Yuletide: Lagos Launches 24-Hour Traffic Control, Clears Illegal Structures

The Lagos State Government has declared a state-wide 24-hour traffic management operation and an extensive enforcement campaign to tackle gridlock and illegal structures ahead of the festive season.
The Lagos Blue line rail heads to Mile 2 Terminal during the inauguration of commercial operation to ease the traffic gridlock in Lagos on September 4, 2023. – Lagos Blue Line rail mass transit system has commence commercial operation to ease traffic congestion in Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial hub. (Photo by PIUS UTOMI EKPEI / AFP)

The Lagos State Government has declared a state-wide 24-hour traffic management operation and an extensive enforcement campaign to tackle gridlock and illegal structures ahead of the festive season.

Tagged “Operation Ember Months Stability,” the initiative was announced by the General Manager of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA), Olalekan Bakare-Oki, who said the exercise aims to ensure smooth vehicular movement, enhance public safety, and maintain environmental order across major corridors and nightlife zones in the state.

 

Lagos State Government Logo
Lagos State Government Logo

According to a statement released by LASTMA, personnel have been deployed to strategic routes, including Ikorodu Road, Apapa-Oshodi Expressway, Lekki-Epe Corridor, and Agege Motor Road to manage traffic round the clock, discourage road indiscipline, and promote safety awareness among motorists and commuters.

Bakare-Oki explained that the exercise is complemented by a multi-agency enforcement task force coordinated by the Special Adviser to the Governor on Transportation, Hon. Sola Giwa.

The task force includes agencies such as Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI), LAMATA, the Nigeria Police, LAWMA, and the Public Works Corporation.

He revealed that the joint team had already conducted a sweeping clearance operation at Apapa, Ijora, and Costain under-bridges, demolishing over 250 illegal shanties, removing derelict vehicles, and evacuating makeshift encampments obstructing roadways.

He said a dummy firearm and dangerous weapons were discovered during the operation, prompting the state’s renewed commitment to public safety.

To sustain order in the reclaimed areas, Bakare-Oki said commercial bus operators previously loading illegally have been relocated to designated parks and terminals, while LAMATA has been directed to integrate the cleared spaces into Lagos’ mass transit infrastructure.

The LASTMA boss also cited the agency’s swift intervention during recent heavy-duty truck crashes at Kara Bridge and Otedola Bridge, which claimed lives but were promptly managed to prevent further casualties and restore normal traffic flow.

Bakare-Oki reaffirmed the state’s readiness to ensure Lagos roads remain safe, orderly, and free-flowing during the festive season and beyond.

Total
0
Shares
Related Posts
Read More

HARPIC partners Federal, Lagos Governments to tackle open defecation, boost sanitation ahead of 2030 target

Residents in Lagos and Abuja may soon witness intensified efforts to curb open defecation as Harpic has joined forces with the Federal Government and the Lagos State Government to expand access to clean and safe toilets in line with Nigeria’s 2030 open-defecation-free target.
Read More

Roseline Ogunro’s report, Radio Nigeria Announcer on Duty the day General Murtala Mohammed was killed

I was the early morning duty continuity announcer on Friday 13 February 1976, exactly 45 years ago. My shift commenced at 5:30 am and would have finished at 11:30 am. Things were going on smoothly until about 7:20 am when a rather scruffy man with red eyes as though under the influence of alcohol or other substances, in army uniform and armed with a gun, walked into the continuity studio with another army officer and one of my colleagues, a producer in the Hausa Service of Voice of Nigeria. The scruffy officer was later to announce that he was Dimka. He said as they came in, ‘any resistance from these people, shoot’. He then demanded to use my microphone. I got up and he took over my seat and my microphone. He then announced that there had been a coup and that the Head of State, General Murtala Mohammed had been killed. He proceeded to make the infamous ‘dawn to dusk curfew’. He read from a scrap of paper. After the announcement he asked if I had military (martial music) to which I said no. The colleague who accompanied the officers left immediately and returned quite quickly with a compilation of martial music records possibly from the music library. He seemed to have pre-compiled them. I was commanded to play them after Dimka’s announcement. I was not overly scared at this point. I thought to myself, ’just do as you are told’ especially as the man was armed with a gun.