria Island and Lekki.
The
traffic quagmire in Apapa got to a head recently when the Oshodi-Apapa
Expressway was totally locked down. From Cele Bus Stop, there was simply
no movement for vehicles going towards Mile 2, Apapa, Kirikiri and
other communities in the axis. Sheer bedlam reigned on the road.
Motorists desirous of reaching Mile 2 were compelled to ply the opposite
lane and face traffic coming from Mile 2. All adjoining
roads, including Ago Palace Way, Lagos-Badagry Expressway and other
areas were affected. To restore some sanity, the federal and state
government set up a taskforce headed by the Lagos State Commissioner of
Police, Imohimi Edgal, comprising members of the security and traffic
management agencies as well as unions within the maritime sector. The
taskforce has since been handed over to the Commander Nigerian Navy Ship
(NNS) Beecroft, Commodore Okon Eyo.
Vice
President Yemi Osinbajo was also in Lagos for an on-the-spot
assessment of the situation. But like every other thing in the country,
the task force has since gone to sleep with truck drivers reigning
supreme.
While
this is happening, living in and around the Apapa zone is a nightmare.
Businesses are suffering and many have folded up. Everyone is losing.
The trucks and tankers which gather around Apapa from all over the
country are also incurring heavy losses due to the long period they
spend on queues to access the ports and fuel tank farms. All these could
be greatly reduced if only the truck operators would comply with simple
instructions; stay in holding bays and await their turns to access the
ports.
Culpability of NPA
The
NPA has equally been accused of culpability in the confusion taking
place in Apapa. Many analysts and observers believe that it is not
playing its regulatory role properly, thereby allowing the
concessionaires at the ports to hinder smooth operations.
Revamping Ports
Many stakeholders have wondered why the
federal government has also not revamped the ports in Warri, Sapele,
Port Harcourt, Onne, and Calabar in order to decongest the Lagos ports
and save Lagosians the trouble of entering Apapa.
For instance, an importer, Emeka
Enebeli, said the Apapa gridlock is a great sign that Nigeria is a
country that cannot solve the most elementary of its problems.
According to him, “we have ports in
Warri, Sapele, Port Harcourt, Onne, and Calabar. We have also river
ports in Onitsha, Lokoja and Baro. Why can’t we activate them to
disperse these trucks and tankers to other ports and allow Apapa to
breathe? Why must the whole nation depend only on Apapa and Tin Can
Ports? Why can’t we rehabilitate the various fuel depots around the
country so that tankers will not need to come to Lagos to load fuel?
“Can’t
we quickly complete the roads in Apapa? Can’t we activate the Apapa
rail corridor to join in evacuating goods? When will Nigeria have a
government that can solve problems? The is gridlock, which has been in
place for the best of the past nine years, defying succeeding regimes,
is a great sign that Nigeria is a country that cannot solve the most
elementary of its problems.”
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