Sanity is gradually returning to the Apapa axis of
the Mile 2-Apapa expressway which has been reeling under heavy traffic gridlock
caused by the bad state of the road and oil tankers parked on both sides of the
expressway.
Following yesterday’s visit to the area by Governor
Babatunde Fashola, the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority, LASTMA and
Taskforce on Environment and Special Offences (Enforcement Unit) have moved in
to control traffic in the area.
Fashola, who spoke after inspecting the level of
traffic on Apapa-Oshodi Expressway and the ports, said on Sunday that the state
would work with all stakeholders to ensure that normalcy returned to the Apapa
Central Business District, CBD.
When our reporter visited the area this morning, the
road was relatively free unlike before and the users attributed it to the
presence of traffic officers who started work at the weekend.
At the Mile 2 axis, the road was free unlike before
and this has reduced the cost of public transportation from N200 to N100 from
Mile 2 to Apapa.
Policemen were around at Berger axis to control
traffic. However, from Sunrise to Coconut area, there was still traffice
gridlock as motorists had to divert through Ajegunle area to get to Apapa.
Governor Fashola accused the Federal Government of
destroying Apapa, expressing dismay at the traffic gridlock which has crippled
commercial activities in the area. Fashola called on the Federal
Government to live up to its responsibility by restoring the infrastructure
damaged in the area by oil tankers.
Speaking with newsmen after the inspection of the
Tin Can Port Road and Creek Road, Fashola frowned at the deterioration in the
area, saying the State Government is paying heavily for the damage caused by
the mismanagement of the ports and fuel distribution by the Federal Government.
“You can see, this is where tankers fall every day,
claiming lives, damaging peoples’ vehicles. It is a herculean task everyday
that we have to remove one container or one fallen tanker from here all because
of the mismanagement by the Federal Government of its Ports responsibility and
of its fuel distribution responsibility.
“Our land has been desecrated; you can see the
destruction, people living on the road simply because the Federal Government
cannot manage the distribution of fuel.”
People are defecating in open drains, all the drains
here have become refuse dumps all because the Federal Government wants to give
us fuel,” he said.
Pointing out that the State Government did not
benefit from all the revenue generated at the ports and from the fuel
distribution, Fashola noted that “the Federal Government wants to run a port.
Look at the roads here, they have all gone. And we don’t get derivation from
oil but we pay so heavily for the distribution of fuel.
“Residents must know this is a Federal problem, it
is not the State’s problem; the distribution of fuel is a Federal problem. The
Federal Government must get up now and change the game and live up to its
responsibility. Its mismanagement of fuel and the Port is destroying Apapa and
destroying Lagos; this must stop.”
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