Lagos-Calabar Road contract followed due process – Umahi

The minister insisted that the removal of properties along the path adhere to the rule of law.

The Federal Government, on Monday, insisted that the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway contract followed the procurement process.

David Umahi, Minister of Works, stated that the 700-kilometer, 10-lane highway was planned as an Engineering, Procurement, and Construction plus Financing (EPC+F) project.

He added that the plan includes partial funding from the federal government.

Umahi, in a note, said the approval process went through the Bureau of Public Procurement (BBP) after consideration by the Federal Executive Council (FEC) as prescribed by law.

He said:

“This project is an unsolicited bid on EPC+F.

“Under this model, the investor provides all designs, part of the financing and construction while the Federal Government provides the counterpart funding.

“The ministry received such a bid, worked on it and sent it to BPP.

“The BPP worked on it according to the Procurement Act and came up with a price slightly lower than the ministry’s price and even lower than the cost of similar projects awarded five years ago like the Bodo-Bonny project.

“BPP issued a certificate of no objection on the project to the Ministry of Works in line with the Procurement Act.

“The Ministry of Works took the certificate of no objection to FEC and FEC debated and approved it. The project followed due process.”

Umahi also cleared the air on the Environment and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) report, saying that preliminary approval was issued in December 2023 by the Ministry of Environment and renewed in January.

According to him, the ESIA certification is progressive.

“We have a certified ESIA to start the project.

“We have redesigned the route to put a human face to the decision and to minimise demolition of permanent infrastructure.

“The process of ESIA involves constant stakeholders’ engagement of which many have taken place and I even participated in two in Lagos.

“We are doing everything possible to follow the law.”

The minister insisted that the removal of properties along the path adhere to the rule of law.

He underlined that only property owners with verifiable titles will be compensated.

Shanties and people with property inside the 250-meter beachfront setback who do not have a Federal Government title will not be reimbursed because it is a legal concern, he stated.

Umahi added:

“The committee is not in charge of ramp or anything else but to verify those to be paid compensation, authenticate and pay.

“But where there is a title problem, it will need a presidential waiver for such to be paid.

“It is only those with proven titles that will be paid after undergoing all the verification processes.

“We have shortened the process. No delayed files, so property owners are assured that within 72 hours, we will do the needful.

“Anyone with a title within 250 meters and it is not a Federal government title, then only the President can give a waiver for the person to be paid.”

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