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Apapa – A National Mirror Is Broken

by Our Reporter

When His Excellency, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode appointed me the

Chairman Wharf Landing Fees Collecting Authority, I was excited that

I have been given another challenge and opportunity to explore

another critical sector in the economy of Lagos State. I was happy

because I like great challenges but the Apapa situation and the

horrible traffic chaos scared me stiff. My friends and associates

called to celebrate with me but added a proviso that traffic in Apapa

may be a big stumbling block.

 

I have gone to Apapa to see things for myself. In search for a new

office complex for the Authority, I came face to face with trouble in

Apapa and Tincan Island Ports. Apapa, the goose that has been laying

the golden eggs lies in ruins in the midst of plenty. The two

National Mirrors are broken into pieces,mercilessly plundered and

ruthlessly pillaged. I lack words to describe these two great Ports,

the largest in the country except to add that our past leaders are

wicked, irresponsible and totally heartless. They must have traveled

severally to different parts of the world. They must have seen their

seaports and the state of art infrastructure available. I have seen

the ones in China, US and Singapore. Our leaders have returned to

continue the business as usual. After all, to have ears is not to

listen, to listen is not to hear, the hear is not to understand, to

understand is not to put to practice.

 

What of the big Managing Directors and CEOs of blue chip companies,

the Customs, the Ship owners, the Shippers Council, the Ship owners,

the business magnets etc who do business in Apapa and Tincan Island ?

For years they have been making trillions at the Nation’s Ports but

lack the capacity and capability to look through the windows of their

Cars and offices to see the ruins and the devastations around the

ports. If they cannot collectively repair roads through Corporate

Social Responsibility,what stops them from drawing the attention of

the Federal Government who takes all the money from the ports? It

pains me to no end that people with full dose of western education

who should know better turn out to be the problem because they have

refused to do what is right.

 

The pandemic problems we have in Lagos ports remain an indictment to

all of us, the political leaders, managers of blue chip companies,

business managers etc. If we cannot work hard to develop this country

for our young ones and generations yet unborn, let us accept the

obvious and painful truth that we have all failed. No wonder the

Republican Presidential candidate in the United States,Donald Trump

described African leaders as meretricious mediocrity, empty heads and

ethical failures. But how did we get into this dead end in Apapa.

Both Apapa and Tincan island ports have only two major ingress and

egress – Apapa-Tincan-Mile Two-Oshodi expressway and

Apapa-Ijora-Western Avenue axis and nothing more. Despite the growing

business in these two major ports, the two roads have remained the

same for nearly fifty years.

 

To demonstrate how wicked, hopeless and helpless our leaders have

been, even the two roads have been left to decay for years. Soon the

racket called the importation of petroleum products led to the

massive building of Tank farms in Apapa. Today all the petrol

products trucks head to Apapa and what we see is chaos all the way.

The Whites who built Apapa Wharf knew then that only the rail system

will be suitable for evacuating the containers leaving the roads free

for other users. The rail system that runs from Apapa to different

parts of the country lies in ruins and today trucks moving containers

out of Apapa and Tincan Island remain the biggest problem. People

have been killed by container laden trucks, vehicles and bridges

destroyed. We need to restore the rail system in Apapa as a matter of

urgency. We must also have the courage to move the Tank farms away

from Apapa. We must make our Refineries to work to stop the

importation of petroleum products.

 

Another biggest problem is the concession of the ports few years back

by former President Olusegun Obasanjo to private individuals. These

concessionaires soon converted the huge truck parks in Apapa Wharf

and Tincan Island to places where empty containers are parked for

years. Consequently, the parks which are capable of housing 3000

trucks at any given time have been rendered useless. Today trucks use

highways as parking lots constituting monumental traffic problems and

robberies in the metropolis. The roads and volume of trucks that go

in and out of Apapa on a daily basis have ruined Apapa GRA. In the

course of trying to secure an office space for the Wharf Landing Fees

Collecting Authority, I discovered that Apapa has been destroyed and

decimated. Residents of Apapa GRA have left in droves. There are so

many houses for sale and many to rent but no buyers and even those to

rent. Roads, drainage systems, security, orderliness have been

crushed in Apapa beyond imagination. It is that bad. Situations in

Apapa should prick the conscience of any responsible and responsive

Nigerian. No strangers from other lands came to destroy the peace and

serenity of Apapa. Our leaders destroyed Apapa. They took everything

in Apapa and left nothing. They plundered, pillaged Apapa and did

nothing to add values to Apapa. Estate developers are counting their

losses in Apapa. They are the worst losers. When leaders fail to do

their job, everybody goes down.

 

Thank God our own Distinguished Senator Oluremi Tinubu has risen up

in the Hallowed chamber of the Senate of the Federal Republic to draw

our attention to the broken national mirror called Apapa. His

Excellency, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode has been intervening and

proffering solutions. Thank God president Buhari is on the throne. It

is either we build Nigeria or we perish.

Apapa remains a big challenge to all of us. We cannot be taking

trillions from Apapa every year without giving anything in return.

Federal Government owns Apapa GRA, Apapa wharf and Tincan Island. We

want concrete actions now not idle talks.

 

Revenues from the oil sector is dwindling and it behoves on all our

leaders to be pro-active and hyper active now in looking at the

alternative sources of Revenue. Our ports in Lagos offer an

alternative and may we not joke with this. Restoring the rail system,

rebuilding the road networks, creating additional access roads and

rehabilitating Apapa GRA is the way to go at least for now. We need

to quickly create additional roads to Apapa wharf and Tincan Island

no matter the cost to the existing two ways in and out of Apapa.

Houses may be demolished to achieve this. We need to look for the

funds and do the needful now or never.

 

Joe Igbokwe

Lagos

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