How Nigeria Is Losing $19 billion A Year Because Of Bribes, Beatings, And Gridlock At Apapa Ports

Date: 13-11-2018 3:31 pm (5 years ago) | Author: kaygee
- at 13-11-2018 03:31 PM (5 years ago)
(m)

Nigeria is losing $19 billion a year because of bribes, beatings, and gridlock at Apapa ports and this incompetence is choking Africa’s biggest economy. The lines of aging blue, red and yellow trucks begin almost 6 miles (10 kilometers) from the gates of Nigeria’s main port of Apapa. Valentine, a 34-year-old driver, has been queuing outside the Lagos site for two weeks. He’s had to deal with policemen demanding bribes and fend off hoodlums known as area boys. “This is the worst I’ve seen it,” he said, changing tires in a grimy orange t-shirt. “Every year, it gets worse.” The lines of aging blue, red and yellow trucks begin almost 6 miles (10 kilometers) from the gates of Nigeria’s main port of Apapa. Valentine, a 34-year-old driver, has been queuing outside the Lagos site for two weeks. He’s had to deal with policemen demanding bribes and fend off hoodlums known as area boys. “This is the worst I’ve seen it,” he said, changing tires in a grimy orange t-shirt. “Every year, it gets worse.”
The congestion outside and inefficiency within Nigeria’s ports is choking the economy, which vies with South Africa as the continent’s biggest, and causes havoc for businesses that use them to import everything from cars to computers, food and machinery.
Nigeria loses $19 billion annually, or about 5 percent of gross domestic product, from the delays, traffic, illegal charges and insecurity that are increasingly prevalent at its ports, the Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industry said in a report this year.
In the World Bank’s Trading Across Borders survey, which measures the time and expense involved with importing and exporting goods, Nigeria ranks 182nd out of 190 countries, below Syria and Afghanistan.
Intimidated Drivers
We have to pay the area boys and the police also want money,” said David, a 40-year-old driver who’s been traveling to Apapa for almost 20 years. “We can pay 80,000 naira in bribes per trip. If you don’t, it can take weeks to get in. Sometimes they will beat you if you don’t give them money.” It’s taken a toll on the companies of Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest man. Dangote Cement Plc, Nigeria’s biggest listed firm, may cancel plans to build an export terminal at Apapa because of the congestion, Chief Executive Officer Joe Makoju said on a call with investors last month. Dangote Sugar Refinery Plc blamed a fall in third-quarter profit partly on the bottleneck there, which it said was leading to more smuggling of sugar through Nigeria’s land borders.
President Muhammadu Buhari, running for reelection in February, said in October the situation was “a major concern” and the government will urgently repair roads and build more railways to the ports. The 75-year-old leader says modernizing infrastructure is vital to diversify the OPEC member from oil and gas and revive an economy still struggling after the 2014 crash in crude prices.
Getting goods through Nigeria’s ports more smoothly and cheaply would also help to curb inflation, which has been above 10 percent for almost three years. Vice President Yemi Osinbajo visited Apapa in May 2017 and directed officials to start working around the clock and all agencies to locate their operations in one place to ease delays. It’s been to little avail. Many people prefer to use more efficient ports in Benin, Ghana and Togo, according to Mike Onulide, who runs a business exporting food including noodles and garri, a cassava-based staple popular in West Africa.
“You don’t face the same kinds of frustration there that you do in Nigeria,” he said, recalling how a fellow businessman still hasn’t received compensation after one of his containers was dropped into the sea early this year. “There’s been no improvement.”


Posted: at 13-11-2018 03:31 PM (5 years ago) | Gistmaniac
- Wazubia at 13-11-2018 04:43 PM (5 years ago)
(m)
APAPA WHARF IS THE WORST WHARF ON EARTH.
All THE CUSTOM OFFICER'S THERE ARE REALLY THIEVES.
Posted: at 13-11-2018 04:43 PM (5 years ago) | Gistmaniac
Reply
- o0OoStGHsbso0OoE1iL at 14-11-2018 06:06 AM (5 years ago)
(f)



π




Ene,


Touch Naijapals: Beating



Young wikipayediale® in our old early age beating is football reastle-real off term of using childhood in understanding
why Royal royal
(why slate slave
why ignorant teacher
why ggz thiefery
why follower persecuters-following)

i leave it at this.
Our port out wearing air and bead must retain decipline as of now beating an okada man for rough speed; Woman must remenber o cry for heir husbands for keep o romance





π


Posted: at 14-11-2018 06:06 AM (5 years ago) | Upcoming
Reply
- o0OoStGHsbso0OoE1iL at 14-11-2018 06:44 AM (5 years ago)
(f)
=


I personally visit a man living also in the area of ukorodu, writing me 8bills ago he expressed how expences surrounding (.....) is an adhock to his social substainance in Nigeria. As a man having Ghanian relations he barelly is affording thirteen (13) pages to write us these typing letters.... The main port covering more of human traficking aim are even whiling this 'Dey Lourkeyted Library |||useause®' voule traditionausem










Posted: at 14-11-2018 06:44 AM (5 years ago) | Upcoming
Reply
- o0OoStGHsbso0OoE1iL at 14-11-2018 06:50 AM (5 years ago)
(f)
Dey Lourkeyted Library |||useausem®


companies pardoning
tail-woman™
Posted: at 14-11-2018 06:50 AM (5 years ago) | Upcoming
Reply