By Temitope Adebayo
The Presidential Standing Task Team (PSTT) has said that over 170 trucks were arrested in the 6 months for violation offenses on port access roads.
The coordinator of the PSTT, Moses Fadipe, who spoke to journalists in Lagos, said the team only arrests trucks violating traffic rules and disrupting the ease of doing business on the port corridors.
Fadipe explained that the allegation of extortion against the PSTT was baseless and libellous, because the team ensures high-level monitoring and supervision of all team members, noting that they are changed regularly at every point they operate.
He said about 90 per cent of trucks, which are arrested for violating ease of doing business on the port corridors, are not roadworthy and do not meet the standards of entering the ports.
According to him, at the point of arrest, the PSTT discovers that most of the trucks have expired documents of about 10 to 15 years nor do they have documents as well as expired licences from the drivers.
“Majority of the trucks we have apprehended so far do not have papers. Even when they have papers, they have expired for over 10 to 15 years. We start to wonder why they are on the road,” he said.
The coordinator said truckers have also turned the port corridors into mechanic workshops for the repair of their trucks, adding that some of them deliberately park and open their trucks’ bonnets pretending something is wrong just to stay there.
Giving details on the activities of the PSTT, Fadipe said once a truck is apprehended, the team looks for the driver and the agent if it is loaded to know where the cargo is heading.
“The drivers are asked to take the vehicles off the road which they refuse by leaving them there.
“PSTT tows the trucks to a nearby parking facility to allow for easy movement of other vehicles on the roads.
“The trucks are registered there under the PSTT, adding that the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), which is part of the team, engages the truck drivers and demands their documentation, including papers of the trucks and the driver’s license.”
He added that if the documents are not valid, the truckers and their drivers have to go and revalidate them at the licence office, which includes vehicle licence, insurance, roadworthiness and other documentation, which comes with fines.
Fadipe said after revalidation of the document, the PSTT looks at the truck papers and issues a form in which the trucker goes to the bank and pays into the Treasury Single Account (TSA).
He said the truckers are given a letter of undertaking to sign, stating they will never constitute a nuisance again.
He said it was also agreed that private facilities should be used as they charge between N3,000 to N10,000 as rent from Apapa to Mile 2 based on their location to the ports.
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