
Motorists will pay toll on the Second Niger Bridge in due course, the Federal Government said on Wednesday.
Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola (SAN) said the bridge, in the meantime, has been opened to ease movement during the Yuletide.
The minister said the road will remain open till January 1 for inward travelers, and for those on outward journey from January 2 to 15.
Thereafter, it will be shut again.
Fashola blamed the Monday sit-at-home by the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) for the delay in completing the project.
He said construction workers were unable to work on Mondays for nearly two years.
Fashola, who spoke on Channels, said: “Infrastructure is one of the instruments for economic growth and tackling multidimensional poverty.
“The purpose of the second Niger Bridge is to bring relief to Nigerians who traverse from east to west or west to east.
“Especially during the end of the year, we know that it is a logistics nightmare moving goods and services and people.
“The bridge itself is finished. The road linking it to the Obusi end on the Anambra side is finished, except for the interchange which is at different levels of completion. The road linking it to the Asaba side is the one that we could not finish.
“We know that it is a festive period; the ports are busy, sea and airports. The roads will also be busy.
As part of the ember month plan, we decided to open it up and provide a choice for people (to either use the old bridge or the new one). We expect that it will relieve the inconvenience at this time of the year.
“We did the same thing on Lagos-Ibadan expressway.
“There is still work to be done there, but we think that it can get better if we remove the construction barriers so that it is a proper thorough fair.
“We did the same thing in Abuja-Kano. On Abuja-Kano, which is 365 km, we have only five obstructions, and they are for safety.
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