Thursday, June 4, 2026

The Sun Nigeria

FG, Akwa Ibom face backlash for rerouting Calabar-Coastal highway

FG, Akwa Ibom face backlash for rerouting Calabar–Coastal highway

From Okwe Obi, Abuja

Federal and the Akwa Ibom governments have been criticised for rerouting the Calabar-Coastal highway in Akwa Ibom

The Save Stubbs Creek Organisation, umbrella of 69 civil society groups, said the decision would lead to the destruction of the Stubbs Creek Forest Reserve and also lead to irreversible environmental and job losses.

Addressing journalists yesterday in Abuja, Executive Director of the Neighbourhood Environment Watch Foundation, Dr. Kelechukwu Okezie, argued that the decision flouted environmental law, as enshrined in Section 20 of the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria, which mandates environmental protection, requiring all levels of government to improve the environment and safeguard the water, air and land, forest and wildlife of Nigeria.

As a way out, Okezie charged the Federal Ministry of Works to “immediately reroute the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway away from Stubb’s Creek Forest Reserve and its buffer zones.”

He maintained that the government should “publicly disclose alternative alignments that avoid protected areas and sensitive ecosystems; and ensure that all project decisions comply with the EIA Act 1992 and robust international safeguards.”

Moreso, he told the Federal Ministry of Environment to mandate and publicly release a cumulative ESIA for all existing and proposed projects affecting Stubbs Creek Forest Reserve, assessing combined impacts before any further approvals or construction.

He also advised the government to enforce full compliance with environmental and forest protection laws by applying the precautionary principle, including a temporary halt to land clearing or construction within the reserve where credible cumulative impact assessments and safeguards are absent.

In addition, he urged the government to ensure transparent public participation and independent oversight by convening open consultations and appointing an independent review mechanism to scrutinise ESIA findings, mitigation claims, and accountability for ecological damage and restoration;

He implored the Akwa Ibom State Government to “unequivocally affirm the protected status of Stubb’s Creek Forest Reserve and refuse any land allocation or right of way approvals that permit construction within the reserve; actively engage the Federal Government and host communities to secure a lawful, environmentally responsible, and conflict-sensitive alignment for the coastal highway.”