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You are here:Home>>Archive>>No roads to anywhere in Onitsha
Monday, 12 September 2011 12:36

No roads to anywhere in Onitsha

Written by Chijioke Iremeka
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Onitsha Onitsha The Guardian

 

Potholes, abandoned road project claim lives as contractor blames non-payment

WHATEVER else is being celebrated as Anambra State marks the 20th anniversary of its creation, roads cannot be one of them. Neither the Federal nor state-owned roads are in a good shape, except perhaps, a few in and around Awka, the state capital. The roads in and around Onitsha, a city that is unarguably one of the nation’s most important commercial centres, however, are among the most neglected.

Driving through Onitsha from Asaba, the Delta State capital, is increasingly becoming an exercise motorists would rather avoid.Once past the Niger Bridge, the inevitable bumpy ride starts, since that route through Upper Iweka is the only entrance from Asaba. Several erosion sites and potholes have turned Upper-Iweka into an area, which has gained notoriety for accidents.

Because of the notorious traffic jam between the head-bridge and the Enugu-Onitsha Road or Onitsha-Owerri Road, the inner-city roads and streets through which motorists meander and maneuver to get out of the logjam have become dilapidated. “Anyone who spent money to buy a vehicle would be most careful driving on roads in the Onitsha area,” a businessman, Reginald Maduako told The Guardian.

“The pot-holes are so many and on virtually all Onitsha roads that vehicle parts like shock-absorbers, ball-joints, clutches and wheels are routinely damaged.“Vehicle-owners in Onitsha must be running up one of the higher bills on routine maintenance than their counterparts in any other city of the country”, he said.

Residents say the state of roads in the area has been worsened by the Federal Government’s “nonchalant attitude to the plight of the masses, especially on road construction and other infrastructural development in Onitsha. “How can anyone explain the Federal Government awarding an important road contract to a company that has been known for not ever completing a road project on time.

His Excellency Gov. Obi

“This company was awarded the Onitsha-Owerri Road project contract alongside another, RCC Limited. “Of course, RCC had finished its portion, while the company in question is yet to do so, five years after.”  It has also emerged that at the time the road contracts were awarded; the ever-busy stretch from the Niger Bridgehead to Zik’s Roundabout was not included in the original plan.

 

“ This development was said to have been unacceptable to the state government, which made a strong case for the inclusion of the Bridgehead- Upper Iweka- Zik’s Roundabout. “ Five years after this inclusion, the company scraped the road badly, especially at New Parts Market, down to New Tarzan Junction, former Ogbunike Toll Gate and Umunya and abandoned the job.

 

“They even moved their equipment off the work-sites, claiming they had not been paid for the job they had done and laid off over 600 indigenous staff of the company.” The recent accident at the Umunya section of the road in which over 35 people died and many more injured has been blamed on the poor state of the road. “The victims were trapped and roasted, as their vehicles were trapped in the   bad stretch of road, already scrapped but not yet tarred.

“Many families and goods worth millions of naira were consumed in that incident.”

 

A source at the Anambra State Road Safety Commission (ASRSC) told The Guardian that 179 people died last year on the same road, while 276 were wounded.Rather than wait for the Federal Government and the contractor any longer, residents are asking the state government to go ahead and rehabilitate the road and then make a case for a refund. In fact, the state governor, Mr. Peter Obi, is said to have sought Federal Government’s approval to rehabilitate the stretch of road from the bridgehead to former Toll Gate to Amawbia to Amansea and Awka.

A group under the aegis of Concerned Residents of Onitsha (CRO) has decried the deplorable condition of roads in the town and are urging Obi to rehabilitate the roads and seek a refund. The Deputy Minority Leader, representing Onitsha II Constituency in the House of Assembly, Emeka Idu, has also appealed to Obi to urgently repair the roads in the area to ease movement of people and goods.

