The Guardian (Nigeria)

How VIOS Extort Motorists Over Road Worthiness Certificat­e

- By Gbenga Salau

DESPITE road worthiness certificat­es not being issued for free by the Lagos State government, many who paid for the service do not have it rosy getting their certificat­es from the Vehicle Inspection Service ( VIS). This is even in cases where the vehicle has passed the computeris­ed inspection test of being road worthy, an investigat­ion by The Guardian has revealed.

A resident of Lagos had complained to The Guardian that officers of the VIS, citing examples of officers at the Daleko centre, always put bottleneck­s to the easy acquisitio­n of the certificat­e after paying for the service and the vehicles successful­ly going through the inspection test.

To verify the allegation­s of the motorist, The Guardian reporter took his car to the centre for his vehicle’s road worthiness certificat­e on January 26, 2024.

After presenting the vehicle for inspection and test, a note was issued that the vehicle was roadworthy, as it scaled through the inspection and test successful­ly. The next step was to present the note to the Vehicle Inspection Officer ( VIO) on duty to issue the original road worthiness certificat­e.

When the VIS officer on duty was approached with the note of the vehicle passing the inspection test, he said there was no road worthiness certificat­e to be issued. When the officer was asked how soon would the certificat­e be ready, he said, “in a week’s time.”

The officer also provided a caveat that since the 60 days provided for the vehicle roadworthi­ness test to be conducted would expire in 10 days time, the certificat­e must be collected before then or else the Automatic

Number Plate Recognitio­n

( ANPR) machines installed on CCTV cameras across the state by government would capture the vehicle for non procuremen­t of the certificat­e even when the vehicle has passed the test.

When he was asked why it should be so, since the car had p a s s e d the test

just that the certificat­e had not been issued; he said “it has not been imputed in the VIS system that the test has been done successful­ly.” So, exactly a week after the vehicle test was done, , that was February y 2, , 2024 and three days to when the 60 6 days for the test to be conducted conduct would expire, the centre was w visited again for the certificat­e certific to be issued.

Luckily, the same officer offic was on duty. When he was approached ap for the certificat­e, he said s there was no one ready yet. yet He gave another five days to the reporter to return and an check if the certificat­e would be available.

With this, The Guardian Guard called one of the vehicle owners whose car was w also inspected inspe and tested t for b e i n g road worthy at the c e n t r e s same day, if he had been issued the worthiness certificat­e for his car. He responded in the affirmativ­e, revealing he got the certificat­e same day.

When the motorist was asked how he got the certificat­e same day despite his vehicle’s inspection and test was conducted after that of the reporter, he said he was initially told that road worthiness certificat­e was not available, but after pleading with one of the VIS officers he knew at the centre, and thereafter, and tipping him, he was given an instructio­n on who to meet for the issuance of the road worthiness certificat­e. “So, I got my vehicle road worthiness certificat­e same day,” he said.

Fourteen days after the vehicle test was done, and certified to be road worthy, a return was made to the centre for the third time for the road worthiness certificat­e to be issued; the same officer was still on duty and insisted that there was no certificat­e to be issued.

However, after some complaint that it was the third time of making a visit to the centre, the officer said that when next a visit is made to the centre for the certificat­e, the document would be available to be issued, which should be in a week’s time.

Thus, in compliance with the VIS officer’s directive, a fourth visit was made to the VIS centre and the same officer was still on duty, but was gracious enough to issue the certificat­e this time around.

Ironically, on the three earlier occasions the VIS computeris­ed test centre was visited, right in front of the VIS officer were road worthiness certificat­es displayed on his table that he was processing to be issued.

Meanwhile, while the back and forth was ongoing between the reporter and VIS officers at the centre, findings were made from officers of the ministry of transport, Motor Vehicle Administra­tion Agency ( MVAA) and Vehicle Inspection Service on whether there were shortage of certificat­es to be issued to motorists whose vehicles had been certified road worthy. All of them stated that there was no such challenge about non- availabili­ty of road worthiness certificat­es to be issued in the state.

Before now, the tradition was for vehicles’ road worthiness certificat­e to be issued by the VIS without physical inspection and test of the vehicles.

But from January 1, 2022, the VIS started demanding that before a vehicle is issued the road worthiness certificat­e, the motor must be physically inspected and tested at any of the designated computeris­ed vehicle inspection centres across the state.

 ?? ?? Vehicle Inspection Officers on duty
Vehicle Inspection Officers on duty
 ?? ?? The Director of Lagos State Vehicle Inspection Service, Mr Akin- George Fashola
The Director of Lagos State Vehicle Inspection Service, Mr Akin- George Fashola

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