Minister
of Works, David Umahi, says buildings located within 15 metres of the Lagos-Calabar
Coastal Highway corridor will be demolished to make way for service lanes,
insisting the measure is part of the project’s approved design.
Speaking
in an interview with ARISE News, Umahi said the Federal Government would
enforce the right-of-way along the coastal highway, adding that affected
structures within the designated setback would be removed during construction.
He
said the service lanes were designed to improve access to adjoining communities
and businesses while enhancing traffic flow along the coastal corridor.
The
minister also defended the project against claims that it had worsened flooding
in Lagos, insisting the highway was specifically designed to reduce flood risks
through extensive drainage infrastructure.
“The
coastal highway was designed to mitigate flooding, not cause it,” Umahi said.
He
said the project incorporates multiple culverts, stormwater evacuation channels
and other drainage systems intended to manage runoff, protect nearby
communities from ocean surges and improve flood resilience.
Umahi
said flooding in areas such as Victoria Island predated the highway project,
blaming the recurring problem on blocked drainage channels, indiscriminate
refuse disposal and construction on natural waterways.
He
added that an Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) had been
completed before construction began and made available to the public, while
noting that the highway was also intended to improve security along the coastal
corridor.
His
remarks come amid public debate following weeks of heavy rainfall that
inundated several parts of Lagos, leaving major roads submerged, disrupting
traffic and damaging homes and businesses.
The
minister’s comments echo those of Lagos State Commissioner for Waterfront
Infrastructure Development, Dayo Bush-Alebiosu, who attributed the flooding
primarily to environmental abuse rather than infrastructure projects.
Speaking
on Channels Television’s The Morning Brief, Bush-Alebiosu said illegal land
reclamation, unauthorised dredging and poor waste disposal were undermining
efforts to tackle flooding in the state.
“It is
important to identify what the problem is in the first place, and the problem
is nothing other than bad habits,” he said.
“I
mean, illegal reclamation and illegal dredging affect it on one hand; habits
affect it on the other hand.”
The
commissioner said while illegal reclamation was driven by commercial interests,
indiscriminate refuse disposal reflected residents’ attitudes towards
environmental sanitation.
“At
the end of the day, those who, out of habit, dump refuse aren’t doing it
because they want to make money from it. However, those who are reclaiming
illegally are doing it for commercial purposes. So, you have both sides,” he
said.
Bush-Alebiosu
also warned against dumping human waste into lagoons, describing the practice
as a threat to both public health and the environment.
“The
first thing is that some people even dump faeces into the lagoon. This is the
same lagoon that feeds us. You’re eating fish that’s feeding off faeces,” he
said.
“So
all of these things eventually will come back to bite us, and this is just a
typical example of what we’re seeing at the moment.”
Recent flooding has
affected areas including Gbagada, Iyana Ipaja, Ikorodu Road, Ikeja, Maryland,
Mushin, Ogudu, Lekki, Oshodi, Agege, Alimosho and Obalende, with sections of
the Lagos-Ibadan, Lagos-Abeokuta, Apapa-Oshodi and Lekki-Epe expressways also
inundated after persistent rainfall.






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