Chairman of the Federal Road Maintenance Agency, Ezekiel Adeniji, has
said the Federal Government will soon reintroduce tollgates to federal
roads across the country.
Adeniji, who spoke in an interview with
online journal on Saturday in Abuja, said it
would
generate revenue for government and jobs for Nigerians.
He did not, however, give a specific date for the reintroduction of tollgates.
Adeniji
said, “Tolling is universal for revenue generation and job creation. In
developed countries, there is no place you go to that you don’t pay
toll for the roads you use.
“If you are paying for water,
electricity and communication, why can’t you pay for good roads? We will
have more revenue to maintain the roads.
“Because when you toll, you get more revenue, you create more jobs and you have funds to maintain the roads.”
Tollgates
were scrapped by President Olusegun Obasanjo during his tenure.
However, since his exit in 2007, there had been reports that government
was considering the return of tollgates to federal roads, especially as
some states like Lagos had successfully introduced such on their roads.
The
FERMA boss also said the agency would recruit 10,000 Nigerians from
communities where it would be engaged in major road maintenance work
before the end of the year.
Adeniji said, “We intend to employ
10,000 youths along our routes before the end of the year. I mean 10,000
youths to work as labourers.
“They will have identity cards. They don’t even need to open bank accounts as they could be paid in cash.
“We
want to hire indigenes living along federal roads as labourers. Those
indigenes will be working on roads that affect their lives directly. The
labourers should be the indigenes of the localities, while the leaders
and head of the team could come from anywhere as far as they are
Nigerians.”
He also said federal road maintenance engineers had
been deployed in the 36 states to manage 95 road camps, adding that
these would soon be increased to 500.
He said, “We are
working towards having about 500 road camps where the indigenous
population would be recruited to monitor the roads and report to FERMA.
He said the efforts would
reduce crime on the highways and create job opportunities for unemployed
youths within the communities.
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