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How Poorly Executed, Uncompleted NDDC Road Projects Affect Imo Residents

Nkedulu Eucharia, a resident of the area, said the road had been like that for about three years.

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Many roads in Imo State are littered with potholes and prone to flood due to lack of proper drainage system. Unfortunately, these roads include those whose contracts had been awarded and payments made.

It is on one of such roads that Fervent Chibuike, a commercial motorcycle rider earns his living.

“The roads cause accidents and damage our machines (motorcycles),” Chibuike told our correspondent as the duo prepares to journey from Bank Junction in Mbaise Local Government Area to Amachara in Ahiazu-Mbaise LGA.

As if to prove him right, the trip was aborted midway after the tyre of the young man’s motorcycle punctured.

The Umedo-Udoha and Ikeduru-Amimo Road that also connects Amachara, is a stretch of red earth, with high steeps and deep ditches that make vehicular movement almost impossible. In the middle of the road, there is a gaping crevice that disconnects the two communities.

Nkedulu Eucharia, a resident of the area, said the road had been like that for about three years.

“It has been long we have been suffering from this. The main road is demarcated into two. There is no way to pass through there,” she said. 

The alternative pathway where Chibuike’s tyre got punctured, was created by a selfless citizen, Nkedulu explained.

On the same road, signposts of projects contracted out by the Niger Delta Development Commission are erected about 200 metres apart. The commission was created to fill such developmental gaps in Imo and eight crude oil-producing states in the region. Across Imo State, similar NDDC projects have been contracted but many of them are either abandoned, poorly done, or not existing at all, as discovered by our correspondent.

According to one NDDC contracting document made available to the Premium Times Centre for Investigative Journalism, over the last four years, at least N5.1bn was budgeted for projects in Imo State by the commission. Out of this sum, N3.8bn was allocated for roads and bridges.

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“This road, as at December last year, was rehabilitated,” he said, pointing to the dilapidated Umuezeala Road.

“It cannot survive one year after. What kind of quality of job is that? There are records of roads that have lasted over 20 years,” he added.

The bad state of the road has diverted vehicular movement away from it, a development that has affected Emeka Nkolo’s business negatively. He sells vehicles spare parts on Umuezeala Road in Ehime Mbano LGA.

“Vehicles no longer moving out here because of that, we have been cut off,” the businessman continued.

“The only route now they are taking is the other way round. This is a link from Aba to Enugu to Okigwe. Even vehicles going to Lagos pass through here to link Orlu but because of the bad road, nobody is passing through here and business is not flourishing. I come out here from morning till night, nothing is moving the way we want,” he added.

It is doubtful that the Umuezeala Road had ever been tarred. The wide potholes on the road are covered with red mud. Motorcycle riders no longer pass the main road; rather they jostle for the walkways with pedestrians hopping by the sidewalk to find dry spots to put their legs.

Mr Ifeanyi, a commercial cab driver, said apart from trailers, smaller vehicles plying the road are easily damaged. He parked his cab with a mechanic along the road. He said the bad road damaged his vehicle’s exhaust.

“Each time we pass, most cars sink here. The road is not good. Only last week, cars and motorcycles sank here. It is very bad,” lamented another motorcycle rider.

‘Urgent remedy’

The line item for the repair of the Isinweke-Ikperejere Road reads ‘Instruction To Urgently Remedy Failed & Unmotorable Sections Of Ihitte/Uboma, Isinweke – Ikperejere – Umudibia – Abueke – Uhuhu Umuahia Road In Ihitte/Uboma Lga Of Imo State.’

But three years after the contract for the road was awarded, the road is still a nightmare to users. Although the Ihitte/Uboma Local Government Area secretariat is situated along the road, no attention has been given to it. Motorists say it is usually flooded during rainy seasons.

“The dry season is an opportunity for them to fix the road but nothing is being done,” one motorist said.

A roadside mechanic, who declined to give his name, said the bad road is the cause of many faulty vehicles he repairs every day.

“Drivers are really suffering on this road. There is usually heavy traffic on the road during the week. You can see the road and record because today is Sunday. If you had come here during the week, there will be traffic,” he said.

Overtaken by flood

The road that leads to Mgbele from Oguta Motel is tarred. NDDC awarded the projects to Atlas Cedar in 2016. However, an overflowing river has overtaken half of the road.

A boat is required to cross the road – now covered with water – to the other side. The young man, who operates the boat, charges N100 per head. Motorcycle riders ferry themselves and their motorbikes to connect the other side of the road.

Residents say it happens every year, usually between September and December.

A civil engineer and Head of Operations at BOLCON Associates Limited, Victor Ajibola, said the condition of the road is a fault from the contractor.

“The problem is with the design of the road,” Mr Ajibola said. “Before construction, surveys need to be conducted on the road, then it needs to be properly designed. The survey and design would indicate that that location is a depression and as such the road would need to be raised and a culvert would be designed to accommodate the river flow.

“The reason why this problem is recurrent is because there was no design and they are just constructing it. This would always lead to continuous failure of the road,” he added.

The engineer said the contractor would have to go back to the drawing board and come up with an appropriate design to salvage the road.

“The solution is to engage a consultant that would conduct a proper survey and undertake all necessary studies; this would, therefore, lead to a good road design.

“Now, the design that would be done would ensure that all water bodies along or across the road is taken into consideration and would be taken care of through provision of culverts or bridges

“But you cannot come up with a one-off solution for this without doing all necessary survey and designs. Most basic thing is to have a culvert to pass the stream flow underneath the road,” he said.

Drainages that lead nowhere

The Oguta Motel to Mgbele Road is not the only poorly constructed road, many of the completed roads tracked by our correspondent suffer one deficiency or the other. For some it was lack of drainage system, for others it was that the drainage was poorly done.

In Nwangele Local Government Area, many of the roads were constructed with uncompleted drainages. The tube-like holes were dug on both sides of the road but the paths lead water to nowhere.

Ajibola said the lack of water path on the road would lead to erosion.

“Based on the fact that there is no passage for the water to pass underneath the road, this would lead to the formation of gullies across the road,” he stated.

Indeed, some part of the tarred roads awarded to various contractors three years ago, have been washed away. There are also multiple potholes on the roads. A resident, Elizabeth Nwachukwu, whose home is by the Abba-Owerri-Nkworji Road (Lot 1), said workers were still on the road three months ago.

Ajibola said the solution is to construct a culvert that would collect water from the drain on one side of the road and pass it to an adjoining drain on the other side.

Other roads like Nkwo Umuowa Road in Orlu LGA that were slated for construction are yet to start years after.

According to a document seen by PTCIJ, the Nkwo Umuowa Road was slated as an ongoing project as at 2011 but there was no sign of an ongoing work when our correspondent visited in November of 2019.

Emmanuel Onyema, a resident, said contractors came on the site about three years ago but merely took the survey, did preliminary works and went back.

“Two to four years ago, they came up and said they were going to construct it under NDDC but after using the dredger to dredge it, they went and never came back again.

“The road is not passable at all. A pregnant woman cannot pass this road without feeling pains,” he said.

When asked about the several uncompleted roads in Imo State, NDDC spokesperson, Charlie Odili, said he had no comment.

 

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