FEDERAL Government’s planned
reintroduction of tolling on Nigerian roads is an action that is bound
to stir the angst of Nigerian road users who have long been condemned to
commuting daily on what could be arguably described as some of the
worst roads in the world. For a country that relies very heavily on road
transportation, the quality of roads in the country has deteriorated to
a level where a former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Emeka
Anyaoku, once described them as worse than any that could be found in
war-torn countries.
Although the usual argument by
proponents of tolling is that money realised would be ploughed back into
road maintenance, the reality in Nigeria is that the country’s
authorities see tolling as another source of revenue generation for the
maintenance of big government and creation of cost centres. This was
inadvertently confirmed by the Chairman of the Federal Roads Maintenance
Agency, Ezekiel Adeniji, when he was quoted as saying, “Tolling is
universal for revenue generation and job creation.”
The proposal is certainly
eye-catching, but hardly the whole story. Before the toll plazas were
dismantled by the President Olusegun Obasanjo administration, the
exercise was riddled with corruption. When it was obvious that the
government establishment that was manning the toll plazas was not
discharging its responsibilities satisfactorily, the job was contracted
out to private firms, who also ended up short-changing the government.
In many cases, revenues
collected were never fully remitted. Many of those hired to collect the
tolls were also printing their own tickets and selling them alongside
official tickets. Some would even grant free passage to motorists once
they dropped already used tickets, which were later sold to other
motorists and the money pocketed. It was not unusual to see tickets
meant for use at Ore, in Ondo State being sold in Ibadan, Oyo State, for
instance. The operation was a cesspit of corruption and there is
nothing to show that it is going to be different if reintroduced.
The pervasive corruption in
tolling then and the failure to adequately maintain the roads were part
of the reasons for scrapping tolling, with a view to replacing it with
fuel tax as a source of funding for road maintenance. The idea was
eventually dropped after it was vehemently opposed by labour unions, who
felt it was an unjust way of passing the burden of additional taxation
on Nigerians, especially on non-road users, who would be forced to pay
the tax for just buying fuel to keep their generators running.
The concern of the government
about the state of the roads also informed the creation of FERMA to
perform the function of road maintenance, which should ordinarily come
within the remit of the Ministry of Works. Regrettably, given the state
of roads in the country today, the interventionist agency has also
failed woefully in its assigned duties and has no basis for its
continued existence. It should be scrapped.
In announcing the Federal
Government’s intention to reintroduce tolling, Adeniji said it was the
usual practice in other parts of the world. The statement is misguided.
It is sensible to ask Adeniji the locations of the roads that will be
tolled. In those parts of the world he is referring to, the toll-roads
are usually well-built, well-maintained, multiple-lane roads; not the
type of decrepit, pot-hole-riddled roads that are in use here in
Nigeria.
It is estimated that 27,000
kilometres out of 34,000 kilometres of federal road network in the
country have collapsed, exposing commuters to preventable accidents.
Rather than be talking about tolling on Federal Government roads, what
the government should be preoccupied with for now should be how to bring
the roads out of their present state of decrepitude.
Also, in those parts of the
world in question, the usual practice is to get some private companies
to build the roads on a Build-Operate-Transfer basis. Such companies
operate under a franchise, which requires them to return the roads to
the government at the expiration of their franchise. That is the method
adopted by the Lagos State Government on the Lekki toll road, where
driving is made more pleasurable.
Nigeria could also adopt the BOT
system to court private sector participation in new road construction
and maintenance. It is insensitive to think of introducing tolling on
the existing potholed roads, built with taxpayers’ money. With BOT, the
level of road infrastructure will improve and Nigerians will be willing
to pay for the use of such roads, which should, however, boast
alternatives or secondary roads, for those who may not wish to use
toll-roads. Tolling should be a private sector affair.
Besides, it is also time for the
government to develop the rail system to reduce over-reliance on roads
as the chief means of transportation. Efficient rail transport will
encourage travellers to take the train and leave their cars behind. This
can be easily achieved by repealing the age-old law of 1955 that puts
the rail system under the exclusive control of the Federal Government.
Similarly, the inland waterways should be made more active for use by
those in riverine areas.
Without any concrete step being
taken to develop transport infrastructure in the country, any attempt to
reintroduce tolling on Nigerian roads, more than eight years after it
was abolished, smacks of insensitivity and should be stoutly resisted by
the Nigerian citizenry.
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