Inter-agency Collaboration, Strong Institutions Prerequisite fo Effective Transport System – Dakuku, Utomi
•Transportation is life, says CIoTA President
The Director General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Dakuku Peterside, has stated that collaboration among relevant agencies and professional bodies remains the sin qua non for the development of an effective transportation sector in Nigeria, stressing that this is a basic condition for economic development. This position was corroborated by Professor Pat Utomi, who also emphasised the need for strong transportation infrastructure.
Dakuku spoke in Lagos in a goodwill message at the investiture ceremony for Dr. Bashir Jamoh, the newly elected President of the Chartered Institute of Transport Administration in Nigeria (CIoTA), and the inauguration of CIoTA’s National Executive Council and Governing Council. He said NIMASA was committed to the actualisation of a robust transportation sector in the country.
The DG, who was represented by the Executive Director, Maritime Labour and Cabotage Services, Mr. Gambo Ahmed, said the Agency will continue to work with professionals in the transportation industry to make the sector more viable and globally competitive. He applauded the election of Jamoh, who is also NIMASA’s Executive Director, Finance and Administration, as President of CIoTA. Dakuku expressed the readiness of the Agency to work with the institute and other relevant bodies to realise a viable transportation sector, which will in-turn aid economic growth and development.
“In NIMASA, we have adopted collaboration as a means to achieving our mandates, because we know we cannot do it alone. The transport sector is too large, hence the need for concerted efforts, through partnerships, cannot be overstated, as this is the only way we can compete favourably with other nations in the globe,” the DG said.
Professor Pat Utomi delivered the keynote address at the occasion, with the theme, “Ensuring Competitiveness and Attractiveness in the Nigerian Transportation Sector – The Role of Professional Bodies.”
Utomi said in his paper that infrastructure and solid institutions were key to resolution of the challenges facing the transportation sector, saying the solution lies with professionals in the sector.
He noted that the economy depended solely on the transportation sector for growth and survival and charged the newly elected executives to come up with globally acceptable positions, which they should present to those in authority to move the transportation sector forward.
While bemoaning the gridlock in the Apapa area of Lagos, Utomi called on the professionals to work with the government in ensuring that intermodal transportation was achieved, as it will also help the economy to develop.
In his acceptance speech, the newly elected President of CIoTA stated that there was a symbiotic relationship between transportation and life. “No matter where you come from, you must use one means of transportation or another”, he said.
Jamoh said the institute was created to augment government’s efforts by proffering possible solutions to the challenges facing the transportation sector in Nigeria. He promised that CIoTA will work with relevant bodies and associations to ensure the realisation of an efficient transportation sector.
Jamoh also said the institute will in the next few months come up with some programmes and also create a platform where all transport-related bodies would come together to brainstorm and share ideas with the relevant authorities for the development of the sector.
In attendance at the event were Chairman, Board of Trustees of CIoTA Nigeria, HRM Alaiyeluwa Oba Rafiu Babatunde Balogun, Adetoyose Ejalonibu II, Elejinrin of Ejinrin Land, Lagos State; Chief Adebayo Sarumi; and Otunba Kunle Folarin, among other notable stakeholders in the transportation sector.
CIoTA was established in Nigeria in 1982, as an affiliate of the Institute of Transport in the United Kingdom.