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Warn against scrapping e-call up system, kick against old practice
By Steve Agbota
Maritime truck owners and drivers staged heavy protests against the call to scrap the electronic call-up system, racketeering, terminal inefficiencies causing trucks to queue on the port access roads, and multiple extortion checkpoints, which have taken a financial toll on businesses.
The protesters, who started their protest from Lilipond Truck Park in Ijora to Apapa Port and Tin Can Island Port on Wednesday, warned that these extortion checkpoints, racketeering, and terminal inefficiencies not only create financial strain on truck operators but also delay cargo movement by slowing down truck entry and exit from the ports.
Daily Sun learnt that cartels are generating call-up tickets and selling them through the black market for between N250,000 and N400,000, while trucks pay about N5,000 to N20,000 at each extortion point along the port corridors.
The protesters carried placards with inscriptions such as: “ETO call-up is working, TTP be! Eliminate extortion checkpoints in Apapa and Tin Can Ports, call-up is working, improve terminal efficiency.”
“Maritime Truck Drivers Association (MTDA) supports ETO call-up against extortion checkpoints, ETO call-up has addressed traffic in Apapa and Tin Can corridors, removed extortion checkpoints and give us ETAG among others.”
The truck owners and drivers are calling for the introduction of Electronic Tags (ETAG), which would help prevent manipulation of call-up allocations, and urged authorities to address multiple extortion checkpoints and deploy a truck scheduler system to enhance call-up efficiency.
According to the truckers’ associations and committee, the production of ETAG will eliminate call-up racketeering and the use of multiple identities to access the ports.
The Chairman of Lagos State Trucks and Cargo Operators Committee (LASTCOC), Lukeman Shittu, defended the electronic call-up system, declaring that calls to abandon the system in favour of old methods are misguided and only serve those who once benefited from chaos and unregulated access to the ports.
Zangalo drew on his two decades of experience in the trucking sector to highlight how the port environment has transformed since the introduction of the ETO system, unlike in the past, when trucks parked indiscriminately and clogged Lagos roads.
“We just want to clarify some misinformation out there; people calling for a return to the old system are not representing real stakeholders. Those were the ones benefiting from the disorder,” he stated.
Zangalo acknowledged that some operational issues remain, particularly when port terminals experience downtime or delays.
“If terminals like APMT or ENL are not operating efficiently, trucks can’t move. And TTP won’t release more trucks, leading to a backlog,” he noted.
The Secretary General of the Association of Maritime Truck Owners (AMATO), Mohamed Sani Bala, declared a vote of confidence in the electronic call-up system, praising its impact in eliminating gridlock and improving traffic flow along the Apapa and Tin Can Island logistics corridors.
While applauding the electronic platform, Bala raised concerns about the negative impact of extortion checkpoints allegedly manned by security operatives and other personnel along the corridor.
“We want to appeal to the management of the NPA to please reduce the number of extortion checkpoints along the port corridors as truckers are losing a lot of proceeds to the activities of the people operating most of these checkpoints.”
He also proposed the implementation of a truck scheduling system that ensures only trucks officially released from holding bays are allowed into the ports, noting that this will help avoid unauthorised entry and reduce congestion.
Bala called for improved terminal operations to match the gains of the call-up system, warning that delays at terminal gates and operational inefficiencies could undermine efforts to decongest the access roads.
The Public Relations Officer of Maritime Truck Drivers Association (MTDA), Afeez Alabi, rejected attempts to undermine the electronic call-up system, warning that any return to the chaotic old order of port access would cripple operations and reverse hard-won progress along the Apapa port corridor.
He said the digital system has brought transparency and order to truck movement in and out of the ports, exposing irregularities and significantly reducing traffic congestion.
Alabi acknowledged that while the system was initially introduced at a modest fee of N10,250, a black market has since emerged where call-up slots are resold for between N120,000 and N130,000, a sign of entrenched corruption the truckers want eliminated.