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Labrish
Nyuuz
Apapa bridge groans under truckload of trouble
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[QUOTE="Munyaradzi Mafaro, post: 81341, member: 636"] Apapa Bridge is about to go out and take Nigeria's economy with it. As over twenty ships loaded with vital goods like petrol, diesel, wheat, and fertilizer head for the Lagos ports of Apapa and Tin-Can Island, the crumbling infrastructure meant to handle that cargo is at a breaking point. A top aide to Lagos Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, Adekoya Hassan, issued a stark public warning that the bridge and its access roads, the only exit route for port traffic, risk total collapse from the strain of constant heavy trucks. The situation is so bad that trucking representatives, like Chairman Saheed Mahmoud, report frequent accidents and vehicle damage just trying to navigate the area. The government official directly called on the federal Ministry of Works to treat this as a top priority, arguing that fixing the surface is pointless without addressing the structural threat underneath. He stressed that a failure would cripple port operations entirely, given Apapa's role as a primary national economic gateway. This warning comes despite ongoing construction efforts and a current lineup of about twenty other ships already docked and unloading items, including general cargo, sugar, and aviation fuel. Stakeholders agree that without immediate and serious repairs, the impending surge in cargo traffic will lead to worse congestion, more accidents, and erase any recent efficiency improvements at the ports. The decaying roads are already a daily hazard for drivers, undermining the logistics of moving essential commodities into the country. [/QUOTE]
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Labrish
Nyuuz
Apapa bridge groans under truckload of trouble
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