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A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times - Politics - Nairaland

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Peter Obi Vehemently Condemns Lagos-Calabar Highway As A Misplaced Priority / ‘Misplaced Priority’ – Obi Questions Lagos-calabar Super Highway Project / Coastal Highway: Approximately 1km Of Highway Completed (Photos) (2) (3) (4)

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A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Racoon(m): 6:58am On May 06
PREMIUM TIMES believes that at a time in which the economy is bleeding profusely, there must be better areas to plough our little resources into.

Construction of the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway has begun amid a myriad of fiscal and due process concerns. But indifference is the response of President Bola Tinubu’s administration to the challenges. The 700-kilometre stretch of road infrastructure, which will span eight years to complete, will gulp a staggering N15 trillion.

This figure is tentative, given the country’s inflationary spiral. The project might well have significant economic benefits for the country but there are real questions involved, especially as regime spokespersons have repeatedly reiterated the fact that our economy is bankrupt, of which there is no question.

The pilot phase of the construction has started at the Eko Atlantic City and it will terminate at Lekki Deep Seaport, for which N1.06 trillion has already been released. It is a highway of 10 lanes, which will cost N4 billion per kilometre, and would be the first of its kind in Africa, says the Minister of Works, David Umahi. His zealousness in its implementation brooks no dissent, and sometimes it gets spiteful. The first set of victims, whose properties were demolished to pave the way for the construction, were paid N2.75 billion in compensation last week.

There are similar road networks in the offing, in the Sokoto-Badagry Coastal Highway and the Enugu-Abakaliki-Ogoja-Cameroon Highway, in what seems like a geo-political balancing act. As a spur, the latter will course through Oturkpo in Benue State, to Nasarawa State and end at Apo, in Abuja. On the second project, Mr Umahi said, “We have started the design and I’m sure that as soon as the Federal Executive Council approves it, we will be starting at the Sokoto side.” Given its 1,000-kilometre length, it will surely gulp over N20 trillion.

The political ecosystem is already astir on the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, with the circumstances surrounding its award. Adherence to due process has been raised by some critics, causing waffling in official quarters. The point has to be made: the project did not go through a competitive bidding process, which is imperative for such a huge venture, in line with the 2007 Public Procurement Act, as enunciated in Section 16 (1) (1) and (d), to create transparency, accountability and value for money.

As the minister admitted, the award sidestepped the public tender competitive bidding process. This raises the question of how the cost was arrived at.

-Was it a favour to a friend of the administration?

-Or is the government bidding farewell to the transparency and accountability of public tender and the competitive bidding process?

-In addition, why was the Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) phase of the project not done before work began?


We know this through a letter dated 18th April that emanated from the Ministry of Works, soliciting residents living in the Section 1 and 11 areas of the highway in Lagos, to attend a workshop organised for a scoping study that will generate this all-important data, after the project implementation had commenced.

This action, the letter reads in part, will “ensure that the project is developed in a responsible and sustainable manner, in line with regulations in Nigeria as well as international standards and frameworks.” No, this is sophistry! The country’s statute and global best practices do not uphold putting the cart before the horse in the award of a contract, as the ministry’s letter exemplifies. The ESIA precedes any contract.

How the project will be financed is still mired in obfuscation. On 23 September 2023, Umahi disclosed that Hitech – the construction company for the work, would fund the project, precisely under the Public Private Partnership (PPP) scheme.

However, in a volte-face recently, he said that the government will provide 50 per cent counterpart funding, in an Engineering, Procurement, Construction plus Finance (EPC+F) model. This fiscal decision is not cast in stone yet, as he revealed that discussions were ongoing for a possible reduction to 30 per cent of government funding.

It beats our imagination that the federal government will undertake the construction of these projects at a time that the country’s finances are heading south; and in the face of the dilapidated state of thousands of kilometres of existing highways, which are death-traps.

It is not surprising that Nigeria is ranked 131 out of 141 countries by The GlobalEconomy.com on the quality of its roads. However, the Muhammadu Buhari regime, admirably, embarked on their reconstruction, instead of building new ones. But many are not yet completed.

A judicious utilisation of resources demands that these vital road networks spread across the six geo-political zones be completed first. In the North, the Kaduna-Zaria-Kano Highway only scaled through the first phase of reconstruction under the last administration. The Abuja-Lokoja Highway has not been completed. With its huge land mass, the northern region has more of such decrepit road infrastructure.

