In major cities and towns across the
country, villages strategically located along highways, there are up to more
than 3000 motor parks and joints in which travellers eat, drink and smoke
without mandatory closing time, from morning through the night till day break.
Licensing authorities at any level
of government are not in place to regulate and control the establishment and
activities of these kiosks, stores, drinking palours, joints, restaurants, open
spaces with tables and chairs mounted to sell alcohol- all within a few blocks
in some cases, around the neighbourhood or vicinity.
In the Lagos metropolis for example,
these motor parks for both intra and inter-state travelling can be found at
Ojota, Maza-Maza, Mile 2, Mile 12, Jibowu, Ojuelegba, Oshodi, Iyana-Iba,
Iyana-Ipaja, Agege, Oworo, Sango-Otta, Abule-Egba and Ikotun.
Others are at Lekki, Obalende, CMS,
Owode, Ikorodu, Epe, Volks, Ajah and other places with high concentration of
people across Nigeria.
At most of these motor-parks and
major bus stops, operators of the drinking spots are usually women and young
girls. All sorts of alcoholic drinks are sold. From soft drinks to beer, stout,
wines, brandy, gordon gin, chelsea, Bertola, illicit gin locally known as
"ogogoro" in various components.
Cigarettes of different brands
including Indian hemp (marijuana), cocaine, heroin are also not left out.
Majority of the customers are bus and taxi drivers, tricycle operators,
conductors, motor-cyle riders and Agberos when they want to cool down after
running up and down extorting money from private commercial transporters.
In addition, there are numerous
travellers, day and night, boarding buses to different destinations in the
East, West, South and North, and even to neigbbouring countries in the sub-West
African region.
Some people preferred night travels
in spite of the danger involved as armed robbers could disguise as genuine
passengers only to pull out guns while on the journey. Armed robbers may operate
on the highway, shooting and dispossessing passengers of their goods, luggage
and money.
Before the journey commenced,
travellers often waited for the night buses to load which could depart between
10pm and 12 midnight. They will relax at these joints to drink and eat before
departure time.
Some of these inter-state bus
drivers often consumed excessive liquor before hitting the road on a trip that
could last for five, eight, twelve hours and above.
According to a traveller at
Maza-Maza park going to Abuja, a lot of accidents are caused by reckless druken
drivers. "There are no government guidelines on alcohol consumption
especially for commercial drivers in this country. The Police should crack down
on the patrons and the bars around motor parks who sell alcohol
indiscriminately.
"We don't have restrictive time
for sale of drinks and it's particularly wrong for drivers to be under the
influence of alcohol while driving. By this, they are putting the lives of
passengers in grave danger."
Reports have showed that thousands
of Nigerians die annually on road accidents due to reckless driving. Moreover
the government itself seems to lack a coherent alcohol policy.
Investigation by Saturday Vanguard
showed that many people are against unlimited sale and use of alcohol by
commercial transport operators, preferring a ban outright of alcohol sale in
motor parks. The government has not found a way out of this to address the
growing concern from the public on this issue. "We are building a big
problem ahead if we don't really find a workable solution to alcohol-related
road accidents in our country", said Mr. Kennedy Tosin, a textile dealer,
a frequent traveller.
"A minority of dealers in
alcoholic drinks at motor parks are responsible for the carnage on our
highways. A staggered closing hours for sale of drinks to commercial drivers
will reduce the number of accidents on the roads. Varied hours can help and
consumption pegged at tolerable limit," he suggested.
According to Tosin, "if you
allow people to drink more, they will drink more and that could lead to more
antisocial behaviour, crime and more abuse of alcohol."
He added: "A lot of people
share this view. In a typical Friday night around motor parks thousands of
people roll up to over 300 restaurants, bars, beer palours, disco clubs,
licensed and unlicensed to sell alcohol. They serve drinks, chicken and fried
meat from 5pm to as late as 5a.m. in some cases."
It has been discovered that at
times, violent crimes and kidnapping are hatched from these spots. Prostitution
also flourished as women of easy virtue stayed around looking for customers who
will take them home.
No wonder Police often raided such
places in search of criminals who hang around these "dark spots".
Some people, after spending time at
the motor parks, proceed to night clubs in quest of more fun. It's like having
good time around the clock. Those without permanent places of abode, could move
into nearby places with facilities for toilet and bathing to clean up and start
another day afresh.
Some travellers are however
compelled to stay very late at the motor parks which have also become transit
zones for those who arrived a city late in the night without immediate
connecting transportation to their eventual destination.
Truck and trailer drivers conveying
haulage goods from the west to the north and East could stop at Ore, Oluku
junction, Sagamu, Ijebu-Ode to rest and re-fuel. In the course of the long
journey, they make use of the entertainment facilities in the motor parks to
relax, eat, drink and socialise within the environment.
So these motor parks provide 'safe
haven" for genuine travellers, "shelter" for travellers in
transit, drinks and food for many, and hide outs for the criminally minded.
Therefore, the good and the bad, often availed themselves with what the motor
parks can offer.
In the first half of 2013, about
1,397 persons were killed in road accidents in different parts of Nigeria.
Federal Road Safety Commission, FRSC Corps Marshal Osita Chidoka who disclosed
this recently said that the frequency of these accidents were due to
"non-compliance with traffic laws, especially overspeeding by
motorists", adding, "the current situation calls for urgent steps to
deal with the menace of road traffic crashes."
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