The Lagos State Government says about 240,000 vehicles plying roads
in Lagos, Southwest Nigeria are not roadworthy and calls on vehicles
owners to make effort to ensure that their vehicles are roadworthy.
Commissioner
for Transportation, Dr. Dayo Mobereola disclosed this today at a news
conference on the 2016 Bi-Annual Safety Week of the Lagos State Vehicle
Inspection Services, held at the State Government Secretariat.
The theme of this year’s Safety Week is “Unroadworthy (Rickety) Vehicles: Threat to Life on our Roads.”
He
said ensuring that vehicles were roadworthy had become a focal point of
the ministry’s oversight function on the sector, saying it is germane
because saving of one life was the single most important responsibility
of any government.
The commissioner said statistics had shown that
Africa had only two percent of world’s vehicle, but that in contrast,
16 percent of global vehicular deaths were traceable to Africa, adding
that in that same study, Nigeria and South Africa had the highest
fatality rates of 33.7 and 31.9 percent per 100,000 population yearly.
“Our
efforts at ensuring security include rehabilitating the roads,
improving drivers’ competence, insisting through monitoring the state of
vehicles and promoting attitudinal changes.
“Of the 45,037
vehicles apprehended last year, 8,012, about 20 percent were not
roadworthy. This extended further means that about 240,000 of the 1.2
million are not roadworthy. It is in this wise that we say safety is not
just a government thing, rather, it is for all citizens.
“When
you maintain a vehicle you are guaranteeing a life. There are no
economic arguments for allowing rickety vehicles just simply because we
cannot place a premium or value on any life. The consequences outstrip
the gains,” he said.
According to him, there were several health
challenges created by the emissions from the rickety vehicles, as they
were all respiratory in nature which could affect the lungs, adding that
long hour of delay on the road also affected health.
The commissioner said the atmosphere is heating up and that carbon emission from vehicles contributed greatly to this.
“To
address these challenges, government is determined to operate and
regulate transportation to ensure safety. We have promoted new
initiatives to ensure a public transportation system that will encourage
people to leave their vehicles at home and use public transport,” he
said.
However, Mobereola disclosed that the Safety Week would hold
between 2 and 8 May, 2016, saying that during this period, Vehicle
Inspection Officers, VIO, would engage motorists at motor parks,
companies with large pool of vehicles, schools and religious houses
alike.
“Our focus will be to bring people to the realisation that
there is a need to maintain their vehicles. It is not only for
themselves but for all other road users. It is then and only then that
we can say we are ready for business. It is pertinent to say that for
sanity to prevail on our roads, everyone of us must consider ourselves
as stakeholders,” he added.
240,000 Vehicles In Lagos Not Roadworthy-LASG
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