Raise your hand if you want your child
to be keke rider!’ – Seun Kuti tackles Nigerians over okada ban - TheCable
Lifestyle https://lifestyle.thecable.ng/raise-your-hand-if-you-want-your-child-to-be-a-keke-rider-seun-kuti-tackles-nigerians-over-okada-ban/#.XjvAu4u4snw.whatsapp
Eric Ayoola: That's a ridiculous assertion. Even in
the UK, an affluent country, there are people who make a living by delivering
items, etc, using bikes and motorcycles. The ban is outrageous, anti-people and
unsustainable. Our politicians are loath to engage brain to solve problems just
brawn and the way out.
Gbolahan Gbadamosi: There is no reason to get angry with
the young man. Seun Kuti has posed a simple question: Is Okada and Keke riding
the sort of career people want for their children? Let them stand up and be
counted. Let them put their money where their mouth is.
The state commissioner for information
came out with statistics of deaths and permanent disability occasioned by Okada
riding. I was shocked. You couldn’t even make up those figures. It is irresponsible
of government to have waited this long anyway. In implementing the ban,
government decided to start with the elite part of Lagos. Only 15 out of 57
LDAs. These are the places where people are better off not where the very poor
lives. But we don’t want the change at all. We want government to have a
miracle overnight solution. Everyone start shouting that they are advocates of
the masses. The same masses that die and get maimed using these rubbish for
transport.
You quickly refer to the UK but you didn’t
say the bikes are used for transport in the UK. You said it is used for
deliveries. Who will worry if we only use it for deliveries in Nigeria?
Certainly not me. Apples and Oranges!
Many years ago government decided to get
rid of the shameful Molue. They were not even as dangerous as Okada but they
were shameful and dangerous in their own ways. This is the same noise our
people made that commuters will die and all poor people will burn walking.
Today there are no Molues in Lagos.
Change is hard. If there’s no pain,
there’s no gain. I have no doubt about the immediate inconvenience the ban will
cause. But we are a very resilient people, an Okada ban that you see as a
disaster has immediately been seen as an opportunity for many Lagosians. Many
small buses are springing up from nowhere. Many more will come. A new business
opportunity is here.
I will prioritise safety and dignity of
our people over and above the frivolities of public noise on social media
especially by people who are not affected. That in my mind is what government
is doing.
We talk about insecurity all the time
and in neighbourhoods all hands point to Okada as the main escape route.
Surulere people (in some part) welcome this only because of crime promoted by
Okada riders.
The unemployment caused to riders is the
other noise. Those bikes are immediately on the way to other states. Majority
have moved to the more than 40 LDA areas of Lagos where it is not banned. The
governor of Oyo State has announced he is considering such ban soon and that
people should not bring those Okada from Lagos to his state. Lagos is not the
first state to do this ban anyway - Enugu, Kano, Kaduna, Imo have all banned at
different times. Let me also predict that if Lagos is successful and security
improves and accident and hospital cost to government reduces many more states
would immediately follow.
Overall, with the ban in the most
“elite” part of Lagos government can learn what to do differently as they
ultimately roll out the plan throughout the state. That is what sensible
governments do worldwide. Do it step by step and learn from the mistake. This
would also gear government up to improve provisions of more public buses (BRT).
If you are looking for a people who want to eat their cake and have, look no
further because they are based in Nigeria. Governance in Nigeria is not a piece
of cake. Our educated elites who claim the monopoly of knowledge at all times
are real problems here.
Eric Ayoola: Whether the man or woman is in the UK
and making a living as a rider is using his or her bike for delivering items or
delivering people, the fact is that he or she is making a living from it. Turning
our noses up at what people do to make a living is a typical African malaise. In
the UK, and many parts of the developed world, there is pride in labour from
the street cleaner to the Prime Minister. And as per Okada it's the most
affordable means of transport for the masses. Banning them outright is
unconscionable.
Gbolahan Gbadamosi: If anyone decide tomorrow in your UK to
start using his motorcycle as a means of transportation in order to earn a
living from it as you call it that person will be arrested.
Ibukunolu Alao Babajide: To deliver items! Not to deliver people and expose them to
death and danger! Look at the other side
of the coin too! Too many needless deaths and injuries are caused by these
okada riders.
Gbolahan Gbadamosi: As a citizen and a stakeholder in Lagos
I personally look forward to a Lagos in 10 years’ time that is well organised
in terms of transportation and not one where Okada would be our pride and what
we want to show off to the world. If Cape Town, Johannesburg, NY, Madrid,
London and Lisbon can do it, Lagos can do it with careful planning. That is the
Nigeria I am looking forward to seeing in the future not a Nigeria proud of
Okada riding to move commuters around.
Everyone has a right to his own dreams,
ambition and aspirations. I aspire and dream that because I know it is
possible.
