News Politics

Monarch, motorists lament deplorable state of Lagos-Badagry Expressway

A Badagry monarch, Oba Abraham Ogabi, has urged Federal and Lagos State Governments to call back to site the contractors handling the Lagos-Badagry Expressway to alleviate suffering of motorists.
The Onimeke of Imeke Kingdom told the News Agency of Nigeria on Saturday that motorists were facing untold hardship since the contractors abandoned the highway linking Nigeria with other other ECOWAS countries six months ago.

The monarch of Imeke, where the famous seaside resort, Whispering Palms, is located, said: “The contractors should be mobilized back to continue the abandoned work on the road.
“The condition is worse now that the rainy season has started.
“The little they had done on the expressway before COVID-19 pandemic has been eroded by the six-month abandonment.”
NAN reports that Lagos State Government is responsible for the Iganmu-Okokomaiko section of the highway, while the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency is handling Okokomaiko-Agbara axis of the road.
Also, the Federal Government in 2018 awarded the reconstruction of 46km Agbara-Seme section of Badagry Expressway to CGC Nigeria Limited.
Many transporters and other motorists have also continued to decry the deplorable state of the Lagos-Badagry Expressway, describing it as a death trap.
Although some road users, who spoke with NAN, commended FERMA for repairing Okokomaiko-Agbara section, they decried the slow work pace on Agbara-Seme and Alakija-Okokomaiko axis.
Isiaka Lawal, an official of the National Union of Road Transport Workers, said passengers were avoiding Badagry Expressway because of the deplorable state of the road.
Lawal said: “Since contractors abandoned the road, it has become worse as passengers have opted to using flying boats between Badagry and Marina, Lagos.
“Since morning, we have just loaded two passenger buses instead of 10 buses on a normal day.

“The road is terribly bad and also there are many security checkpoints on the way.
“So one spends between four to six hours on a trip of less than 60km.
“Besides, this bad road is damaging our vehicles.”
The NURTW official appealed to Federal and Lagos State Governments to mobilise the contractors back to site to complete their jobs.
Miyise Fasinu, a regular user of the road, said motorists had been facing untold hardship since construction workers left the site early this year.
Fasinu said: “The road is so bad that we are held up in gridlocks for close to four hours, thus making one to miss important appointments.
“Government should come to our aid by recalling the workers back to site.
“Enough is enough.”
Meanwhile, CGC Nigeria Limited, the company awarded the 46km Agbara-Seme section, said the workers were taken off the site due to COVID-19 pandemic.
Yunus Oloolu, Spokesman for CGC Nigerian Limited, told NAN that workers would return to site when it was safe to start work on the road.
Oloolu appealed for understanding from the people plying the road, adding that the situation was not their own making.
NAN.
SOURCE: THE EAGLE ONLINE
[logo-slider]
See also  Experts warn that drug-resistant diseases are now posing a significant threat to global health.