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Embarrassing Effects Of Multiple Roadblocks

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It appears that Nigeria has returned to the embarrassing experience of yester years, as illegal and multiple road blocks mounted by men of the Nigerian Police Force (NPF) tend to be thriving again.

The practice tends to flourish in spite of measures put up to checkmate it across the country, as the number of road blocks keeps increasing by the day, and officers muster more courage to continue on such activities with the major motive of extortion of motorists.

As part of efforts to control the multiple extortionist road blocks some past police bosses had ordered policemen on stop-and-search duty to refrain from the routine vehicle particular check so as to ward off some of the negative imprints of such activity, but this order tends to be impotent enough to reverse the ugly trend, as the systemic, illegal and lucrative trade still flourishes.

A recent journey to Calabar has revealed that there were at least 36 road blocks/check points from Port Harcourt to Calabar.

Former Minister of Integration and Cooperation in Africa, Dr. Bimbola Ogunkelu while relating his experience with respect to road blocks/checkpoints said “Sometime ago, I travelled from Togo to Nigeria through Benin Republic. From Seme border to Badagry, I noticed about 28 road blocks. .. it is like every 260 metres there is a road block especially in the evenings.”

From all indications, if the essence of the road blocks had been simply to tighten security, indeed their proliferation probably would not have attracted much reactions, but instead it has been established, even at the full glare of commuters that policemen at the checkpoints/road blocks are just on extortion mission, instead for the purpose of security.

Most of the police men at the so-called check points dent the image of the police force through petty corruption, indiscipline, brutality and oppression among others in the name of checking particulars.

While they point the gun at motorists with right hand, the left hand is used in collecting bribe, even a ridiculous sum of N50 from commercial drivers. Some of them that are heartless will go extra mile to shoot, and there had been reports of drivers that lost their lives through this.

In Port Harcourt and its environs, this phenomenon has become very much pronounced virtually in every road on Port Harcourt especially in the evening hours, and reports have revealed that security operatives on the East-West Road are the worst offenders.

The increasing number of vehicles in Port Harcourt, coupled with  number of roads under construction and the attendant pot-holes have added to the bad traffic situation which is usually experienced when these action/extortionist Police men mount road blocks/check points.

The resultant effect of this is that a driver plying certain areas within the Port Harcourt axis will have to set aside at least N800 for police checkpoints/ road blocks, while those plying outside the city like Calabar will set aside at least N2,000 for settlement of Police.

Not minding the monetary aspect of the thing, but the most disturbing aspect is the untold hardship that commuters face especially in the evening hours while returning from work, as the result of traffic jam alias “hold up” keep people trapped on the way home for several hours.

His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Chibuike Amaechi had a feel of this ugly trend when on a Friday evening in the first quarter of 2010, while passing through the Choba/Rumuokoro route, very close to the “Obiri Ikwerre” met a “hold up” and the cause of this was due to Police activities at the check point.

The scenario motivated the action police men and other security operatives on the governors convey to manhandle these police men at check point, and dismantled all that they mounted, while some were taken away, at the glare of road users.

For about two weeks following, there was no operation of road block/check point at that point, and motorists had free movement within that area throughout that period.

Indeed several orders had been issued concerning check points/road block but these have been flouted continually.

Although junior police officers might be dismissed from service, and have been dismissed when caught extorting money, but it is yet to be mentioned of senior officers, especially Divisional Police Officers (DPO) among others whose beats or area of operations are known for such illegality.

It is alleged that returns are rendered to such senior officers.

It is my belief that much has not been done yet by the right authorities. It is the right time Mr. President, the National Assembly and the Police Service Commission brase up to the challenge of scrutinising and sanitise the corruption element that has brought the Nigerian Police to the ridicule.

Though the challenge is enormous, it must be emphasised that attitude of Police Force with respect to corruption reveals the level of corruption in Nigeria.

Much has not been done yet to properly enforce order in the police. The public and motorists alike have cried aloud. Unless these senior officers are deait with, there might not be an end to extortion and other road block irregularities. That National embarrassment must stop.

 

