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Motorists Groan As Ogun Ram Market Causes Gridlock On Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

Herders attend to their sheep as they await buyers ahead of the Eid-al-Adha celebration at Kara-Isheri sheep market in Ogun State, southwest Nigeria, on July 18, 2021. - The hike in sheep price but which sellers attributed to high cost of animal feeds has resulted to low patronage even with large supply of ram across the market. (Photo by PIUS UTOMI EKPEI / AFP)

Motorists on Wednesday found themselves stranded on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway as buyers and sellers of livestock at the Kara Market blocked sections of the road causing a massive traffic jam.

Our correspondents, who monitored the traffic congestion along the corridor, observed that large trucks carrying livestock, which were parked by the side of the highway for offloading, compounded the gridlock on the corridor.

While the livestock were being offloaded from the trucks, sellers of the animals around the Kara Market displayed them on the road, blocking the traffic on the expressway.

Our correspondents further observed that the traffic backlog heading out of Lagos ended at the OPIC, while the backlog heading into Lagos terminated just a few metres past Kara Market, starting at Arepo, as of the time this report was filed on Wednesday.

Due to the road blockage caused by displaying rams on parts of the expressway, our correspondent further noted that intending buyers worsened the gridlock by parking their vehicles along the sides of the road.

Our correspondents also observed that the increasing activity of traders along the corridor is not unconnected to the upcoming Eid-el-Kabir festival, an annual Muslim celebration that involves the slaughter of livestock, especially rams and cows.

Stranded motorists, however, criticised the government for permitting the traders to disrupt traffic flow, especially when the expressway is typically congested during festive periods.

“How can the government allow these people to use their businesses to affect others? This is not fair to the users of this road. This gridlock started since morning, and it is already getting worse,” a motor boy simply known as Kazeem told our correspondents.

A distraught passenger, Moses Uche, attributed the congestion to both the traders and the impatience of some road users who often disregarded traffic laws, especially on the expressway during rainy and festive periods.

Uche said, “It is not only caused by the ram sellers. This place has always been known for traffic, especially during the rainy season. If you pass this place during any downpour, you will see that the whole place will be messed up.”

Corroborating Uche’s assertion, the spokesperson for the Ogun Traffic Compliance and Enforcement Corps, Babatunde Akinbiyi, described the activities of the livestock traders as ”greedy and selfish.”

He noted that the agency was working hand-in-glove with other agencies, including the police to resolve the traffic issues on the corridor.

Akinbiyi said, “Because of the heavy flow of traffic, human and vehicular movement, that’s why you have hitches around those areas. The Otedola Bridge area is also contributing to the gridlock. And you know any time it rains around those areas, it is always waterlogged. This also slows down vehicular movement.

“About the ram sellers that you talked about, I don’t know why some people are so greedy and selfish. How can they be selling rams on the road? I’ve spoken with our operatives who are currently controlling traffic in the area; they are already working in collaboration with the officials of the police, the Federal Road Safety Corps, Vehicle Inspection Officers, and others to control the activities of traders in that area.

“When the festive periods are rearing, there are always issues, especially those bringing rams, cows, and goats inward Lagos compared to the outbound. The influx outward from Lagos will be mild as a result of the Kara turning. This festive period is an accumulation of the challenges that we have already had on the road since time immemorial. A synergy is currently being worked on to improve traffic.”

The spokesperson for the Ogun State sector commandant of the FRSC, Florence Okpe, noted to the newsmen that the officials of the corps had been dispatched to control the traffic situation on the expressway.

She said, “This is because of the turning at Kara and those people who are buying rams for the Sallah preparation. We are doing our job at the FRSC. The operational orders for the Sallah preparation are out now, and even my sector commandant will hold a press conference tomorrow (today) or Friday to address the motoring public on Sallah Day.

“We have an outpost at Ibafo. Our men have been deployed already to control the traffic in that area, so I believe they are on the ground.”

 

 

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