Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola (SAN) has regretted the
loss of over 15 lives in Tuesday’s tanker explosion in Apapa area of the
state.
Fashola spoke to journalists after inspecting ongoing projects in Ikorodu on Thursday.
Describing the incident as devastating, Fashola noted that the era of moving PMS by road has gone.
He noted that Nigeria was one of the few oil producing countries
still transporting fuel with trucks through metropolitan cities,
berating the Federal Government for not living up to its responsibility
of making the rail transportation system work.
“Everyone must take his own share of the responsibility on this
issue. First, the federal government. There isn’t a rocket science about
restoring the old rail tracks. If the rail is working as they say, then
we should begin to use it to transport our petroleum products rather
than use the road. It will save the roads and fuel,” the governor said.
He said the incident coming just few months after the revelation of
mismanagement of funds in the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation
raises serious questions on how the federal government appropriated the
funds.
He said, “When one looks at the waste in NNPC. Now we were talking
about $45billion that was missing. They seem to be quite satisfied to
tell us that it was only $10 billion that was missing. This is a lot of
money. One dollar of public money is a lot of money. But later they told
us that they spent the money actually.
“Now serious questions must be asked by the National Assembly,
chartered accountants and Nigerians about who appropriated the money.
Was it spent during the period that the CBN governor said that they
didn’t account for the money or was it before? And if there was
appropriation for it, then we can now begin to seriously talk that were
they the right places to spend the money? Given that if we had spent $10
billion to try and use it to build rails for evacuation of fuel from
Apapa and Tin Can Island, maybe those people wouldn’t have died. They
are serious questions. First was that the priority? Were those the
things to spend them on assuming there was appropriation? They are
serious questions that we all must ask at this moment.”
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