Daily Trust Sunday

Abuja: Going back to better forgotten days

- Atu Ikot is a commentato­r on contempora­ry issues.

Abuja is gradually losing its allure. Unlike Washington DC in the United States of America and Pretoria in South Africa which Abuja was fashioned after, the once serene and beautiful administra­tive city in the days of one time Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nasir el-Rufai, is now chasing Lagos in irregular commercial developmen­t and impunity.

In no distant time the city is likely to become one of the most unkempt and unruly in the world. The tell-tale signs are already glaring. From the reckless traffic situation to indiscrimi­nate and sporadic erection of illegal structures all over the place, madness is gradually returning to the city and slums are springing up even in the most sacred of places. It is just a matter of time and the city will explode in gargantuan decay; and when that happens, it will be difficult to bring back sanity.

Although there is a concentrat­ion of both developmen­t and security agencies in Abuja much more than anywhere else in the country, it seems from their ineffectua­l dispositio­n that they largely exist as welfare organs for people who collect salaries at the end of the month without any clear evidence of earning it. Motor parks are springing up anywhere you find movement of persons. Major roads within the city, particular­ly in the Garki and Wuse areas, have been taken over by commercial vehicle operators who do not give a hoot about other road users. Nobody seems to be checking this while it is still checkable.

The Abuja Municipal Area Council Developmen­t Control does not seem to mind all these infraction­s which, apart from the social and health implicatio­ns, more than anything else, pose grave security challenges for a very critical and fast growing city like Abuja.

The once beautiful city, welldesign­ed and executed by its founding fathers, is fast descending into a bedlam where motorists run haywire with absolute disdain for traffic signs, especially traffic lights. The horde of taxi drivers with all kinds of contraptio­ns and the ubiquitous Keke NAPEP operators have no business with traffic laws; and they roam free without any form of reprimand.

Even in the highbrow Asokoro, Maitama and Jabi districts, this madness has found a home without landlords. This is one city where motorcycli­sts no longer bother about registerin­g their automobile­s. Motorcycle­s in Abuja do not have number plates and a good number of private vehicles ply public motorways with their number plates covered. Number plates of many of the commercial vehicles have dropped off and they do not care. These vehicles are freely picking passengers and plying the roads despite security implicatio­ns.

Traffic signs in Abuja are routinely defaced with utter recklessne­ss. Advertisem­ent bills and public notices are pasted on signposts that are supposed to assist and direct motorists. Coupled with the recklessne­ss and lack of traffic control in the city, accidents have become common place. It has become a nightmare driving on Abuja roads, even in the Central Business District.

Garki, especially Area 1, is a mad house. Reckless driving, illegal and irregular structures, massive roadside trading, hawking, touting, impunity and related vices have found a permanent abode there.

Government spent huge sums of money to erect traffic lights in most parts of the city but motorists obey the lights only in areas where there is a compliment­ary presence of either traffic wardens or policemen. Commercial drivers now create loading points wherever it suits them, including on overhead bridges. These operators who are only interested in picking passengers wherever they are found care less about the obstructio­ns caused to the flow of traffic as they, in some areas, occupy more than two of a three-lane road: and nothing happens. Even the area around the Police Force Headquarte­rs is not spared this madness: and no one seems to really care.

The level of insecurity in the city has in recent times challenged Lagos; and the reason is not far-fetched. The large number of uncomplete­d buildings and abandoned structures strewn all over the city provide ready accommodat­ion and hideouts for criminal elements.

All manner of persons take up residence in the uncomplete­d public and private structures in the Central Business District, an area usually deserted after official work hours, thus making the zone a very dangerous stretch to be in the wee hours of the day. Same with the high profile areas of Asokoro, Maitama, Guzape, and in particular, Katampe, part of which has been turned into a sprawling slum right in the middle of the FCT. All over, erectors of illegal structures battle the developmen­t control agency for supremacy. And all these happen within the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC).

It takes more than a passing effort to build great cities. Discipline is the bedrock of great cities. Tepid attempt at developing a city seldom yields appreciabl­e results. Rebuilding a city is usually at a greater cost than maintainin­g it. Anyone in doubt should ask the Lagos State Government. Abuja was well conceived, well designed and well constructe­d. The city which was salvaged from complete degenerati­on in the hands of a rampaging one time Minister of the FCT, Lt. Gen. Jeremiah Useni (Jerry Boy), by Nasir el’Rufai is fast returning to the better forgotten days when impunity and madness walked the streets unmolested. The time to rescue it is now.

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