Road
travel in the South has rarely been an epic joyride, but it just got worse.
Multiple checkpoints by various security agencies and touts alike – sometimes
at 500-metre intervals – suggest a no-thoroughfare to the Eastern part of the
country. While the need for security presence is understood by all, most
harrowing is the attendant bedlam that serves more extortion and harassment
purposes than the protection of lives and property, Bertram
Nwannekanma (Lagos), Lawrence Njoku (Enugu), Charles
Ogugbuaja and Collins Osuji (Owerri) report.
The
distance from Lagos to Aba, in Abia State, is 464 kilometres, and normally
completed in six to eight hours. While the road infrastructure has improved, to
anticipate a better sail for motorists, the traffic has become more chaotic –
with a new travel time of 12 to 16 hours!
The
Southern corridors are not new to security checkpoints, but t hey have more
than doubled lately. A recent count by The Guardian at the last
festive season showed over 120 stops almost in quick succession on the
464-kilometre trip.
Between
Lagos and Ore are about 40 checkpoints demarcated with wooden flatbeds, logs,
sandbags, and fire cans. Ore to Benin has 46 of them. Benin to Onitsha, 25. Travelers
inbound from Owerri, Enugu, Abakaliki, Asaba, and Rivers have scores of
checkpoints to add to the list.
At
an average of five-minute delay at each stop – if both ‘gatekeepers’ and driver
are in the mood to play ball – the 120 checkpoints imply 10 hours of extra
travel time per trip.
At
intervals are unpleasant experiences for both the drivers, who had to part with
‘toll fares’, and commuters, who had to endure the agony of the transaction.
‘Military’
zone, keep off!
Although the unpleasant experiences start from the
Sagamu-Ore-Benin expressway to Southeastern states, it is, however, more
traumatic within the East. More harrowing is Enugu to Port Harcourt; Enugu to
Onitsha in Anambra State, Owerri in Imo State and Abakaliki in Ebonyi State.
On
January 1, 2024, Chiamaka, who was travelling to her village for the yuletide,
had an unusual experience. The mother of one boarded a bus from Owerri-Akwakuma
to Nwaorieubi in Mbaitoli Local Council of Imo State. Just 15 minutes into the
journey, they came face to face with security men at a checkpoint. The officers
halted their movement temporarily until their driver parted with N100 to resume
the journey.
A
few minutes later, they ran into traffic. Wondering whether there was an
accident ahead, they continued slowly until they discovered another checkpoint
where security officers, who had barricaded both sides of the road, left about
six feet of space for a long line of vehicles to meander after the drivers must
have parted with some Naira notes.
They
met five security checkpoints of the Army, police, and other security outfits
during the journey of about two kilometres. She noted that the driver was
forced to part with N100 or more at every checkpoint.
Chiamaka
lamented that her experience at the Army checkpoint in Ama-well, before
Nwaorieubi police station, was traumatic.
“When
we got to the army checkpoint, we were asked to alight from the bus. We did and
they ordered us to trek a reasonable distance until we left the army
checkpoint. The weather was inclement as we walked in the scorching sun.
“Ahead
were a lot of buses in the queue, waiting for their passengers to board for the
continuation of their journey. It took us a few minutes to locate our bus and
we moved on.
“It
was demeaning. I thought by now, all these things would have stopped in the
Southeast, where commuters are forced to alight from their vehicles and cross
the checkpoint on legs with hands raised, but here we are again. This is
sad. Why do passengers have to come down and trek to be profiled? Are we
all criminals?” she queried.
Chiamaka’s
experience represents what many travellers pass through at the numerous
checkpoints that dot the Southeast roads cordoned by battle-ready security
officials – with one hand on the trigger and the other held out to receive
money from hapless motorists.
Some
popular checkpoints are also seen along Owerri-Aba expressway,
Onitsha-Owerri expressway, and Aba-Enugu expressway as well as MDS,
Amaraku/Anara/Okigwe Road in Imo State.
They
abound at entrances of the new Kenyatta market; the old toll gate; the
University of Nigeria Teachings Hospital (UNTH) in Ituku; Isuawa; Amolli
junction; Nenwe; Mgboho, Awgu junction; Enugu-Abia boundary; Isiagu; Ihube;
Lokpanta; Okigwe junction; Mkpa; and Ohia.
Others
are Eke Obinagu junction, Owo, Nkalagu, Enugu-Ebonyi border, Onueke, Ugwu
Onyeama, Ninth Mile, Ezeagu, Oji River junction, Ugwuoba, Enugu-Awka boundary,
Awkuzu, Oyi junction, Onuimo, among numerous others.