Eric Ayoola: My son and his sister and my wife
accompanied me on the recent trip to Nigeria.
And he asked, on his return, “Dad, why don’t we use motor bikes as means
of commercial transport in London as done in Nigeria?” And frankly, I couldn't think of any reason
why not. It will surprise you when such a phenomenon was to happen in the UK.
It might not be as an essential means of transport but maybe for thrill seekers.
The Lagos government can do better or study how countries with more motor bikes
than Nigeria handle theirs
Ibukunolu Alao Babajide: So, because there is pride in labour, government
should ignore safety and security? Can I
be selling cocaine door to door because of dignity in labour? This is how we
condone indiscipline until it becomes an untreatable problem. People occupy and
build stalls on public land and start selling and causing a nuisance. When they
are ejected people start shedding crocodile tears. Half of all the traffic in
Lagos is caused by people turning highways into stalls. Can we not obey simple
laws and instructions?
Ibukunolu Alao Babajide: Your simple answer should have been,
here people are disciplined and obey laws but in Nigeria they are not.
Gbolahan Gbadamosi: You mix things up a bit my sweet
brother. I will keep it at those countries I know above Nigeria on your list
that I have personally visited or did some work: Indonesia, Malaysia, and China
do NOT use motorcycles for transportation. They are all heavily populated
countries some significantly more than us.
The key word is not the heavy use of
motorcycles in the city as you say, it is using it as a means of transportation
for “mass movement” of people. One motorcycle will carry 2-3 people. Compare
that with a bus or a train. If it is about getting people to their
destinations, you need a big vehicle to do it effectively and efficiently.
In those countries above Nigeria on your
list the bicycle riders are mostly alone commuting to work or to a business and
they are sensible and want to get back to their families. Okada riders in Lagos,
if you have seen them and especially if you have been on it, are mostly
irresponsible and aggressive. Often, sometimes are desperate to break
somebody’s leg (including their own leg) just for fun. Many are on heavy doses
of tramadol, alomo, opa eyin, and burantashi. (If you are close to the people
you will know that stuff. Again, apples and oranges sir!
Eric Ayoola: So, regulate them. Dint take the easy
and non-cerebral yet anti-people way out.
Wow... so, a government cannot put in
place safe guards? We just don't want our politicians to think at all.
Ibukunolu Alao Babajide: The only safeguard is to ban them.
Okada is also a security issue. They are a risk and a menace!
Eric Ayoola: That doesn't address the question
though. We will all be here mouth agape if an entrepreneurial Nigerian Youth
starts Okada London. Gets it registered and away he/she goes. The policy
obviously will find favour amongst the well to do. Whilst the indigent people
who rely on the bikes both fir transport and means of likelihood will suffer.
Gbolahan Gbadamosi: This argument will not fly. It
disappears in the face of the evidence.
Ikoyi, Victoria Island, Lekki, Apapa, Ikeja,
Surulere. These are the areas where most well-to-do people live. These are the
areas Okada is presently banned. Rich people should be protesting. Why should
poor people be protesting on their behalf? Okada is still moving freely in
other areas.
If you already afford to live in these
places and you are adversely affected by the ban, then it is time to consider
moving to other areas so you can continue to use Okada, don’t you think so?
Eric Ayoola: Haba.... Rich people in those areas are
served by poor people who travel from afar . Not so? Whether banned in rich
areas or banned in poor areas, those who will suffer are the poor people. Simple!
Funsho Jacobs Adekanye: It's sincerely dangerous for safety and
security of Lagos to continue to keep Bike and Keke. I walked from Law School
to Amodu Ojikutu this morning on my way to the office and it feel cool. If you live or work in VI and appreciate the
essence of security you ll definitely applaud the restrictions. Two weeks ago
in the office we still debated the issue of strange riders of Okada in Lagos.
Most of the riders especially in VI, Ikoyi and Apapa are of no visible address
and they even refused registering the Bikes. No wonder it was so easy for them
to start returning where they came from since last Saturday.
Eric Ayoola: Again...the haves will applaud. It
cannot be too much for a government to regulate and to inspect. Not ALL okada
riders are foreigners and non-indigenes.
Not ALL okada riders are Boko Haram in disguise. They provide a vital
service which the government hasn't replaced.
Gbolahan Gbadamosi: We do not want a Nigeria where some
poor people are serving some rich people. We look forward to dignified labour. Nobody
want their generation to be servants. Let rich people serve themselves or make
their children useful. If they are really rich let them house the poor servant
so he/she doesn’t have to commute. All those locations with ban have bus-stops.
“Servants” will have to walk maximum of 30 minutes to get to their destination
from the bus-stop in any of those locations. I was born in Lagos and I think I
know the place well.
We look forward to a better Nigeria
where the rich is not exploiting the poor in the name of serving them. I sign
out of this one.
