| Rail Transportation: A Solution To The Carnage on Our Roads |
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| Written by Akintokunbo A. Adejumo | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Saturday, 14 June 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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MISSION STATEMENT: To emerge as the leader in the Nigerian Land based transport system, using well-motivated work force with modern technology to offer high quality and reliable rail transport services with guaranteed customer satisfaction. VISION STATEMENT: To be a world-class rail transport organization, which provides efficient, affordable, reliable, widely connected and customer oriented services. The above are from the official website of the moribund Nigerian Railway Corporation. Makes you laugh, doesnt it? Our situation in
On 3rd June 2005, in a speech entitled Reform of Transport Sector In Nigeria presented by the then Minister of Transport, Dr Abiye Sekibo, at the financial bid opening of Port Harcourt Port Terminals A and B at LMeridien Hotel, Abuja, the Honourable Minister confirmed to Nigerians that transportation occupies a central position in the socio-economic and political development of any nation and further confirmed that successive Nigerian governments have left the transport sector comatose as a result of total neglect. He listed the following as being characteristic of the Nigerian transportation system: excessive government monopoly; grounded rail system whose services are more or less inefficient; obsolete and deficient transport policy; under-developed inland waterways transportation, ports and port services that leave much to be desired, and (wait for it!) corruption. This was during Obasanjos term, exactly three years ago. What exactly has changed since then, you ask me? Nothing. It is quite possible that the same rhetoric were uttered by several previous Transport Ministers twenty, fifteen or ten years ago. Still no change, all have been empty speeches and promises. It is not surprising to most Nigerians. Every administration and ministers come and go, failed to leave their marks, fail to deliver and the next thing you know, the Minister is a billionaire. Dr Sekibo, amongst other things, also admitted that the entire transport system was sliding on a downward gradient and could no longer provide vital links that would support socio-economic activities in a modern society. Damn right, you were! I would not like to go through his entire speech, but the Minister recognised, at least in his speech, and playing to the gallery as is typical of our politicians, that a lot of work needed to be done to improve, develop and sustain our transportation system. He mentioned the existing modes of transportation in
These are very noble and ambitious plans, actually achievable if there is commitment and selflessness and if they really mean it. Granted 25 years is not here yet, but the problem is we cannot see anything to suggest that we will meet the twenty-five year plan at the rate we are going after only three years. I write this as a result of the daily carnage on our road, with especially in mind the death by road accident of forty-six Nigerian servicemen-peacekeepers, who had just returned, ironically safely, from
So who have been Ministers of Transport since or before Dr Sekibo? Chief Tony Anenih, dubbed the most dangerous politician in Nigeria and Mr Fixit of the PDP, was given 300 billion Naira to spend on roads alone (Only God knows how much he was given to spend on other modes of transport) but we can all attest to the poor state of our roads. Not a single kobo, apparently went into the roads, even the main road to Anenihs home state of
The current Minister of Transport, Mrs Diezani Allison-Maduekwe made a show of public emotions when, on assuming duties last year, she visited the Lagos/Benin expressway and promised quick action. To her credit, although work is very slow, several important major roads all across the country are being either reconstructed or repaired. Travellers on the Lagos/Ibadan and Lagos/Benin roads will be grateful when these are completed. The Lagos/Ibadan expressway is a very important route in
What Ministers, civil servants, transport ministry engineers and this Administration should be concentrating on is not so much as the state of the roads themselves, but the cause of the sorry state of them. We also do not have enough road in the country. One major problem which no one seems willing to address or recognise is the number of heavy duty vehicles plying these roads. Of course it is essential to move goods, services and people from Lagos to other parts of the country, but are these roads built to withstand such gruelling and constant use, especially where our maintenance culture, corruption, careless and illiterate drivers, inefficient policing, and even our climatic conditions, etc are all playing their respective roles in ensuring the roads deteriorate so rapidly? For example, the number of trailers or articulated lorries, plying the Lagos/Ibadan expressway is such that there is no way that the road will not deteriorate because the traffic is too heavy and the road cannot withstand such heavy usage. Again, as we know, when roads are built in
Then again, are the contractors building according to world-standard specifications taking into account the effect of our climate torrential rainfall, high humidity (in the tropical rainforest that is the south of the country) and very hot, arid weather (as in the northern part of the country) on the roads they build? The rainy season, poor equipment and poor maintenance pose challenges to road maintenance in
The carnage on our roads calls for a lot more than government officials making speeches in hotels and forums. Many Nigerians will not and cannot forgive them for their indifference to their plight, their duplicity, double-speak, inaction and their corruption. Their action, or inaction, have visited death and misery on millions of families, Nigerians and non-Nigerians alike. I have tried to make a conservative guess, but believe me if I say that on Nigerian roads all over the country, an average of 100 people lose their lives on a daily basis. That works out to a minimum 36,500 Nigerians per year. On the Lagos/Ibadan expressway alone, there must be an average of 10 per day, so you can see I am not far wrong. And please do not count the survivors who are usually maimed for life. Is this a deliberate plan to reduce our population? Conspiracy theorists, over to you. So what do we do? Whilst it seems that
I have always advocated the efficient, effective and safer rail transport system for
Whatever the case, the Federal Government must urgently actualise rail transportation in the country. There must not be any more delay in a massive rail modernisation and rehabilitation, as well as funding for these projects. It remains the most practical, efficient, effective, safest and cheapest way we can move people, goods and services to and from the large expanse of the country. We can see the result of this in
The Nigerian Railways however, came into existence on October 3, 1912 by the merger of the Lagos Government Railways and the Baro -
According to a critique in January 2008 by Mazi Jetson Nwakwo, acting Managing Director of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC),
I do not believe that the money is not there, as our politicians and government are often fond of telling us, thinking they are talking to idiots. In fact, we all know the money is there, the problem is the corrupt, selfish idiots who parade themselves as leaders.
Why dont they for once do something for us that we can remember them by in good appreciative sentiments? I say, let the truth be said always, only then can we progress as a nation. Akintokunbo Adejumo lives and works in London,
He is also the Coordinator of CHAMPIONS FOR
After posting this article, I was not too surprised to read a news item on The Punch of Sunday 115th June 2008 on how the rail modernisation contract to the Chinese was inflated during OBJ's regime. Here is the link: http://www.punchng.com/Articl.aspx?theartic=Art200806142124646
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Posted by Robot| 14.06.2008 15:19