Indications emerged penultimate
weekend that the Federal Government will divest its funding of road
construction in the country. The government plans to cede the construction of
road projects to the private sector in 2019. These facts were disclosed by the
Minister of Information, Mr Labaran Maku at the Ministerial press briefing
organised by his ministry for the Federal Ministry of Works in Abuja.
The Federal Government said at the
briefing that it has spent N1.765 trillion on 184 on going projects across the
six geo-political zones of the country.
Speaking at the briefing during
which the Minister of Works, Arc Mike Onolememen, presented his
score-card, Maku explained that by 2019, the construction and maintenance of
roads will principally be handled by the private sector.
He regretted that the insurgency in
the North -East had negatively impacted on the development of the nation’s road
infrastructure. According to him, most of our roads would have been fixed with
the trillions of naira wasted on the war.
“Imagine what would have happened if
all of the money (said to be trillions of naira) spent in prosecuting the war
on Boko Haram had been spent in providing roads throughout the length and
breadth of Nigeria,” he said.
Maku also suggested that the
appropriate authorities should be more proactive in tackling the high rate of
encroachment on the right of way by Nigerians.
“There is no money that you will get
today from the Federal budget that will deliver on these infrastructure,” he
explained in an apparent justification of why road construction must change
hands.
“Everywhere in the world now, or
major countries that are strong economic powers like Nigeria, people are not
looking for Federal money or government money for road construction. People are
returning to the private sector. India, Malaysia – several of those countries –
attract billions of dollars for road construction from the private sector.
That is what Arc. Mike Onolememen
and his team are saying now. Moving forward, after the reform that will create
the Federal Highway Authority, the PPP, beginning with the (second Niger
bridge) and Lagos- (Ibadan expressway), in the next three, four, five years, I
believe that the money that will go into the provision of roads will not come
from the government. It will be coming from the private sector,” Maku said.
He stated that nipping the
encroachment on the right of way in the bud was necessary because once someone
had built on the right of way and government wanted to clear the illegal
structures and restore order, there would be an outcry from civil society
groups, the media and other Nigerians who would drum up sentiments against the
action.
For that reason, he urged those vested with the authority, to always be alert and stop structures from springing up on any given right of way.
For that reason, he urged those vested with the authority, to always be alert and stop structures from springing up on any given right of way.
Thanking the Works Minister, Mike
Onolememen, and his team for the momentous accomplishments recorded by the
Ministry, he recalled some of them as the flag-off of the second Niger bridge,
the ongoing reconstruction of Apapa-Oshodi expressway and the complete
overhaul of the Third Mainland bridge in Lagos.
He said in terms of road
maintenance, all the major roads in Lagos belonged to the Federal Government
and were being maintained on a regular basis, adding that, in this regard,
Lagos was enjoying the same treatment given to Abuja.
Works Minister in its scorecard, said that based on the aggressive road
construction and rehabilitation drive of the present administration, 25,000km
of the 35,000km of federal roads are now in good and motorable condition.
According to the Minister, by the
end of 2013, each geo-political zone in the country witnessed enhanced
construction activities, covering a total corridor of 6,500km.
Giving the breakdown of the
N1.765trillion, the Works Minister stated that while the North central, North
East and North West have a total of 65 ongoing projects of 3,461.68km with a an
estimated cost of N796bn, South East, South South and South West have a total
number of 109 projects of 3,063.60km, costing N767bn.
Apart from this, the Minister also
noted that his ministry is currently engaged in emergency intervention in some
critical highways infrastructure such as the Apapa-Oshodi expressway that
provides access to Tin Can Island and Apapa Ports in Lagos State, as well as
Access Road to Mosimi Depot in Ogun State.
Why FG Opts To Stop Funding Road Projects By 2019 — Maku
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Rating:
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
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