Corlins Walter

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Transport

Automated Points Concession : FAAN Workers Gave 72hrs To Revise Decisions In PH

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The trapatriate Unions conprising the National Union of Air Transport Employees (NUATE), and the Air Transport Service Senior Staff Association of Nigeria, (ATSSSAN),  has given 72 hours Ultimatum to Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria FAAN, Omagwa Airport, Portharcourt to revise its recent decision on the concession of Tollgates and Parks to private hands.
The chairman of the Trapatriate Union, Comrade Felix Ohwoefe gave the Ultimatum yesterday immediately after the joint Unions meeting held at the Airport office of the union, Omagwa, Portharcourt.
Comrade Ohwoefe who double as the chairman of the National Union of NUATE said the two Unions have agreed to take drastic actions if the Authority of the Airport declined to step down it’s decision of concessioning the major revenue points to private hands.
According to the Union chairman, the  two union was not aware of the  concession plans, and that there were no due process to the procedures.
Comrade Ohwoefe said any attempt for the Airport Management to decline it’s demands towards the concession will result to barricading all entrance and access points of the Airport.
Expressing the  the challenges associated to the concession, the Union Chairman said the gesture might resulted to massive sack of workers in the Airport.
The chairman also expressed foul play on the part of either individuals or government in the terms and conditions so given to the concessionaires, demanding the reasons of contracting the automated points to private hands for only 14 millions, when the FAAN is presently generating over 28 million naira monthly, even when the tariff was not  reviewed upwards.
He describes the process to the procedures as fraud with intention to increase unemployment in the state.
“We are not against the concession of the Automated points, but due process must be followed. If government is concessioning the place, we are asking what will happen to our workers in the existing units.
“Secondly, if the concessionaires is taken over, they must pay higher than what the FAAN is generating presently, we are generating to the Management over 28 Millions monthly, but we had that the private company is required to pay only 14 Millions monthly, which is far below 5 percents of what we are generating presently, even when the tariff is increased, which means there is a foul play.
“The process is fraud either on the part of individual in the Government, or Government itself.
” The unions is saying no to the Concession until we come to a terms of understanding ourselves., we are afraid of loosing workers, we don’t want to loose any workers if due process is not followed in this hard of economy,  we even demanding for employment of more workers in FAAN.” Comrade Ohwoefe said.
The Union used the opportunity to called on the minister of aviation, and the President of the Country, Bola Tinubu to intervene.
When contacting the Management of the Airport Authority through the head of Corporate Affairs, Dr Ngozi V. Onyeanwuna-Nwosu,  she said the management has not given her the approval to say something.
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Transport

FAAN Announces Pick-Up Points for Go-Cashless Cards

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The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has announced designated pick-up points for individuals wishing to obtain their Go-Cashless cards ahead of the March 1, 2026 deadline.
This was announced in a statement signed by the Director Public Affairs and Consumer protection, Henry Agbebire  and made available to the Tide last Friday in Portharcourt.
According to the statement,  Go-Cashless cards is at all  FAAN commercial offices and access gates of Airports in the country .
The release further stated that cards will also be available at designated branches of Fidelity Bank Plc from March 16, 2026.
FAAN in the statement said the cashless policy followed the Federal Government directive mandating all Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to transition to a cashless system to enhance transparency and reduce revenue leakages as well improve transaction traceability in the Aviation sector.
FAAN  reiterated its commitment to full compliance with the directive, appealing to the public for their understanding and cooperation during the transition period.
FAAN also inform that the Go-Cashless cards can still be obtained at the designated points after the March 1, deadline.
The Authority assures airport users that the initiative will promote faster, safer, and more convenient transactions across its airports nationwide.
By: Enoch Epelle
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Transport

Nigeria Rates 7th For Visa Application To France —–Schengen Visa

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Nigeria was the 7th country in 2024, which filed the most schenghen visa to France, with a total of 111,201 of schenghen visa applications made in 2025, out of which 55,833, about 50.2 percent submitted to France
Although 2025 data is unavailable, these figures from Schengen Visa Info implies that France is not merely a preferred destination, but has been a dominant access point for Nigerian short-stay travel into Europe.
France itself has received more than three million Schengen visa applications, making it the most sought-after Schengen destination globally and a leading gateway for long-haul and third-country travellers. It was the top destination for applicants from 51 countries that same year, including many without visa-exemption arrangements with the Schengen Zone, and the sole destination for applicants from seven countries.
Alison Reed, a senior analyst at the European Migration Observatory said, “France’s administrative reach shapes applicant strategy, but it also concentrates risk. If processing times lengthen or documentation standards tighten in Paris, the effects ripple quickly back to capitals such as Abuja.”
The figures underline that this pattern is not unique to Nigeria. In neighbouring West and Central African states such as Gabon, Benin, Togo and Madagascar, more than 90 per cent of Schengen visas were sought via French authorities in 2024, with Chad, Djibouti, the Central African Republic and Comoros submitting applications exclusively to France.
“France acts as the central enumeration point for many African and Asian applicants,” said Manish Khandelwal, founder of Travelobiz.com, which reported the consolidated statistics. “Historical ties, language networks and established diaspora communities all play into that concentration. But volume inevitably invites scrutiny, and that affects refusal rates and processing rigour.”
That scrutiny is visible in the rejection statistics. Of the more than three million French applications in 2024, approximately 481,139 were denied, a rejection rate of about 15.7 per cent. While this rate is lower than in some smaller Schengen states, the sheer volume of applications means France contributes significantly to the total number of refusals within the zone.
For Nigerian applicants and policymakers, one implication is the need to broaden engagement with other Schengen consular hubs. “Over-reliance on a single consulate creates what one might call administrative bottleneck effects,” said Jean-Luc Martin, a professor and expert in European integration and mobility law at Leiden University. “If applicants from Nigeria default to France without exploring legitimate alternatives in countries like Spain, Germany or the Netherlands, they expose themselves to systemic risk
Martin added that the broader context of Schengen visa policy is evolving, with the European Commission’s preparing roll-out of the European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS) aimed at harmonising pre-travel screening across member states.
For Nigerians seeking leisure, business or educational travel to Europe, these trends suggest that strategic planning and consular diversification could become as important as the completeness of documentation and financial proof. Governments and travel consultancies in Abuja, Lagos and beyond are already advising clients to explore alternative consular pathways and to prepare for more rigorous screening criteria across all Schengen states
By: Enoch Epelle
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