Protesting Residents Shut Down Benin Bye Pass Over Bad State Of Benin-Sapele-Warri Road
LAGOS APRIL 23RD (URHOBOTODAY)-Commuters on the Benin-Sapele-Warri Expressway, by the Benin By-Pass, on Thursday had a herculean task navigating the road as residents of the area, in their scores, took over the bad portion of the road to protest its bad state and seeming abandonment by both the Federal and the Edo State governments.
The protesting residents claimed that the several petitions written to the governments had not yielded any positive response as the road remained impassable.
They expressed fears that the rains already setting in could worsen the situation.
Speaking to newsmen, a resident and Chairman of Sapele Road By-Pass Axis, Daniel Omorogbe, said they had suffered enough due to the bad road.
“Some of our children can no longer go to school. Our cars are bad. We are finding it difficult to use this road, and this road connects to the Niger Delta and those coming from the Niger Delta axis to other parts of the country also pass through here. Trucks coming from the North to the Niger Delta also pass through here.
“Three months ago, we wrote to the Senate, House of Representatives, we wrote to the Ministry of Works, the state House of Assembly and even the Governor of the state, still nothing has been done, so we are tired. We are going to stay here until the government listens to us. We are going to continue to remain here till they answer. They come here to be using labourers to work using head pans and wheelbarrows and once rain falls, the whole place will collapse and get flooded,” Omorogbe lamented.
Another resident, Omo Osifo, said: “We now spend hours; from By-Pass to Ring Road used to be N150, now we spend up to N500 because of the state of the road especially when it rains. They were rushing a woman to the hospital for delivery but because of the bad road, there was traffic and she delivered, it was a Good Samaritan that now rushed her to a nearby hospital. What if that good Samaritan was not there?”
For Mrs Sandra Otaigbe, another protester, “We want to make it known to the federal and the state governments that good social amenities are not a privilege but a right. If it rains people are stranded, you see little children trekking with their lunch bags after school because of the bad situation when it rains.”
When contacted, the Federal Controller of Works and Housing, Edo State, Razaq Aransiola, declined comments, promising to call back.
Thewill