Fuel queues grow longer in Lagos, Ogun, others
Fuel scarcity in Lagos
The fuel supply situation, which showed
slight improvement in recent days, has taken a turn for the worse as
queues grew longer on Sunday at the few petrol stations selling the
product in Lagos and Ogun states.
The Minister of State for Petroleum
Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, had recently said petrol queues would clear
in Abuja and Lagos by April 6 or 7, adding that the scarcity would
subside in other parts of the country, including Kano, Katsina, Port
Harcourt and Warri, by that weekend.
But more than 10 days after, the scarcity of petrol has continued to
bite hard as motorists and other consumers struggle to get the product,
even at filling stations where it was being sold above the regulated
price of N86.50 per litre.
Our correspondents gathered that loading
at depots had not improved significantly, with many of them still
attending to tickets issued in November last year.
In Lagos, many filling stations did not
have the product on Sunday, while black marketers had a field day as
they sold the product for as much as N300 per litre.
The Chairman, Nigeria Union of
Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers, Lagos Zone, Alhaji Tokunbo Korodo,
said in a telephone interview with one of our correspondents, said,“We
are still having the fuel problem because there is no supply. Even with
the little we are rationing, if you look at the queues very well, they
have returned to what they used to be. And it is a very devastating
situation now.
“Most of the depots are not loading
well. Even the products they promised that they will soon pump to the
depots is not in sight now. I have not seen any seriousness on the part
of the other stakeholders to complement the effort of the NNPC. The NNPC
is supplying, but it cannot do it alone. Now, it is only the NNPC that
is bringing the fuel into the country.”
A source, who is an official of an
independent marketer, said, “The queues will remain like that until we
have good supply. And that good supply may not come until May. I expect
that by first week of May, something positive should happen.
“People are still finding it difficult
to get foreign exchange. All the ones that the government promised have
not been released to anybody.”
The situation was, however, slightly different in Abuja and neighbouring cities to the Federal Capital Territory on Sunday.
Although some motorists were sighted
queuing in front of the few petrol stations that dispensed the
commodity, the queues were not as long as they were on Friday. Attendants at some of the filling
stations attributed the shorter queues to the fact that there was less
traffic in the city on Sunday as many residents were either out of Abuja
or were relaxing at home.
The Group General Manager, Group Public
Affairs Division, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Mr. Garba
Deen Mohammed, assured motorists and other petrol users that the current
shortage would soon be over, as the problem had been largely resolved.
SOURCE: THE PUNCH NEWSPAPER
Comments
Post a Comment