The East-West Road, a coastal road network in the South-South has been a work in progress through four administrations since 2005 when Olusegun Obasanjo’s regime initiated it. Its Calabar-Oron end and final stretch has not been touched. A Senate Committee on Works chaired by Abdul Ningi, on a fact-finding tour in September 2023, turned in an unsavoury verdict: “We have traversed the East-West Road from Bayelsa, Delta, Rivers, Akwa Ibom and now Cross River; it is disturbing what we have found in the course of this assignment.”

A failed section of the road in Eleme, Rivers State, precipitated a fuel tanker fire late last month that burnt 120 vehicles and killed five persons. On the Calabar-Ituh Road, Ningi’s committee spent six hours on a journey, which ordinarily should take one hour; and the senator decried: “I have never seen and experienced what we saw on that road anywhere. Thousands of trucks stuck in traffic with little or no motion.”

The Benin Sapele Highway and Benin-Auchi-Okene-Lokoja Road remain a nightmare for motorists, who perennially block them in protest. The Benin-Sagamu Expressway rehabilitation, started by the Jonathan administration, is still unfinished work. The Lagos-Badagry-Seme Highway, whose Lagos end will increase from four to 10 lanes, is begging for completion.

In the South-East, reconstruction work on the Enugu-Port Harcourt Highway stopped at the Aba end, due to the lack of funds, as the Buhari presidency wound up. The dual carriage work on the Owerri–Aba road has been suspended. These uncompleted projects, among others, left a N6 trillion debt hangover for Tinubu. The N300 billion 2023 supplementary budget the government provided to address this challenge does not scratch the surface at all.

The Tinubu regime should be shrewd in deploying public resources. A road project that will take eight years to complete offers no solution to the urgency of now. If the economy had been buoyant, the borrowing binge of the immediate past regime would not have been a policy trajectory to embrace so soon.

As part of the government’s 2024 borrowing plan, the Senate, in December last year, approved $7.8 billion and €100 million. The NNPC Limited has facilitated a $3.3 billion loan from Afrieximbank, under a five-year tenure at an 11.85 per cent interest rate, which will be repaid through a crude oil swap, whose value has been seriously questioned by critics.

There are also two other loans from the World Bank: the first, a $2 billion facility secured to mitigate the hardship of fuel subsidy removal and a more recent $2.25 billion one that the Minister of Finance, Wale Edu, announced after his Washington trip. The African Development Bank (AfDB), too, has offered the government $1 billion in credit.


These funds should not be frittered away on a white elephant and projects that will not positively impact the economy in the short and medium terms. The country’s education and health sectors are in absolute shambles, resulting in recurrent crises. There isn’t a single world-class healthcare facility in Nigeria. Our teaching hospitals are relics of the last century; while our universities remain underfunded, denied of the N220 billion annual revitalisation funds in demand since 2009, to make them functional and ideal citadels of research and innovation.

Nigerians are presently being ravaged by fuel scarcity as the federal government is unable to pay oil marketers the N200 billion outstanding bridging claims owed them. Our seaports cannot compete with the best in Africa, which before now led to the loss of $7 billion annually to Cotonou and Ghana seaports, while the international airports are a laughing stock in comparison with their peers offshore.

Nigeria’s crude oil production has fallen to 1.23 million barrels per day, according to OPEC records in March. We urgently require strategic thinking on how to improve public finances. Nigeria’s revenue has plummeted, creating a foreign exchange shortfall with its crippling effect on the naira.

PREMIUM TIMES believes that at a time in which the economy is bleeding profusely, there must be better areas to plough our little resources into, not coastal roads. In fact, the over N77 trillion debt and 96 per cent of total revenue to service it, alongside the criminal negligence of our roads, are sufficient red flags against this super highway now.

https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/691629-editorial-a-coastal-highway-of-misplaced-priority-and-due-process-abuse.html

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Racoon(m): 7:01am On May 06
As the minister admitted, the award sidestepped the public tender competitive bidding process. This raises the question of how the cost was arrived at.

How the project will be financed is still mired in obfuscation. On 23 September 2023, Umahi disclosed that Hitech – the construction company for the work, would fund the project, precisely under the Public Private Partnership (PPP) scheme.

However, in a volte-face recently, he said that the government will provide 50 per cent counterpart funding, in an Engineering, Procurement, Construction plus Finance (EPC+F) model. This fiscal decision is not cast in stone yet, as he revealed that discussions were ongoing for a possible reduction to 30 per cent of government funding.

...
This is one of the red flag or sign of this controversial project. No due process on the actual cost, pattern of funding and abuse of government provision in the award of public contracts. No competitive bidding.

This is what you get when criminal minded people are in government. Meanwhile, this construction is alleged to be awarded to Hi-Tech a company owned by the notorious Lebanese- Chaugoury brothers who helped the late Sanni Abacha to laundered Nigerian money.

