| Siding with the Okada |
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| Saturday, 25 March 2006 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Their contention is that if other modes of commercial transport are allowed to operate beyond 7:00 p.m., then the reason given that armed robbers avail of services of commercial motorbikes to perpetrate criminal activities is unjustified given that robbers can and do avail of any commercial transport service. They pointed out that motor cycle riders are themselves victims of armed robbers and that the notion that a significant number of commercial riders are in fact involved in criminal activities is wrong. Okada, Achaba, Goyin, depending on what part of They soon gained popular acceptance however and very quickly became the backbone of public transportation in city centres. They are as a matter of fact the preferred option of many for a fast and convenient means of getting from one point to the other and for beating constant traffic jams. Motorcycles according to patrons have other benefits over the rickety buses and taxis that are the alternative. The passenger does not get squashed up against other passengers with various hygiene needs in seats that yield more of their metal parts than is desired and give shelter to all manner of vermin, many like the body louse going home with the unsuspecting passenger. Since commercial motor cycles create the shortest routes between two points and they are not bound by any traffic codes, they were accommodated by the average Nigerian that would himself be bound by no laws. Sightings of erudite achievers like Fola Adeola perched on top of a machine (our affectionate name for the motorbike) in his white flowing agbada trying to make good time to a wedding where he was no doubt an important guest, have been reported in newspapers. Obvious acceptance and use by the more enlightened has therefore by proxy authenticated commercial motor cycles as a means of public transportation by the Nigerian public.
Given that commercial motor cycles and their riders have been with us for years now such that many of the foreign do-gooders who come to rescue
The typical okada operator is rough uncouth and ready to beat up on you whenever, wherever. They are known to gather in their droves to attack the unfortunate motorist that aggravates one of them. Whatever your approach in the event of an altercation, you will come out the worse for wear and more likely than not you would be grievously hurt from a beating that other riders who had no knowledge of cause will deliver in esprit de corps with glee and blood lust. The police, if any happens to be near at such times, do the fast transmute that they are now known for in times of trouble, donning mufti at such speed that one would doubt having seen a police officer only split seconds before.
When they are not intimidating hapless motorists, these commercial motorcyclists dedicate time to the wilful destruction of other vehicles on the road and dare owners to complain while they throw insults in tandem with passengers who seem oblivious of threats to life and limbs, literally. They ride pedestrians down on sidewalks making journeys as perilous as possible while fellow miscreants jeer at those they accuse of being Johnny-come-lately. The
We have lived with this for so long so why would any level of government or misguided community security association want to threaten the continued existence of the commercial motor cycle. Newspapers and magazines are full of tear jerking stories designed to buy sympathy for these Okada riders, most of whom claim aspiration to better lives when asked. Not one would admit to the criminal activities that are perpetrated by their numbers in full view of society daily. They tell stories of how this temporary undertaking is either to accumulate enough funds to start a trade or to pay their way through college. One look at this purported student and you wonder what kind of professional he would make on completion of his academic career if indeed he is a student going by apparent inability to articulate even the simplest thoughts.
However we helped to create them and they should therefore have public sympathy. There should be a movement to prevent the new threat presented by local and state authorities to the commercial motorcyclist. Something should be done now to stop the trend to impose restrictions on this indispensable public transportation mode. How can we be expected to return to those days when we all had to struggle for bus or trek everywhere? No longer can you find the average Nigerian willing to walk even the shortest distance where he could get on a machine. The entertaining sight of the woman clad in a long skirt riding side-saddle on the vehicle least designed to accommodate such. One woman, young pretty and trendy, got the hem of her skirt caught in the spoke of a motorcycle once by Falomo and got the rest of it yanked off her, irretrievably tangled in the wheel of the motorcycle. Her short midriff skimming blouse could not be pulled down over beaded g-strings and she found herself crouching low until another woman was kind enough to give up her scarf to restore some modesty. At least she was not mortally wounded.
This and other titillating tales of experience at the hands commercial motorcycles is reason enough to promote them as a tourist attraction. Least ways there are economic and social benefits to the proliferation of commercial motor cycles, jobs have been created that encourages able bodied young men to loaf at road junctions where motorcycles are parked three deep, causing a preventable obstruction in the traffic flow. Armed robbers and small time hoodlums who look no different from regular operators have been given a low cost and efficient get away resource. More South East Asian countries have found a receptive market for cheap low quality motor cycles and young men have forsaken prolonged periods of vocational apprenticeships to make daily takes while indulging natural tendencies for the macabre. Ladipo Auto Market is reaping quick profits from the sale of tokunboh wing mirrors. All state and municipal authorities should weigh these benefits carefully before making draconian laws to outlaw the Okada. After all where were they when commercial motorcyclists came to our rescue.
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The talk in 

Posted by Robot| 26.03.2006 00:02