The Guardian (Nigeria)

Poor funding model, paucity stall $ 3.2b eastern rail project three years after

• Contractor removes old tracks, abandons sections • FG’S 15% counterpar­t fund paltry, non- committal, residents say • We are reviewing its financing, committed to its delivery, minister assures

- From Lawrence Njoku, Enugu

FAILURE of the last administra­tion to put its money where its mouth is has stalled the rail rehabilita­tion work on the eastern corridor, three years after its flag- off.

Findings showed that the project, estimated to cost $ 3.2 billion, has become a hard sell to investors.

It will be recalled that the project, flagged off by former President Muhammadu Buhari in March 2021, was to be funded by 85 per cent foreign loan and 15 per cent counterpar­t contributi­on of the federal government, with a delivery timeline of two years.

The Guardian learnt that the federal government’s 15 per cent stake has been instrument­al to the ongoing work on the Port Harcourt- Aba section of the over 2000km stretch but the rest has been left fallow.

Besides complaints about the “unattracti­ve” funding model, residents lamented the removal of the old rail tracks without a definite plan for their replacemen­t.

More so, the Eastern corridor got a narrow- gauge approval as opposed to the standard gauge on the South- West and North- West, stretches from Port Harcourt through the South- East, Middle- Belt, North- East and terminates in Maiduguri, Borno state.

The Eastern rail line, in its heydays, covered areas such as Bonny Ports in Port Harcourt, with a spur in Owerri, to link the Aba – Enugu rail line with spurs in Abakaliki and Awka, before linking Makurdi, Lafia, Kaduna, Bauchi, Gombe and Maiduguri in Borno State.

With a total of 61 stations and passing loops, the eastern corridor project measured about 2044.1km.

Just at the end of its scheduled delivery date, in March 2023, the immediate past Minister of Transporta­tion, Mu’azu Sambo, announced that the rehabilita­tion work would not be realised in the lifetime of the last administra­tion due to paucity of funds.

It was learnt that the foreign loans required to fund 85 per cent of the project were not available.

While those affected by the project rued the back and forth, the contractor handling the rehabilita­tion work, China Civil Engineerin­g Constructi­on Corporatio­n ( CCECC) in May 2023, mobilised to the old tracks and removed the iron tracks, a developmen­t that generated mixed feelings among the residents.

Disturbed by the delay in the completion of the rail line, stakeholde­rs in the SouthEast are calling on the federal government to adopt alternativ­e funding methods to restore train services to the area.

The stakeholde­rs, who began a campaign under the auspices of Njiko Igbo Forum ( NIF), tagged, “Eastern Corridor Railway” said they were disturbed by the snail speed that has become the lot of the rehabilita­tion project and the high probabilit­y of its abandonmen­t.

Coordinato­r of the forum, Okechukwu Obioha, told The Guardian that they were worried that the contract may have been abandoned after the old tracks were removed and wondered why there was little or no attention to it. Obioha noted the rail services run efficientl­y on standard gauge in Ibadan, Lagos, Abuja, Katsina, and Kaduna up to the Niger Republic.

“It, however, seems that Port Harcourt to Maiduguri, which includes Umuahia, Enugu, Kafanchan, and Bauchi, among others, has been abandoned. Nobody is saying anything meaningful about the rehabilita­tion work awarded several years ago even when means of movement of goods and other services have gone all- time high in the region. ”

He added that the federal government should not pretend that all is well with the people of the region when they are not enjoying the services being given in other zones, and when the cost of living has continued to rise.

“We refuse to accept this manner of treatment. Let there be action on restoring the train services in this region. When this is done, it will have a huge impact on the economy of this region as was the case several years back. It will also impact other areas of life of the average Easterner. We will not stop this campaign until the project is completed,” Obioha said.

Also, a Public Affairs Analyst, Eze Anthony, stated that the piecemeal approach being adopted by the federal government over the eastern corridor repair was an indication that it was “never ready to see train services restored on the route.”

“If after three or four years, we are still talking about rehabilita­ting, it means there is no seriousnes­s in making the route work again.

“There are some salient questions that should be addressed in this instance and that is to ask: why is the NRC still paying the staff of the eastern corridor ( salary) for doing nothing? Are they saying that the rest of the areas that enjoyed train service before now are no longer part of Nigeria?

“Go to the headquarte­rs of the NRC in Enugu, the first thing that will greet you are disused locomotive­s. All the ticketing areas have been converted to business areas.

“There are several offices that are either leaking or abandoned. Recently, they resorted to selling some of their assets including land to private developers allegedly on a Build Operate and Transfer basis. These are some of the things creating worries that rail services may not return to this area any longer.

“The much we have heard so far is that the federal government has not been able to secure the foreign loan it wanted for the completion of the project. If that is the case, why did they remove the old tracks? Who is in custody of those tracks?

“I want to call on the government to change the funding method and embrace the method it adopted in other zones of the country if this must work. Let President Bola Tinubu review this funding method to restore the eastern corridor,” Eze said.

Miffed by the mounting criticism over the delay in the execution of the project, the NRC, which had in January this year, stated that the rehabilita­tion work had progressed from Port Harcourt to Aba, assured that it would restart train services on the axis completed before the end of March 2024. The promise has not been kept.

 ?? ?? Minister of Environmen­t, Dr. Balarabe Lawal ( left); Minister of Women Affairs, Uju Kennedy- Ohanenye and Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Abubakar Bagudu during the launch of the National Guidelines for Women and Girls Empowermen­t for Optimal Nutrition in Abuja.
Minister of Environmen­t, Dr. Balarabe Lawal ( left); Minister of Women Affairs, Uju Kennedy- Ohanenye and Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Abubakar Bagudu during the launch of the National Guidelines for Women and Girls Empowermen­t for Optimal Nutrition in Abuja.

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