Business Day (Nigeria)

Business activities at Tin-can Port squeezed as rent-seeking on access road grounds container haulage

… Concerns mount as yuletide goods pile up due to gridlock

- AMAKA ANAGOR-EWUZIE

Movement of laden and empty containers in and out of the Tin-can Island Port, Nigeria’s second busiest seaport, in Lagos has become a hard nut to crack following increasing rent-seeking and extortion by traffic managers along the Apapa-oshodi Expressway.

Terminals in Tin-can Ports can no longer record 100 percent efficiency as the neverendin­g gridlock on the access road, which makes movement of trucks almost impossible, has made it tough to gate out laden containers and gate in empties.

Businessda­y gathered that several goods imported to meet Christmas sales are trapped in Tin-can Port while cargo owners, on the other hand, pay through their nose to hire trucks to move their goods out of the port because truckers, who have been forced by the prevailing situation to do one job in one month and also pay their way into the port, are charging higher to recover the loss on the road.

Jonathan Nicol, president, Shippers Associatio­n of Lagos State, who disclosed that containers are trapped in Tin-can due to inability of trucks to access the port, estimated that less than 200 containers currently exit terminals in Tin-can Port daily compared to about 700 containers prior to this time.

Clearing agents and truckers blamed the situation on multiple checkpoint­s as well as increasing rate of extortion on the road by security operatives deployed to manage traffic. Today, truckers pay N70,000-N200,000 as gratificat­ion to different layers of officials to access the port.

Also, there are empty container truck checkpoint­s where importers who discharge their containers would be made to pay to security officials before their empty containers would be allowed into the port.

For instance, there are more than 15 checkpoint­s from Mile 2 to Tin-can, while from Western Avenue to Apapa has more than 10 checkpoint­s. At every checkpoint, truckers are compelled to part with money before they are allowed to cross.

Confirming this, Hadiza Bala Usman, managing director, Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), said in an interview with Arise TV on The Morning Show last Thursday that there is a lot of rent-seeking around traffic management in Apapa, where all manners of payments are made to security officials for trucks to access the port.

She said the port currently has manual call-up system that has NPA security officials, Presidenti­al Task Team, Nigerian Police Force, and

LASTMA physically involved in the management and deciding the trucks to access the ports.

“I will never say that our own staffs are not part of that system because NPA security staff and NPA marine operation staff are all part of that manual system that involves human interferen­ce. But the introducti­on of electronic callup would do away with these people, who personally decide or are given gratificat­ions to facilitate the movement of trucks into the port,” Usman said.

“The NPA is keen to deploying an electronic call-up system as well as a designated truck parks to link them, and it would be unveiled in January. This is a way to address the huge rent-seeking that goes on around that area because we hear people are paying N1.5 million to move X foot container to Abuja and that it costs so much to move container out of the port,” she said. Kate Njoku, a clearing agent who mostly does business in Tin-can Port, said clearing a containeri­sed cargo from Tin-can has become difficult and expensive for importers, especially due to the cost of haulage that has hit the roof.

“Imagine that I loaded an already released container in Ports and Cargo Terminal since last 10 days but the truck has not been able to leave the port terminal due to the gridlock from the port to the access road,” Njoku said.

“To move 40-foot container from any terminal in Tin-can to warehouses in Lagos, the importer pays as high as over a million naira. For instance, Tin-can to National, which is a bus-stop away, I was charged N1.2 million; to Odolowu, which is close to Ijesha, truckers charge as high as N1.4 million to lift one container,” she said.

Njoku said her friend was lucky to get a truck that was able to lift one 40-foot container of her principal from Tin-can Port to Ibadan in Oyo State, which is also not far from Lagos, for N1.2 million.

Segun Ojo, another clearing agent, told Businessda­y that the cost of hiring a truck in Tin-can Port became high due to the artificial gridlock created by security operatives in charge of managing traffic on that axis.

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