Funsho Jacobs Adekanye: Truly speaking Champion, Factory work
is work, Cobbler is work, carpentry is work, Road cleaning is work, Okada is
not work! It's a suicidal Enterprise, killing in the short or medium term.
Abayomi Fakorede: It would have had more meaning if there
was adequate public transport system. It doesn't add up in a country where the
public transport system is next to non-existent. A well-regulated operation
would have had more meaning than outright ban. Operators should be licensed
before they can operate. Okada licence will be issued by the local authorities
at a reasonable amount. This will generate some revenue for the local authorities.
The motor bikes cannot be modified in any way as it is presently where
operators remodify the seats to enable them carry more passengers. Overloading
should not be tolerated. They also modify the steering wheels so that they can
navigate between traffic. Safety helmet must be worn. These are health and
safety risks which should not be tolerated. Operators must provide verifiable
address and bear ID badge whilst on duty. Biometric identification should be
used.
Funsho Jacobs Adekanye: There is State Law stating all you
mentioned here that the riders are not obeying. I just told you here that in
Apapa & co, 95% of the Okada got no plate numbers. There are reports that
in an attempt by Apapa Iganmu LCDA to compel them to register they mobilised
and attacked and burned the LCDA Secretariat!!!
Abayomi Fakorede: The laws are there but there is no
enforcement. Same way as it is with all our laws. Those who burned down should
be identified and punished accordingly.
Eric Ayoola: Reads like a communist novel. Where
there are no servants and all are either all rich together or poor
together. It does not exist in real
life. Not even in communist countries.
And if the purpose of destroying the
livelihood of indigent people is to stop them from being poor, what has been
brought in by government to replace their means of livelihood. An anti-people
policy cannot be cloaked in any veneer of reasonableness. I am sorry.
Akintunde Adejumo: The opportunity cost should be
adequately analysed. Many families depend on the okada and keke for survival.
It is the elite that are scared of the presence of the riders that should
champion re-distribution of wealth which can open up the economy better.
Eric Ayoola: Abi o. And provide alternative means of
transport before banning the means of transport relied on by millions.
Gbolahan Gbadamosi: My Otunba, you left Lagos a long time
ago. You go back in limousines. Get in touch with your people and they will
tell you. Seriously, there are regulations in place but Nigerians are not
traceable. Okada riders refuse to register or be regulated. They refuse to
follow simple traffic laws. They refuse to wear helmets. They continue to
convey armed robbers if they are not robbing themselves. Majority of new
entrants into Okada riding are said to be foreigners from everywhere actually.
Lagosians say some don’t even speak English or pidgin. It is a serious security
challenge. The hospitals cannot cope with accidents arising from Okada riding.
This is daily. I am not making this up. The figures are publicly available and
shocking.
To come back to your most serious
assertion of an outright ban. This is simply not true. Majority of Lagosians do
not live in Ikoyi, VI, Ikeja, Apapa and Surulere. These people are actually in
the minority. These are the places where Okada is banned not the whole of
Lagos. That is not outright! That is a systematic implementation of sanity in
transportation system.
Unless otherwise, like Eric, you are fighting
on behalf of your own servants who commute from Oko-Oba to Ikoyi where Eric and
yourself lives. I’m running away before both of you catch me.
Eric Ayoola: Lol... See turn or event o. Champion GG
who cares not a jot for the thousands rendered jobless and the poor workers
left without means of transport now wants to accuse those asking that humanity
and compassion be brought into government policy of being elitist.? Wonders
will never cease.
Abayomi Fakorede: It takes us to the wider picture, which
is the general state of lawlessness. Okada operators are not the only ones who
do not obey laws, so why single them out for punishment. What about other road
users who flout traffic rules with reckless abandon? Nobody wants to do as they
are told in Nigeria. They just want to be left alone to continue to do their
nonsense. Laws are useless if they are not enforced.
Funsho Jacobs Adekanye: Probably you are not aware that Okada
is outrightly banned in Kano, Kaduna, Borno,Anambra, Imo, Enugu, Bauchi,
Katsina and so many others. The riders displaced in those places and their
collaborators from Mali, Chad and Niger Republic constitute the Lagos
Challenge. So, if their State Governments banned Okada and didn't provide alternative,
why must it become Lagos State’s responsibility? Or it's Lagos responsibility
to create Jobs for Mali, Chad and Niger guys crowding our space. Why didn't
they go to Accra or Nairobi, why Lagos?
Kweku Adedayo Tandoh: I’m not sure this gentleman is based in
Lagos. Sir, have you seen the okada riders? 90-95% of the ones in Lagos are
foreigners (non-Nigerians) and they are a menace. There have been so many
terrible and violent incidents that have been traced to them. Please we in
Lagos do not want them. Our lives are not safe at all with these people in
their large numbers.
(The above were the discussants on the
Champions For Nigeria (CFN) WhatsApp platform)
No comments:
Post a Comment