5th June,
2020
PRESS
RELEASE:
UNMARKED
LANES CAUSING ACCIDENTS ON EXPRESSWAYS
-
MURIC
An Islamic
human rights outfit, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC), has decried the
frequency of accidents on Nigerian expressways. The group lamented the high
human toll and blamed the trend on the failure of construction companies to
mark the lanes on expressways. The group called on the construction companies
to place more value on human lives than the money they make from road
contracts.
This was
contained in a press statement issued by the Director of the human rights
organization, Professor Ishaq Akintola, on Friday, 5th June, 2020.
“We are
greatly worried by the current trend whereby road building companies fail to
mark the lanes on expressways. Indeed, we are perturbed that most of the
culprits are foreign companies. Does it mean that they do not care about
Nigerian lives? Is this how expressways are left unmarked in their own
countries?
“Construction
companies handling road projects now have the habit of leaving the expressways
unmarked thereby making it difficult for drivers to stay on their lanes and to
know when they foray into other lanes. The failure of the road builders to
demarcate the lanes with white bold paints has been largely responsible for
several accidents not only on Lagos-Ibadan expressway but also on many other
expressways across the country.
“But it is
most pronounced on Lagos-Ibadan expressway. For example, five people were
killed in a fatal accident which occurred near Danco Petrol Station, Shagamu on
Lagos-Ibadan expressway on Saturday, 30th May, 2020. Nine other people were
critically injured in the accident. Four people had died while four others
sustained injuries three days earlier in another accident which occurred around
Pipeline Junction, Ogere, on the same Lagos-Ibadan expressway. It is a daily
occurrence.
“The
statistics are stunning. According to the Federal Roads Safety Corps (FRSC) an
average of 12 people died daily in 2019 in road accidents across Nigeria.
28,195 people died in road accidents in 68 months. 5,400 people died in 12,077
road accidents in 2015. Nigeria had 11,363 accidents in 2016 with 5,063
fatalities. There were 10,026 accidents in 2017 with 5,049 deaths. 2,598
Nigerians died in road accidents between October 2017 and March 2018.
“We
strongly condemn this waste of human life. It is careless, inhuman and very
irresponsible for construction companies to build expressways without marking
the lanes. Why do you think road signs are placed in strategic places in
cities? Is it not for the purpose of guiding motorists as well as pedestrians?
Marked lanes also serve the purpose of guiding motorists, keeping them steadily
on their lanes, warning them regarding where they can or cannot overtake,
alerting them to dangerous bends ahead and generally making the road safe for
all.
“It is
therefore high time construction companies demonstrated care for Nigerians by
marking lanes on expressways. MURIC places high value on human life. The Muslim
Rights Concern (MURIC) is concerned because Islam as a religion places high
premium on human life. Nigerians are not cheap chickens whose lives do not
matter. Every Nigerian life is vital to the nation’s economic development.
“We
are calling the attention of the federal and state governments to the
proliferation of road accidents particularly on expressways. We are also
putting the blame squarely on companies who fail to demarcate expressway lanes
in conformity with global best practices. While we acknowledge the giant
strides made by the Buhari administration in infrastructural development, the
failure of expressway builders to demarcate lanes may whittle down the huge success
achieved in this direction.
“We charge
road-builders to add a human face to their profession. They should show some
modicum of concern for the lives of Nigerians, not just the money they expect
from the contracts. The safety and dignity of the Nigerian must be respected by
all construction companies at all times.”
#Nigerianlivesmatter
Professor
Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights
Concern (MURIC)
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