Daily Trust Sunday

Blame the government, not contractor­s

To simply berate contractor­s who have done so much damage for so long is not justice: they ought to be identified and prosecuted.

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In January 2023, as time wound down on the Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion, it approved a project plan under which, it said, nine roads totaling 1,347km nationwide would be commission­ed for 25 years.

The plan was described as the first phase of a Public-Partnershi­p-Project scheme under the Highway Developmen­t and Maintenanc­e Initiative (HDMI).

Remember: January 2023. But the HDMI scheme began much earlier, in 2020, with a call for bids. The preferred bidders were announced in April 2022, with the government approving nine of the 12 highways in January 2023.

The nine included the 195km AbujaLokoj­a highway. (The Lokoja-Benin, about which I have written substantia­lly, was deferred along with a few others for the second phase of the HDMI Project process.)

Keep in mind that in January 2023, the government approved an applicatio­n of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited to invest N1.9 trillion in the reconstruc­tion of 44 federal roads under the NNPCL tax scheme.

The list of roads included at least the Abuja-Lokoja segment of the A2 highway. The contractor­s involved were listed as CGC Nigeria, Mother Cat, Dantata and Sawoe, and RCC. In May 2023, the government signed commercial contracts with the concession­aires.

In January 2024, under the new government, Mr Umahi set a March 2024 deadline for the roads to be handed over to the concession­aires. According to the HDMI project profile of the Infrastruc­ture Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC), the concession­aire for the Abuja-Lokoja Road is Avia Infrastruc­ture Services Limited (AISL).

Last week, in a meeting with the four constructi­on contractor­s, Works Minister David Umahi threatened to terminate their contracts.

He sounded like a very angry man, describing a scandal without admitting there is a scandal: of contractor­s receiving contracts for which they lack capacity, and staying on a single project for 17 years, seeking contract variations.

Mr Umahi observed of the Abuja-Lokoja Road that the initial project cost was N121bn, before the administra­tion of President Bola Tinubu, but had been reviewed to about N870bn.

“We demanded from the contractor­s to approve that they can do the job and they did but the arrogance of contractor­s in this country is very insulting. A country where the contractor­s are dictating what happens; in the Ministry of Works, many contractor­s have over 17 projects but they have no personnel and equipment to do it. They are just playing politics. Staying on jobs for 17 years and that is what is playing out.”

CGC Nigeria, Mother Cat, Dantata and Sawoe, and RCC have been involved with the Abuja-Benin City Road in various respects for most of the past two decades. I have cited them in previous interventi­ons on this subject.

If they are involved in any projects under the NNPCL tax scheme, it seems to be to be too soon for threats, given that the scheme is just one year old. If the threats involve their work on the Abuja-Benin City segment in the past two decades, justice—not threats—is what is required.

The contract alleged to have been awarded during the Olusegun Obasanjo presidency has subsequent­ly seen the succeeding government­s of Umaru Yar’Adua, Goodluck Jonathan and Muhammadu Buhari, none of which recognized it. Instead, as I explored here in ‘Does Dave Umahi Know Nigeria I,” they have awarded at least 10 separate contracts since then.

To simply berate contractor­s who have done so much damage for so long is not justice: they ought to be identified and prosecuted.

Similarly, to attack contractor­s who may have been extorted by government officials or by government­s which failed to honour their contracts, or by government­s which for their own purposes persisted in awarding new contracts without investigat­ing or implementi­ng the existing contracts is not justice, either.

That said, I repeat the obvious: the parlous state of Nigerian infrastruc­ture, particular­ly roads, is a crime, and crimes are committed by people. Principal among these are various Ministers of Works and officials of the Ministry. I have already called on Mr Umahi, if anything is ever truly to change, to begin from his office.

Two weeks ago, for instance, I drew attention to the Bola Tinubu government’s institutio­n of an app called Citizens’ Delivery Tracker, to track public projects: the exact function as Eyemark, which his predecesso­r launched just months before it left office.

My comment: “It is another illustrati­on of how parallel, multi-level, multi-year, multiadmin­istration, uncoordina­ted, incoherent, incompeten­t chaos in planning, spending and execution has given Nigeria not simply the world’s worst infrastruc­ture, but also the largest assemblage of uncomplete­d projects, including in rail, schools and hospitals.”

It is a good idea for the public to be armed to track projects, but what is the point if the same project is re-budgeted, and budgeted again by succeeding government­s in indistinct sections and phases that are never completed?

But this is the mess that the federal government has made of infrastruc­ture developmen­t in Nigeria. No project appears genuinely designed for completion, let alone in the short term, and no project is important enough or limited enough to attract a clear completion schedule.

This is why I always remind people that when I write about the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, the Lagos-Calabar Rail, the AbujaKano Road, or the Abuja-Benin City Road, it is simply a metaphor. The same issues apply nationwide.

Our government­s are built on guile and manipulati­on, not performanc­e. They lack as much commitment to service as they do to excellence. It is why they contract and re-contract. The contractor, recognizin­g that there is far more money in the game than in performanc­e, invests in it.

Think about it: In 2012, Mr Jonathan, “distressed” because work on the Lagos-Ibadan expressway was taking too long, terminated the contract with Bi-Courtney, which had been on it for four years. His government came to an end in 2015, but the work was not completed.

Mr. Buhari’s government ran the same scheme for the next eight years, into 2023, with the highway still not completed.

Sadly, the Tinubu administra­tion continues the tradition, the tradition in which, everywhere, there are far more announceme­nts of projects than projects completed.

This is partly why the 700km LagosCalab­ar Coastal Highway, which is now said to have replaced the Lagos-Calabar Rail which Buhari could not build, is a serious issue.

Defenders of the administra­tion claim that the N15.6 trillion tab for the road alone, not the uncosted photo-trick rail in the middle of the 10-lane plan, is not an issue. They say it will be completed in Tinubu’s eight years.

But if Umahi thinks that contractor­s playing games with contracts is an insult, government­s playing politics with projects is a bigger insult. How can anyone build a project around a re-election that has not even been contested, let alone won?

Why did Buhari fail so embarrassi­ngly? He was unprepared for the task of governance: those who wrote his words could not provide the skills or the heart required for governance as a serious project.

That spilled into the years, including project delivery throughout the country. So far, and predictabl­y, Renewed Hope is following the same path, providing little hope.

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