At
some of these checkpoints, there are neither hurries nor urgency. You are told
to either turn off the engine or keep it running. Either way, you obey without
complaint. If the officers see your face puckered or you grumble, you will be
subjected to abuse, harassment, intimidation and/or longer delays.
A
commuter, Ogechi, said: “We are not happy with soldiers’ manner of checking
passengers here at Aba Road/Sam Mbakwe International Cargo Airport, Owerri. Why
should a traveler be made to come down from his or her vehicle and be made to
walk from one point of a checkpoint to the other point and re-enter the
vehicle? This is inhuman! Let the military authorities stop this.
“I
am also not happy that security operatives constantly ask commercial drivers to
pay as much as N200 at checkpoints. There are several checkpoints on Aba Road
operating openly. Can’t the authorities stop this mess? Our reputation is
ruined by these unending acts.”
Another
resident, Jonah Obi, said he was embittered by the directive by the soldiers to
commuters to alight from vehicles and walk to another point of a checkpoint.
He
said: “Not everybody is a criminal. Security operatives manning these
checkpoints should be monitored and disciplined. This (excess) is too much.”
Old
habits die hard
The proliferation of checkpoints in the East is not new but has increased due
to the rise in violent crimes such as kidnapping and armed robberies on the
highways. Although stakeholders have continued to call for caution and the
dismantling of the countless roadblocks, the calls have fallen on deaf ears.
For
instance, the then President General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief Nnia Nwodo, had
in 2019 queried the development.
He said: “Evidence available to us indicates an unusual number of military,
paramilitary and police checkpoints in all routes leading into and within Igbo
land. To be precise, our report presents the following gory picture: there are
60 checkpoints between Lagos and Onitsha (a major route for Igbo traders) thus:
Lagos to Ore 24 checkpoints, Ore to Benin 23 checkpoints, Benin to Onitsha 13
checkpoints. Just in Enugu State alone, the checkpoints are uncountable.
“The
interpretation is that these checkpoints, which are mainly interested in
extorting money from numerous Igbos passing through them, are mere toll gates.
The nonchalant attitude of the Federal Government and heads of security
agencies gives the impression that the erection of these “toll gates” is
deliberate, extortionist and intended to subdue the will of the people.
“In some instances, these security agents attend these ‘toll gates’ with POS
(Point of Sale) machines, which they use to force travellers who have no cash
but possess debit cards to forcibly transfer cash to their private accounts.”
A
lot has since changed but for the worse. An Igbo leader, Chief Ralph Obioha
told The Guardian that no fewer than 300 security checkpoints mounted
by soldiers and police now exist in the Southeast region, stressing that the
delay it is creating in the movement of goods and services is unimaginable.
Vehicles
parked at MDS, check point, Amaraku/Anara/Okigwe Road
A
printer, Clinton Ugwu, who travelled from Enugu to Abiriba in Abia State
during the Yuletide season, told The Guardian that he counted no
fewer than eight security checkpoints from Umuahia to Abiriba.
He,
however, said throughout the journey, they were never asked to alight from
their vehicle, and “this is the only thing that has changed within the period.”
“I
want to believe that it was so because of the volume of traffic on the road,
otherwise before now, you must alight and walk past every security checkpoint.”
Ugwu
stated that it was baffling how their driver parted with N100 at each security
checkpoint, adding that, “in some cases, they will even return a ‘change’ of
N100 in case you gave them N200.”
Travelling
from his hometown in Mbaise, Imo State, to Enugu after the Christmas
celebrations and experiencing the frustrations on the highway, John Igwe said:
“The GOC 82 Division, Nigerian Army should do something this 2024 over the open
extortion of motorists plying Southeast roads by soldiers at various army
checkpoints, especially Enugu-Onitsha and Enugu-Port Harcourt roads.
“This
is becoming a huge embarrassment and shameful to the country and Army. They now
give ‘change’ to commercial drivers like the police. The GOC and Garrison
Commanders should do something please.”
For
the love of country, safety of all
Militarisation of Southeast roads began with an increase in insecurity
created by the activities of agitators, banditry, kidnapping, farmer-herder
clashes, cultism, and armed robbery, among others. In 2016, the Federal
Government launched military operations to check the rising
insecurity in the Southeast region.
It
started with Operation Python Dance in Onitsha, Anambra State as the
operational base. The exercise saw several military personnel mounted at
strategic places regarded as dark spots in Anambra State.
