THISDAY

Chinese’s $200m Loans to Tackle Flooding Intact, Says Oyo Govt

- In Ibadan

Ademola Babalola

Following the August 26, 2011, flood incident in Ibadan which literally brought Oyo State to its knees, resulting in the deaths of many residents and untoward economic downturn, the state government has said it has spent only 14 per cent of the $200millon World Bank loan granted it by the Chinese Government.

The Director General of the state Bureau of Physical Planning and Developmen­t Control, Alhaji Waheed Gbadamosi, stated this while briefing journalist­s at the state Ministry of Informatio­n, Culture and Tourism yesterday.

Part of the loan, Gbadamosi said, was being spent on reconstruc­tion of bridges, roads, dredging of rivers, and water channels as part of efforts to control flooding in the state.

According to the D G, the government has listed many of the affected sites under the Ibadan Urban Flood Control, and the project is expected to last for eight years.

Also, the 70-year-old Eleyele water dam, he noted, would be upgraded to a world class dam, stating that constructi­on work is expected to commence soon.

Gbadamosi who spoke extensivel­y on the Ibadan Master Plan final draft that would be submitted next month, disclosed that 22 private radio stations that are operating without approved building plans in Ibadan would soon be closed down.

He frowned at the inability of the media houses to get approval from the appropriat­e agencies in the state, just as he stated that most of the residentia­l structures turned to commercial ventures especially in Ibadan would soon be asked to pay huge fine/fee for doing such.

Gbadamosi said: “Over 22 radio stations don’t have approved building plans. They are more than 22 of them. They don’t have building plans. Most of them turned residentia­l buildings into commercial ventures.

The DG who said the government had decided to take necessary actions to close the radio stations down, also disclosed that the case had been brought to the attention of National Broadcasti­ng Commission (NBC) for necessary actions.

He said the need to take legal action and exercise patience before the closure was necessary so as not to see the closure as a political tool in waging war against the media in the state.

“When we want to close them down, we know it may create some security threat, we have brought the case to the NBC for necessary actions and sanctions.

“They have converted residentia­l buildings to commercial ventures. Such developmen­t is going to bring and attract vehicular and human traffic to the area, is there plans for that?”

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