Meanwhile this same Chaugoury is an a long time political ally of Bola Tinubu. So the well discerning Nigerian can see the connect. Dave Umahi will end up being the fall guy here. Same way he built an economically unprofitable variegated colour Airport in Ebonyi state.

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Sannisege: 7:02am On May 06
The coastal road as an alternative road will reduce stress on the internal roads thereby making them last longer. New communities will also spring up along the coasts leading to more economic activities and depopulation of already overpopulated internal urban and rural areas. How about travel time reduction? The advantages are endless.

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by magoo10(m): 7:03am On May 06
Reasonable arguments made here but fake lovers of Nigeria who will never use that route till eternity will come and defend it just because their failure of a god initiated it.

166 Likes 12 Shares

Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by immortalcrown(m): 7:03am On May 06
Sannisege:
This same premium times that reported Peter Obi’s criminality as Anambra Governor. Obidients will choose to support this premium times write-up but not the one against their messiah.
As you believed Premium Times then, believe it this time.

Sannisege:
The coastal road as an alternative road will reduce stress on the internal roads thereby making them last longer. New communities will also spring up along the coasts leading to more economic activities and depopulation of already overpopulated internal urban and rural areas. How about travel time reduction? The advantages are endless.
But the endless disadvantages outweigh the endless advantages. It is like killing millions to save one. Imagine N77 trillion loan and a whooping 97% of total revenue to service the loan. Is this progress?

You changed your comment to show how inconsistent you are.

160 Likes 12 Shares

Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Racoon(m): 7:05am On May 06
"These uncompleted projects, among others, left a N6 trillion debt hangover for Tinubu. The N300 billion 2023 supplementary budget the government provided to address this challenge does not scratch the surface at all.

The Tinubu regime should be shrewd in deploying public resources. A road project that will take eight years to complete offers no solution to the urgency of now. If the economy had been buoyant, the borrowing binge of the immediate past regime would not have been a policy trajectory to embrace so soon...."
Exactly what Peter Obi said yet the government and it herds of mummified zombies are calling him names. Nigeria is a criminal enterprise. Meanwhile, the rubberstamped Akpabio-led NASS is useless in check and balance because they are neck deep in the corruption.

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by helinues: 7:05am On May 06
Una generational wailing has just begun

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Racoon(m): 7:06am On May 06
"PREMIUM TIMES believes that at a time in which the economy is bleeding profusely, there must be better areas to plough our little resources into, not coastal roads.

In fact, the over N77 trillion debt and 96 per cent of total revenue to service it, alongside the criminal negligence of our roads, are sufficient red flags against this super highway now..."

62 Likes 7 Shares

Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by helinues: 7:06am On May 06
Sannisege:
This same premium times that reported Peter Obi’s criminality as Anambra Governor. Obidients will choose to support this premium times write-up but not the one against their messiah.

Those people don't only practice hypocrisy, they mastered it instead

27 Likes 4 Shares

Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by immortalcrown(m): 7:07am On May 06
Is Premium Times obidient?

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by lonecatt(m): 7:12am On May 06
helinues:


Those people don't only practice hypocrisy, they mastered it instead
dispute what was said or keep quiet,next thing you will start attacking igbo's abi you no get sense

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by helinues: 7:14am On May 06
lonecatt:
dispute what was said or keep quiet,next thing you will start attacking igbo's abi you no get sense

Dispute what?

Which of the P&P did you just arrive from?

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by lonecatt(m): 7:15am On May 06
helinues:


Dispute what?

Which of the P&P did you just arrive from?
is premium times igbo ? Because that will be your next line of defence.
1 2 go oya insult igbo's for the exposition made there .

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Splashme: 7:16am On May 06
When a thief is your president ...
.

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Topman7: 7:16am On May 06
I honestly wish there was a way we could mark down all the people opposed to this project, and BAN THEM FROM USING THAT ROAD once it's completed.

They're so annoying!

12 Likes 3 Shares

Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by helinues: 7:18am On May 06
lonecatt:
is premium times igbo ? Because that will be your next line of defence.
1 2 go oya insult igbo's for the exposition made there .


Point out to where I mentioned Igbo

On your marks, set.....

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by benuejosh: 7:18am On May 06
South South people are so happy because of the coastal road that will be constructed and they have not hidden it, South West people are happy because the road will be constructed. The Northerners are not worried about it and have not said anything. But you see South East, they are very bitter because of that road. Why?

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by ClearFlair: 7:24am On May 06
If you look at the people who support wrongdoings, you'll understand how some Africans sold their brothers and sisters to colonialists and slavery. There's no difference between them and the people who sold people their kinsmen because of small gains.