But the Permanent Secretary, Anambra State Ministry of Works, Mr. Benjamin Umerah said the state government cannot just take over Federal roads as the government could be sued for trespass or denied any reimbursement. In his reaction, the Public Relations Officer of CCC Limited, Mr. Patrick Morgan blamed the slow pace of work on the other part of the road project on non-release of funds by the government

“We need N5 billion to complete the project. We have over N2 billion outstanding certificates pending at the Federal Ministry of Works for job done. “Only N1.2 billion out of the total sum was provided for the project in the 2011 budget by the government. Also, Onitsha-Amansea project was split into Phase I -N7billion and Phase II -N4 billion, but only N2 billion had been released so far.”

Okpoko-Onitsha

Attempts to get officials of the Federal Ministry of Works in Anambra State to comment on that claim and other issues failed.

 

The Guardian Newspaper

 

Last modified on Monday, 12 September 2011 12:50

2 comments

  • Comment Link Benjamin Anosike,  PhD Monday, 12 September 2011 17:10 posted by Benjamin Anosike, PhD

    NO ROADS IN ONITSHA? OH, BUT IT'S FOR THE ONITSHA
    BILLIONAIRES TO FIX THEM! by Benjamin Anosike, PhD.
    Ndigbo, but why bother asking the elected government of Anambra State (or,
    for that matter, even the Federal government at the national level), to
    fix the roads in Anambra State or to keep them in good repairs and safe
    condition? Isn't there supposed to be a "new" political credo of governance only
    recently unveiled and propagated by some self-anointed economic
    development theoreticians, largely on the Internet, of forced governance and
    infrastructure-construction by indigenous billionaires - in Anambra State, at
    least?
    You know, the recent Internet propagated "new" economic development theory
    about the fixing and rehabilitation of the public roads in Nnewi being the
    responsibility of "Nnewi billionaires" !?
    And oh, about the other perennial plague of Anambra State, the mountains
    of public refuse and garbage that, as well, have long bedeviled the
    population and claimed the precious lives and good health of the citizenry in
    Onitsha, in Nnewi, and Awka (every major urban town of Anambra) probably by the
    thousands every year? Oh, about that? Well, in a current parochial-minded
    society and culture of self-consumed cash-and-carry jobbers where the hungry
    and the jobless jobbers will readily sell off even their own mothers for a
    pot of portage just "to chop," you can be damned sure it won't be long
    before someone invents another "new" theory about how to resolve that one,
    however outlandish or asinine it might turn out to be! It would not be long.
    That, you can be absolutely sure of in the current Ndigbo culture of "say
    anything, do anything, for chop, for money!"
    These current crop of mostly Internet-based cash-and-carry Igbo jobbers,
    often devoid of personal character or morals but awash in self-greed,
    self-deceit and bloated egos, are precisely the ruinous characters of the kind
    who Thomas Fuller have in mind when he wrote, "He that makes money before he
    gets wit, will be but a short while the master of it."
    They are precisely the nauseating characters whose virtual habitation on
    the Igbo (and other) Internet fora these days has essentially wrought the
    exodus, in droves, of many an eminent and brilliant thinker and writer of
    Igbo extraction out of the Internet fora (including this humble writer). So
    that today, as we speak, it's getting increasingly harder and harder for the
    Chris Aniedobes, the Okenwa Nwosus, the Okey Ndibes, and their like, to
    stay on this platform and to keep their priceless, often unpaid, fertilization
    of the fora going for the ultimate greater betterment of the Igbo fate in
    Nigeria !
    Thank you.
    Benjamin Anosike, Ph.D.

    "It shall be well with Ndigbo. It shall be, the very moment the
    present-day Ndigbo get really, really sick and tired of getting really, really sick
    and tired of their own self-inflicted demons and afflictions, and directly
    confront them with courage and frankness to themselves!"

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  • Comment Link Johnny Obikwe Monday, 12 September 2011 17:03 posted by Johnny Obikwe

    The governor is busy laughing and the commercial center of Ndiigbo is going down the gutter. Obi do not care for the state. May he leave very fast for we need an action governor like Fashola. Maybe Fashola may come and be our governor, after all we need development. And is does not make a difference who will give it to us.

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