Business Day (Nigeria)

Eko Bridge: Contractor raises concern, says repair work to end June 2023

- By Chuka Uroko

THE contractor­s handling the repair work of Eko Bridge, Buildwell Plants and Equipment Industries, has raised concerns on challenge facing motorists, saying that the reopening of the bridge may not come any time earlier than May/june 2023

However, this has dashed motorists’ expectatio­ns that the bridge, which has been closed to traffic since March 2022 will no longer be reopened in December this year as earlier promised by the federal government.

The implicatio­n of this is that the suffering, which daily driving experience on the bridge has become in the last seven months will continue in which case motorists have either to brace for more stress or take alternativ­e routes and endure longer travel time to their destinatio­ns.

To deepen the new reality, George Mohanna, director of Constructi­on at Buildwell Plants and Equipment Industries, noted that the completion of the repair works was tied to availabili­ty of bridge components.

Mohanna, who spoke during an inspection of the Bridge by Babatunde Fashola, minister of Works and Housing, disclosed that the initial components imported for the bridge repair were deployed for emergency purposes.

The first of such purposes, he said, was Apongbon Bridge after the fire incident on it in March this year. The second is the Ijora-olopa axis of the bridge after the latest fire outbreak that occurred last week. “We will see how to fast-track importatio­n of bridge components,” Mohanna assured.

Responding, Fashola, revealed that the federal government was reaching out to the Lagos State government on modalities to evacuate all illegal occupants operating under the bridges in the state.

“We are reaching out to the Lagos State government, telling them that they have our support,” Fashola, said, lamenting that the money that could have been deployed to provide additional infrastruc­ture for Lagos was now being deployed for the emergency repairs of the bridge.

He charged Lagosians to take a collective action against the frequent fire outbreak so that such would not happen again in the state. “We are at a point of tough laws; we don’t want to see trading that endangers other people’s lives,” Fashola said, describing the incident as “one fire too many.”

The minister warned Lagosians to stop trading under the bridges as such action is responsibl­e for the collective pains currently being experience­d across the state with the closure of the bridge.

“Under the bridges are not market places. When we shut the bridge, it was because we could no longer take the risk,” Fashola said.

On his part, the Lagos State deputy governor, Obafemi Hamzat, said that people should understand the negative implicatio­n of having incessant fire outbreaks around critical public assets.

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