ABUJA—IN
what appeared to be a self assesment, the Federal Government,
yesterday, scored itself and came to a conclusion that the worst roads
in the country were located in the South-South and South-East
geopolitical zones.
Disclosing this, yesterday, in Abuja when he
appeared before the Senate Committee on Federal Roads Maintenance
Agency, FERMA, headed by Senator Magnus Abe, Minister of Power, Works
and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, who noted that some of the major federal
roads in the 11 states were constructed before the 1967-1970 Nigerian
Civil War, said that efforts were being put in place to fix the roads.
Fashola told the senators that the N100 billion sourced through the
Sukuk bond, was yet to be released to his Ministry to carry out 25 major
road construction projects in the six geopolitical zones of the
country. Chairman of FERMA committee, Senator Abe, noted that senators
who are the true representatives of the people were usually sidelined by
heads of Ministries, Departments and Agencies of the Federal Government
when mulling siting of projects.
He said: “As elected
representatives of the people, if the Federal Government is doing
anything in your areas, our inputs are hardly needed. We will then have
to fight for relevance. “We are meeting you because of the challenges
FERMA, which is under your supervision, is facing. Is this agency
relevant in your scheme of things in your ministry? We need you to touch
on the core challenges of this agency.” On his part, Fashola said:
“When we did the audit of our roads, we discovered that some sections
are bad. Many roads have outlived their lifespans. Many roads in the
South-East and South South were built before the civil war. They are
among the worst in the country.
They need to be replaced. “Funds
generated from Sukuk have not been released because of the conditions
tied to them. We will try and repair the roads before people start
travelling for the festivities in December. We are doing something about
that.” On the Challenges facing FERMA, Fashola said: “One of the
reccurring stories of under performance which we inherited is that of
ministerial interference. We have tried to supervise without
interfering. As best as possible, we try not to. “I have tried to enable
government see what it is spending in each of the parastatals under my
ministry. In the past, FERMA spent money on areas it had no business
with. That has to stop.
If you allocate money and it is spent on
local government roads, it means something is wrong. The core mandate
of FERMA is to repair federal roads. “FERMA can be the largest
construction company in the country. It depends on what we are willing
to put into the agency. In the past, FERMA collected monies for roads
they did not construct. That has to stop in this government. “We are
working with the Army Corps to see how we can develop local content. The
unemployment challenges we have can be reduced if FERMA is busy in
every state.”
No comments
Post a Comment