A
year later in 2017, Operation Python Dance 11, which had its base in Umuahia,
Abia State was launched and went full swing in other states in the region. Since
then, this has been the deployment of more military personnel during the
yuletide into the Southeast region in what the army described as a ‘special
exercise’ to flush out crimes and criminality from the region.
When
he flagged off the “Exercise Operation Golden Dawn 111”, in Owerri, Imo State,
late last year, the General Officer Commanding 82 Division, Nigerian Army,
Enugu, Major Gen. Hassan Dada said it was to compliment efforts of other
security agencies to wipe out crimes in the region and ensure hitch-free
yuletide season.
Before,
only suspected vehicles were asked to pull over by security operatives with
their passengers thoroughly frisked, even as the soldiers were alert as the
vehicles moved. However, that is no longer the case as all travellers are now
suspects.
Worried by
the harsh reality, the head of the Igbo socio–cultural organization, Ohanaeze
Ndigbo, Nwodo, at a recent security summit held in Enugu, complained that the
Southeast alone harbored over half of all checkpoints in the country. Arguing
that the logic is flawed, he called for the dislodging of the roadblocks.
Apparently,
in agreement, the President of the Coalition of Southeast Youth Leaders
(COSEYL), Good luck Ibem, said the military checkpoints had been “turned to
places where innocent Nigerians are subjected to different degrees of inhuman
treatments, for failing to pay bribes or murmuring when a motorist pays a
bribe.”
Ibem
said: “Trucks are forced to pay as high as N2,000 to N3,000 per truck. Buses
pay N500 to N1000, and cars pay N200 to N500 depending on the soldiers’ mood.
“We
demand the immediate dismantling of all military checkpoints and roadblocks in
Southeast roads because they have outlived their purpose. We demand the
immediate arrest and prosecution of those soldiers involved in the collection
of bribes on our roads, which have helped to destroy the security of the zone.”
Security
agencies can do better
Social Affairs Commentator, Justus Nwoha, however, disagreed that the
checkpoint phenomenon had lost its essence.
Nwoha noted that the stopgap measure, though inconvenient, has helped the
security forces to recover open spaces created by the activities of unknown
gunmen.
He
stated that the improved presence of security operatives, especially during
ember months drastically reduces crimes, adding that, “if you look back, you
will agree that we did not record many incidents of kidnapping and other
violent crimes. That is because these men of the underworld knew that there was
a superior power and the best thing for them was to lie low.
“We
are gradually recovering from what used to be a bad situation to the era where
you could say you can confidently move around. I understand the negative
attitude of those officials who have turned the assignment into a money-making
venture, but that was not why they were sent to those roads. Anyhow, let us not
throw away the gains because of certain bad elements in the system,” he
appealed.
On
his part, the national coordinator of the Human Rights Writers Association of
Nigeria (HURIWA), Emmanuel Onwubiko, said the militarisation of Southeast
Nigeria is a big burden for travellers, who commute to their various
destinations in Southern Nigeria and particularly residents of the five states
of the Southeast.
“One
major issue that is worrisome is the manner such travellers in buses and other
commercial means of transportation are compelled at gunpoint to disembark and
trek across the military or joint security checkpoints, and in some instances,
they are required to raise their hands like they are being sold in olden days
slave trade.
“Aside
from these terrible experiences of travellers, a very disturbing trend is that
in all the five states, particularly in Abia and Imo states, the police are now
actually charging fixed fees from distressed victims of crimes before they can
go after the criminals, and if the victims of crimes are not buoyant enough to
meet the demands, then their suffering and victimisation from criminals would
continue.
“The
case of Imo State became significant and very burdensome during the Christmas
period given that hundreds of thousands of Igbo people came home from their
places of abodes outside of the Southeast and far away from Nigeria in a lot of
cases,” he said. On the maltreatment of travellers, the rights group stressed
that it is unconstitutional and illegal.
According
to Onwubiko, HURIWA has urged the Chief of Defense Staff, General
Christopher Gwabin Musa to immediately activate pragmatic mechanisms to stamp
out dehumanizing treatments being meted out to travellers by operatives of
security services manning roadblocks.
Reacting,
some soldiers at the checkpoints said they were ordering passengers to alight
and walk for security purposes given the upsurge of insecurity in the Southeast.
One
of the soldiers, who pleaded anonymity, said: “We are asking you people to get
down from your vehicles and walk across for everyone’s good. We advise you to
journey well.”
Unhappy
about the development, Imo State Commissioner of Police, Aboki Danjuma has
urged commuters and other Imo residents to report any case of extortion and brutalization
to the command.
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