✕ CLOSE Online Special City News Entrepreneurship Environment Factcheck Everything Woman Home Front Islamic Forum Life Xtra Property Travel & Leisure Viewpoint Vox Pop Women In Business Art and Ideas Bookshelf Labour Law Letters
Click Here To Listen To Trust Radio Live

Bamise: Don’t end BRT in Lagos, make it safer — Commuters tell Sanwo-Olu

Some Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) passengers along the Ikeja/Oshodi corridor in Lagos State on Sunday, appealed to the Lagos State Government to boost security on the buses for improved safety of commuters.

The passengers, who spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria, begged the state government to deploy technology to make the operations better and safer for passengers, to avert a repeat of the Bamise saga.

Why APC National Convention may not hold March 26

SPONSOR AD

2023: ‘It’s either Igbo produce the next president or be allowed to exit Nigeria’

A trader at Computer Village, who simply identified himself as Okwudili, said the BRT was the ‘hope of business people’, who had to catch up early with business appointments.

Okwudili said it was impressive that the BRT fleet was increasing, adding that government should improve and digitalise operations for efficiency and safety.

“Government has banned commercial motorcycles (Okada) on highways, BRT is the fastest means we have, especially business people.

“If you go to some countries abroad, they don’t have traffic jams because the government introduced big high capacity buses everywhere.

“The death of Bamise should make all transportation stakeholders discuss how to make BRT safer. Transportation is big business internationally, I believe that Gov. Sanwo-Olu can do it,” he said.

A 300 level student of the University of Lagos, Miss Peju Pedro, said “It is scarier taking BRT at night now because I will be afraid of rape or death. Government should make it safer.”

Pedro who made the statement at a BRT Terminal opposite ShopRite Superstores in Alausa appealed to the government to seek the private sector’s help in regulating BRT operations effectively.

Another student of Agidingbi Junior High School, Master Joseph Kushima, said that the bus scheme eased the burden of pupils as they often convey them to school for free. 

“We like BRT, they should not stop it, if there is security, no driver can kill anybody,” he said.

Miss Bamise Ayanwola, the late 22-year-old fashion designer, went missing after she boarded a BRT bus driven by Mr Andrew Nice on February 26.

Her corpse was later found on Carter Bridge in Lagos Island, nine days later, leading to the arrest of Nice by officials of the Department of State Security Services in Ogun, after he fled Lagos.

Join Daily Trust WhatsApp Community For Quick Access To News and Happenings Around You.

NEWS UPDATE: Nigerians have been finally approved to earn Dollars from home, acquire premium domains for as low as $1500, profit as much as $22,000 (₦37million+).


Click here to start.