The security and
intelligence community chiefs that talked about the vigilance that
prevented the planned attack of Lagos three weeks ago failed to disclose
to the public the magnitude of weapons the masterminds of the terror
act had deployed for the failed operation and the main target.
At the
weekend from the authorities concerned that apart from the deadly
weapons uncovered, the arrested attackers’ main target was the strategic
Third Mainland Bridge in Lagos.
According
to revelations at the weekend, the attackers surreptitiously conveyed
the weapons to Lagos inside some of the numerous fuel tankers that ply
major roads to Nigeria’s former capital and indeed Nigeria’s commercial
nerve centre.
At the
weekend that indeed the Federal and Lagos State authorities were quite
startled that the masterminds of the planned terror act could pile up
weapons of mass destruction in Lagos, generally considered the safest
haven for investment at the moment in Nigeria.
It was
learnt that the Lagos State authorities, including the governor, were
shown the illegal arms that the security and intelligence community’s
interagency co-operation confiscated recently. “They were shocked,
really shocked when they were shown the level of organisational capacity
of the evil ones that planned to attack Lagos…”, a top source disclosed
last week.
In a
related development, security chiefs that briefed the National Assembly
top-shots last week about the reality of the planned attack of Lagos
reportedly told the federal legislators that indeed the attackers had
planned to attack Lagos to cripple the economy. Lagos is the commercial
nerve centre of Nigeria. Former Head of State, the late Gen. Murtala
Muhammed, had in 1976 recognised the strategic importance of Lagos even
while he was announcing the creation of Nigeria’s new capital Abuja
then.
His
words in a national broadcast to the nation on January 3, 1976: “… Lagos
will, in the foreseeable future, remain the nation’s commercial capital
and one of its nerve centres. But in terms of servicing the present
infrastructure alone, the committed amount of money and effort required
will be such that Lagos State will not be ready to cope.
“It
will even be unfair to expect the state to bear this heavy burden on its
own. It is therefore necessary for the Federal Government to continue
to sustain the substantial investment in the area. The port facilities
and other economic activities in the Lagos area have to be expanded.
“There
is need in the circumstances for the Federal Government to maintain a
special defence and security arrangement in Lagos which will henceforth
be designated a special area. These arrangements will be carefully
worked out and written into the new constitution. Kaduna and Port
Harcourt are to be accorded similar status and designated as Special
Areas…”
The
security chiefs told the federal legislators and their presiding
officers that some of the attackers captured had hinted that the plan of
attack on Lagos was deliberate: to cripple the nerve centre of
Nigeria’s commerce and industry, a city that plays host to the
international air and sea ports so that Nigeria’s economy could
collapse.
It was
said that the insurgents had reasoned that since they had successfully
crippled business operations in the North, there should be federal
character spread of the destruction, as even the East and South-South
geo-political zones too have been negatively affected by the insurgency
and kidnapping. The federal legislators were said to have been alarmed
by a revelation about the sense of urgency of the insurgents to hit
Lagos “just to make Nigeria ungovernable for the present
administration”, as it was revealed.
It was
not clear at press time whether the Federal Government’s planned amnesty
programme for Boko Haram insurgents has been partly influenced by the
confirmed incursion to the unofficial commercial capital that makes the
money that Abuja spends. It is on record that as critics of Washington
DC often say, “New York makes the money that Washington spends”, so it
is with Lagos that consumes about 60 per cent of the fuel that
PPMC/PPPRC imports and the rest of the country shares the remaining 40
per cent.
The
implications of targeting the very strategic Lagos Third Mainland Bridge
have been worrisome to authorities at all levels. This is part of the
reasons for the concerns in Abuja and Lagos.
The
Third Mainland Bridge is the longest of the three bridges connecting
Lagos Island to the mainland. The other two are the Eko and Carter
Bridges. It is the longest bridge in Africa. The Third Mainland Bridge
is a vital artery of the network of federal highways and commands high
patronage in Lagos Municipal Area, as it connects two of the Lagos
State’s commercial hubs, Victoria Island and Ikeja.
The
bridge, which has about 350,000 daily users, is also a vital link to
Lekki, Ajah and Epe communities. Midway through the bridge, there is a
link to Herbert Macaulay Way, Yaba. The bridge starts really from
Oworonsoki, which is linked to the Oshodi–Apapa Expressway and
Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, and ends at the Adeniji Adele Interchange on
Lagos Island. Built by Julius Berger Nigeria Plc, the bridge was
commissioned by former Military President Ibrahim Babangida in 1990 and
it measures about 11.8 km in length.
The
bridge posts huge economic relevance to the country as it saves
commuters who shuttle between two of the Lagos State commercial hubs,
Victoria Island and Ikeja, a lot of man-hours. It was said that the last
repair of the important bridge cost the nation N1.055 billion.
It is
feared that if Lagos Third Mainland Bridge is destroyed, Lagos and
indeed Nigeria, are destroyed. It was estimated that the cache of arms
seized from the insurgents about three weeks ago when it was reported
that Boko Haram entered Lagos was capable of wreaking havoc on the vital
bridge in the heart of Lagos.

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