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Fashola Blames IPOB’s Sit-At-Home For Delay In Second Niger Bridge Completion  

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The Minister of Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola has blamed activities of the Indigenous People Of Biafra (IPOB), especially the sit-at-home, for the delay in completion of the Second Niger Bridge project. 

Fashola said this on Wednesday when he appeared on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily.

He said, “These dates keep shifting and people must remember that on the eastern side, our contractors have not been able to work on Mondays for almost two years and that has affected the completion date.”

Fashola said the project is lagging 52 days, even though the construction workers work on Saturdays.

The minister further asserted that certain other challenges liken relocating transmission lines connecting the East to the West across the Niger River, contributed to days lost and added to the snag that affected the early completion of the bridge within the time earlier stipulated.

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Speaking on finishing the last 4km stretch of the road in four months, Mr Fashola said the construction is taking place in a marshland and as such, there is great need for dredging and sand filling, process which he says cannot be rushed.

He emphasized that the reason the ministry and its contractors have made great progress on the road so far, is because they have employed the use of Prefabricated Vertical Drains which accelerate settlement and drainage and as such, workers can start building quicker than would ordinarily have been expected.

The minister however promised that the new target date to deliver a perfectly completed Second-Niger Bridge will be April/May 2023, adding that inevitably the bridge will be tolled to ensure that it is maintained to serve Nigerians for many years.

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