Maritime
Engineer Seeks Wrecks Law Review
A marine engineer, Mr Olu Akinsoji, last Wednesday urged the Federal Government to facilitate the review of wrecks law as contained in the Merchant Shipping Act, 2007.
Akinsoji, a former Government Inspector of Ships (GIS), made the plea in an interview with newsmen in Lagos.
He said that the review became imperative in line with the new structure of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) charged with safety matters in Nigerian waters.
According to him, for orderliness and sanity, a ship owner should not be encouraged to abandon a ship after its useful life in such a way that it becomes a wreck.
He said that government should go back to the interim report submitted in 2010 by a Ministerial Technical Committee on Wrecks and consult the professionals.
Akinsoji said that the committee’s recommendations were not followed in terms of removal of wrecks.
He said the committee headed by him had recommended detailed identification of wrecks.
Akinsoji said that wrecks were being removed without detailed identification of those below the water level and those above and not marked for easy visibility.
The marine engineer said that the committee’s recommendations had made provisions for salvage and suggested a safe haven for distressed ships.
Akinsoji said the committee also recommended that there should be identification of appropriate places for piling up wrecks.
“There was also a suggestion on the implementation of a plan for wrecks prevention in Nigerian waters,” the former Nigeria’s Alternate Permanent Representative at the International Maritime Organisation (IMO) said.
He advised the government to go back to the drawing board and have a full identification of wrecks.
“There should be identification of those that are serious and dangerous wrecks in the way of navigation, particularly those not marked,’’ Akinsoji said.
He said there were wrecks which were potentially, either dangerous to navigation, decayed or had become hazardous, toxic and could be dangerous to the villages around the channels.
Akinsoji said that there were also some wrecks that should removed because they were either not pleasant to the environment or could serve as hide-outs to miscreants.
“The wrecks law is supposed to deal with such matters,” he said, adding, “we have wreck superintendent according to the law as well as receiver of wrecks’’.
It would be recalled that the Minister of Transport, Mr Idris Umar had on Tuesday said at a news conference in Abuja that NIMASA would remove 52 wrecks.
NPA said it had removed 24 critical wrecks in Lagos channels, but the Lagos State Government still complained about 32 others abandoned in Lagos channels.
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