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Promismike(m): 7:24am On May 06
Gospel truth. I maintain it's a misplaced priorities.

Every resources Nigeria has presently should be channeled into
1. building of refineries to reduce the price of petroleum which which is the mainstay of our economy and has multiple effect on the economy and massess. Dangote refinery is not enough.
2. Provision of constant electricity. Many businesses are winding up in Nigeria because of the high cost of production as a result of cost of diesel and fuel couple with high cost of raw materials.
3. Security

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by MaziObinnaokija: 7:25am On May 06
ANTI PROGRESS, DEVELOPMENT PEOPLE sad

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by wetrlr: 7:25am On May 06
Totally agree with this

8 Likes

Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by jumper524(m): 7:25am On May 06
every govt always have a long term and short term economic projects.
this one in particular is raising eye brows because one man is using free govt land to do business and govt wants that land back.

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by IdowuRufai: 7:26am On May 06
Hi
Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Akwamkpuruamu: 7:26am On May 06
A white elephant project that can never be completed. Tinubu using FG money to expand the shores of his business interest with his Chagoury gang.

But Zonebs are hailing him in an empty stomach.

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by CharleyBright(m): 7:26am On May 06
Tinubu lo kan.
Anyone that think Tinubu doesn't intend to recoup the millions of dollars he threw in the elections, is out of his/her mind.

By the time Tinubu finishes 4 yrs tenure, (even if Nigerians doesn't give him 2nd term), he would have laid enough underground pipelines through which Nigeria's revenue will be syphooned into his family pocket like he did in Lagos state.
My worry is the way his very dangerously ambitious son - Seyi Tinubu is hovering around the seat of power like a vulture will make the even more deep.
Emi lo kan is far from Awa lo kan.
But am happy that the Emi lokan supporters were the first to compose and sing the Ebi kpa wa sound track.
What you sow, you will reap.

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by LadyExcellency: 7:27am On May 06
Sannisege:
This same Premium Times that reported Peter Obi’s criminality as Anambra Governor. Obidients will choose to support this Premium Times write-up but not the one against their messiah.

Are you human or something else? The issue of national interest is under discussion by all parties involved and you there make it a kitchen gossip and tribal matter?
Shit, shame on you. Nigeria will never move forward with this mentality.

The constant reminder to sycophants, the people deserve accountability.

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by epainos: 7:27am On May 06
Lol

Many of these people who write rubbish are mocked outside of Nigeria. Go check out all of the current wealthy nations. They began by developing infrastructure. Whether the economy is in depression or not, we must put structures, roads, railways, and seaways in place. We keep shouting that food is expensive...while farmers complain about bad roads. Consider how much food, oil, and other large items will be transported by rail across the entire region. And then the road will be preserved.

Many people are just educated illiterates in Nigeria.

I don't like Tinubu, I am not his fan... but during the election, I said it clearly that he would build Nigeria like he built Lagos. However, we will have his boys everywhere. Thuggery will reign... and many other bad things. Nigerians prefer him, and they have him. Shikena. Make dem manage am. But building infrastructure is not out of place.

Nigerians are gluttons. They prefer palliatives. Or have them use magic to put food on their table. They do not see the economic value in constructing this railway and road. They will finish it by the grace of God. Tinubu does not have records of abandoned projects. He is a man who chooses a follower to replace him and keep his projects going. The evidence is still in Lagos. He has many flaws, but I believe we should let this phase pass.

To me, let them keep putting infrastructure in place. We have reaped too many benefits from subsidies. Let us make sacrifices for our children and generations to come. Let us sacrifice for them. Even these politicians are embezzling, and we can do nothing. As long as infrastructure like this exists, we will eventually be able to confront corrupt politicians and control corruption.

Finally, it is beneficial to have opposition. While I condemn those who oppose this project, I still appreciate them. Everything requires checking and balancing.

Let us move Nigeria forward.

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by DMerciful(m): 7:27am On May 06
Tinubu government is a fraud!

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Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Mindlog: 7:27am On May 06
Sighs...
Re: A Coastal Highway Of Misplaced Priority & Abuse Of Due Process - Premium Times by Bobloco: 7:27am On May 06
As the minister admitted, the award sidestepped the public tender competitive bidding process. This raises the question of how the cost was arrived at.

-Was it a favour to a friend of the administration?

-Or is the government bidding farewell to the transparency and accountability of public tender and the competitive bidding process?

-In addition, why was the Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) phase of the project not done before work began?

It was obvious from day one that the project was a highway of fraud just as Atiku described it.

A fraudulent highway from Bourdillon to Lebanon

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