View Full Version : An Act Of Sabotaging The Nigerian Railway


friendsofthecity
July 15th, 2008, 08:04 PM
An Act Of Sabotaging The Nigerian Railway

Searching for information on the internet about the Nigerian railway revealed some facts which prove why the Nigerian railway system has remained moribond for years. The contract for the construction and upgrade of the system which was awarded to the Chinese China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation(ccecc) at 528.00 million USD as at December 9, 1995. Most surprising thing is that is the only contract available on their website regarding the railway project which the Nigerian government has spent billions of dollrs in getting it modernized.

Nigerian Railway 2006-3-29

Name of Contract: Construction/Rehabilitation and Purchase of Locomotives & Rolling Stocks for the Nigerian Railway System

Name of Employer: Nigerian Railway Corporation

Contract Value: 528.00 million USD

Main Works: Construction / Rehabilitation of existing Nigerian Railway System including surveying, designing, deduction of steep slope, elimination of sharp curve, supply of 620 locomotives and rolling stocks, renewal of signaling equipment, training of local technicians and skilled workers. Locomotives and rolling stocks are made in China. Constructional equipment, track materials, signaling equipment are made in Austria, Germany, France and China.

Date of Award: 9 December, 1995
http://www.ccecc.com.cn/english/pic/200632992149.jpg http://www.ccecc.com.cn/english/pic/20063299224.jpghttp://www.ccecc.com.cn/english/pic/200632992224.jpghttp://www.ccecc.com.cn/english/pic/200632992324.jpghttp://www.ccecc.com.cn/english/pic/20063299244.jpghttp://www.ccecc.com.cn/english/pic/200632992428.jpg


Contract Duration: 4 Years
link: http://www.ccecc.com.cn/english/2006-3/200632992500.htm

Railways and public expenditure

By Punch Editorial board
Published: Tuesday, 15 Jul 2008

Against the backdrop of the failure to provide for rail development in the 2008 budget, the Federal Government should come out with a clear agenda on how to revive the moribund transport mode. The Olusegun Obasanjo administration had conceived a 25-year rail vision to reduce excessive use of the roads. Part of the plan to actualise this vision was the award of a rail modernisation contract to a Chinese firm, China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation, at a cost of $8.3bn. But recent media reports indicated that this project was inflated by about $5.8bn.

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A Nigerian Railway Corporation

In spite of the huge amount of money sunk into rail projects, the system remains a far cry from what it should be. From over 11 million passengers that used the rail system in 1964, the number of passengers plunged to about one million in 2003. This mode of transport, which helped to carry three million tonnes of freight in 1960 has declined dismally in importance. It now carries less than 10,000 tonnes per annum. It is sad that the nation has failed to expand or even maintain the rail infrastructure inherited from the colonialists.

The prostrate state of the railways has impacted negatively on the economy. Due to constant use, the roads are always in a state of disrepair, as heavy-duty vehicles and trucks carrying different types of goods destroy them soon after repair. Indirectly, this shoots up transport fares and freight charges because there are no functional alternatives to road transportation in the country. The high transport cost translates into high prices of goods.

As with many sectors of the economy, the comatose nature of rail transportation is due mainly to corruption. Contracts were awarded and mobilisation fees paid, but some of the contractors failed to carry out the jobs. Testifying at a recent Senate public hearing on Transportation, the Auditor-General of the Federation, Robert Ejenavi, reportedly said that a total of N124.9bn was spent on rail projects from 1999 to 2008. He cited a particular contractor who was mobilised with $250m, but curiously, $175m was paid into his foreign account while the balance of $75m was paid into his Nigerian account.

Another contractor was paid $1.5m, but there was no record in the Ministry of Finance indicating that the money was disbursed. Even the Nigerian Railway Corporation was said to be unaware of the payment. Owing to the abysmal failure of huge public investments to salvage the sector, it has been suggested that the rail system is being deliberately sabotaged by powerful men in haulage business who have hundreds of tankers and trailers.

But the main problem is the poor integrity of public expenditure, which is often seen by public office holders and cronies as another opportunity to extract rents and patronage. The existence of the Railway Act of 1955 has ensured that rail business is run as a federal monopoly. This Act precludes private investment in the rail system. In 2000, a Canadian firm indicated interest in building the Lagos-Abuja rail route. The FG scuttled this genuine intention. Yet, experience has shown that government hardly runs businesses effectively.

As a first step towards resuscitating the rail sector, the National Assembly should repeal the Railway Act. In most advanced economies, monopolies have effectively been checked through liberalisation.

In the United Kingdom, for instance, private companies handle rail transportation on franchise basis. Any company that wins the franchise for any route takes full control of that route for a given period. Through private sector participation, a 365-kilometre high speed rail has been built across the straits in Taiwan. The new rail infrastructure enables express trains to travel from Taipei to Kaohsiung in about 80 minutes, as opposed to about five hours by conventional rail.

The surest and swiftest way to have an efficient rail system is to open up the sector to competition and private investments.

link: http://www.punchng.com/Articl.aspx?theartic=Art200807151295020

This is a shameful thing that great transport infrastruture like the railway system is been left to crumble by incessant corruption.

Carver02
July 17th, 2008, 11:50 AM
Abacha didn't do anything, so it's not surprising that there was no result from the 1995 contract. The OBJ deals sound like they weren't handled that well either.

They announced good plans to replace pretty much the whole system with new standard guage double tracks. It'll be great when it happens.

friendsofthecity
August 7th, 2008, 07:46 PM
SOUTH KOREA TO INVEST IN NIGERIA RAILWAY PROJECT


The South Korean government announced on Monday that it will invest in Nigeria's railway modernization in exchange for the African country's transfer of stakes in an operational oil field to Seoul.

The announcement came after South Korean Commerce, Industry and Energy Minister Chung Sye-kyun and Nigerian Oil Minister Edmund Daukoru signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) in Seoul on the project.

Under the MOU, South Korea will offer long-term, low interest commercial loans to Nigeria and let South Korean companies take part in the second phase of Nigeria's railway modernization program in exchange for stakes in an operational oil field in the African country.

According to South Korea's Yonhap News Agency, the railway project requires an estimated cost of US$10 billion and will be the largest single construction project ever undertaken by South Korean builders.

Nigeria plans to replace a 1,500-km-long railway, which links Port Harcourt on the Gulf of Guinea with Maldugun in Nigeria's northeastern region, with new standard gauge tracks.

Nigeria is moving to update its huge rail system by allocating US$35 billion in a four-phase project, Yonhap said.

The MOU is part of South Korea's ongoing efforts to secure overseas oil and gas fields by pledging to build up the power generation and industrial infrastructure of resource-rich countries, Yonhap said.

The South Korean government set a target to raise its self- sufficiency in energy from the current 4 percent to 18 percent by 2013.

The MOU was signed during a state visit by Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo from Monday to Tuesday in Seoul. Obasanjo held a summit with South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun early Monday.

(Xinhua News Agency November 7, 2006)


That was old news and yet to see the benefit out of the MOU signed in South Korea.