Presidential Task Force And Middlemen Crisis In Apapa By Kehinde Adegboyega
On May 22nd 2019, President Muhammadu Buhari set up a Presidential Task Force Team on Apapa gridlock, with the Vice President Professor Yemi Osinbajo as the chairman and Comrade Kayode Opeifa to serve as the vice chairman.
The objective of its establishment is to return normalcy to Apapa because of the incessant gridlock that is crippling the area, enforce discipline, introduce a workable manual call up system pending the introduction of electronic call-up system by NPA, Dvelip and Deoy a working traffic management system, coordinate and control trucks and tanker drivers who are designated to access the seaport to stay off the roads leading to the port.
The presidential task force team comprises of Nigeria Police, Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA), and Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), the combined team has been working to ensure the objectives of the establishment of PTT achieved.
Kayode Opeifa identified some stakeholder’s behaviour as being responsible for the current unnecessary artificial traffic gridlock at the Tin Can Port, as against the reports that accused officials of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) Security Department, Police and the Presidential Task Team on Apapa gridlock who were deployed to manage traffic in the area, of extortion.
Backlog of vessels at seaports, congestion caused by noticeable potholes in both sides of Lagos-Badagry expressway and the current state of rehabilitation and reconstruction of roads project presently on-going can be seen as the cause for the congestion noticed recently around the Mile 2 area.
Also exporters and truckers who are desperate to move their containers into the Port directly instead of through the transit truck parks at Lilly Pond and Tin Can truck parks even while they are aware that they are not to approach the Ports directly.
Various social medium had reported that accusing officials of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) Security Department, Police and the Presidential Task Team on Apapa gridlock, who were deployed to manage traffic in the area, where allegedly Involved in massive extortion of truck and tanker drivers, collecting from them unaccounted sum of between 80,000 to 170, 000 naira before they can access the seaports.
During a chat with the Executive Vice Chairman of the Presidential Task Force, Comrade Kayode Opeifa denied the allegations as baseless, with no iota of truth and a Corruption Fight Back strategy.
He explained that there are challenges and said the hardship will soon be a thing of the past even as he backs recent moves by NPA to regulate barging operations and Stripping at the Ports.
He added that enforcement agencies have a new responsibility to go after the organizers of stripping at other locations such as Warehouse road in Apapa, Marine Bridge, among others now.
Opeifa reveals that Freight Agents and truck owners have persistently lamented over the worsening traffic situation along the port access roads which the Presidential Task Team who were deployed to manage Apapa gridlock has no control over. On extortion by the taskforce, he denied knowledge of such and urges anybody with information should directly approach him or NPA with proof as most have been found to be false or by Middlemen and scammers operating as Movers and mostly affecting those who are always working to subvert due process.
He also commented on the activities of the members of the Community Security who has been supportive and assisting the government in checking the crime rate during traffic trigging along and around Mile 2. Noting that their efforts as long as is peaceful and productive is commendable.
He said "While cargo stripping isn’t the norm in port business globally, and particularly hazardous as it clogs the port access roads, some stakeholders have turned this practice to the norm while the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) has now risen to control it and must be supported as its creating problem along the port access roads."
"Most importers have resorted to stripping at Tin Can to evade possible seizures by Customs and enable them to easily evacuate the goods and the high demand for stripping at the port environment has made the service more expensive than conveying the goods outside the ports."
"Consequently, other cleared imports were unable to leave the port while exports couldn’t also access the port."
Opeifa urged that terminal operators and others involved in sharp barge operations and causing additional hindrances on the port corridors should be sanctioned while genuine, terminals and manufactures who desired barging for their direct operations should be protected in the interest of inter and multimodal transport.
He commends that Freight agents and their truckers who have obtained TDOs should be free from storage charges and demurrages arising from the clogged port access.
According to a top NPA source, who wants to remain anonymous, this logistics quagmire was what led the Authority to suspend stripping within the Tin Can Island Port premises.
Agents, on the other hand, argued that the stripping fares ranging between N600,000 to N700,000 was sufficient to move the cargoes outside the port environment.
The amount for stripping in the Tin Can Island port area is exorbitant but it is simply a factor determined by market forces. The demand for stripping in this area is so high and there is no space for such activity.
Therefore, those with the facility hiked the prices but importers don’t care because it saves them from the possible dangers with the multiple Customs units on the highways,” an NPA official at Tin Can Island Port said.
Noting that stripping isn’t the ideal practice around the world, the NPA source said, “Stripping became a necessity at Tin Can because of the nature of the cargoes received at the port.
In fact, terminals operating in the Tin Can Island Port environment have been systematically fuelling the chaos in the area as they also ignored NPA’s proposal to only receive trucks that have Terminal Deliver Order (TDO), so that the trucks bringing empties can leave with consignments as some bad eggs in the division have given the group a bad name.
There are more challenges aside issue of stripping and port stakeholders flooding environs of the seaports to cause artificial gridlock as middlemen operating at the seaports given bad names to the PTT
Some truck and tanker motorists who spoke to our correspondent, blamed that most of the challenges being faced at the seaport is as a result of the state of the roads and middlemen operators.
A truck owner, Friday Marvelous said some middlemen claim to be truck owners and desperately acting like middlemen mostly causing artificial traffic and demanding money expected to settle Nigeria police, LASTMA, NPA, FRSC before the truck owners and tanker drivers have access to the seaports.
This criminal behavior and impersonation of PTT recently revealed as untrue and Task force team urges all the truck owners and tanker drivers move their trucks direct to port without paying anything to any middlemen, Marvelous said
He also revealed that PTT didn't send any middlemen to exhort or collect money from any truck owners before being passed.
As a result of this, PTT have been blackmailing on various social medias, sponsor articles to dent the image of the task force and causing problems most times at the seaports as these are major challenges the team experiencing over time
Marvelous noted that since few days ease of traffic, tankers and trucks better and access to the port ease without unnecessary and trigging of traffic at the moment.
He however said trucks are steady moving towards the seaports aside massive reconstruction of access road causing additional deny to the port and urges the construction companies to fast the projects on time.
A truck Driver, Usman Alli said; "most challenges being experienced is as a result of our bad roads. Most of the roads are in deplorable state and some of them are currently on-going reconstruction."
He also laments on the activities of middlemen operators particularly with most of them causing artificial trigging of gridlock at the seaports.
David Emmanuel, a motorist said; "all shareholders need to be blamed. He said those middlemen causing problems at the seaports should be arrested because they can't continue adding problems to the already bad roads and also blocking those in authority do their jobs."
He noted that any truck that refuse to produce its Terminal Delivery Order, TDO, at the seaports should be sanctioned and also added that the construction company handling projects within the area should work fast to ease the traffic and frustration people are passing through on daily basis around the axis.
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