WATCH: Heavy Traffic In Lekki As Lagos Residents Flout Lockdown
10:03
Despite the lockdown in Lagos State to limit the spread of the
coronavirus pandemic, hundreds of motorists were on Monday stranded in a
gridlock on the Lekki-Epe Expressway.
Footage of the gridlock, which was trending online, showed hundreds of vehicles stuck in traffic.
“No
isolation anymore, no quarantine in Lagos State, from Jakande Estate to
Agungi, full hold up is going on right now,” the person, who recorded
the video, could be heard saying.
Some of the stranded motorists lamented having to spend hours for journeys that should have lasted minutes.
While
some complained that the gridlock was caused by security agents
enforcing the lockdown by scrutinising motorists plying the road, others
said not all those stuck in the gridlock were rendering essential
services and thus, were exempted from the lockdown.
A stranded
motorist, who is a health worker, said on condition of anonymity that
she had to abort her journey to a hospital in the Ikeja area of the
state after spending three hours in the gridlock, adding that residents
were not complying with the directive on the total lockdown of the
state.
The medical personnel stated, “I spent three hours
navigating through Igbo-Efon and Jakande roundabouts. I was on my way to
work and driving out of Lekki when I ran into the gridlock around 10am.
I was still in the traffic by 1pm and in that period, there was a heavy
downpour, so, I had to turn back at the Jakande roundabout.
“I
learnt that the gridlock was caused by security agents enforcing the
lockdown as they were stopping motorists and asking them where they were
going. However, some of the people on the road were essential service
providers. People are not complying with the lockdown at all.”
A Twitter user, Chiekezi Dozie, condemned the development and questioned the effectiveness of the lockdown.
“As
if we are not mad enough as it is already this is Lekki Ezpressway 1
hour ago on a supposed lockdown. We really are a selfish bunch of people
@Outsiderinside1 see ya people on lockdown. Please help me ask them
where they are going today.”
When contacted, the General Manager,
Lagos State Traffic Management Authority, Olajide Oduyoye, said, “There
will be gridlock, because the police are all over the place checking
that those who are supposed to be on the road are the ones that are
allowed to be on the road and once that happens, there will be gridlock.
“The
fact that there is a build-up of traffic doesn’t necessarily mean that
people are violating the lockdown. However, it doesn’t change the fact
that the number of vehicles on that road was a bit high, because I saw
the footage too.
“But the government also said that markets could
open between 10am and 2pm; the issue now is that a market is not at the
junction of every street, so the people who are selling in the markets
will need to be conveyed there and there is no purpose for the markets
if people who need to buy cannot get there.
“So, that could also
be a factor in terms of the increased number of vehicles on the road.
People in the Lekki-Ajah areas are affluent and rely on their cars, and
that was what, in my opinion, created what was witnessed on Monday
morning.”
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