PH Road, Aba & Garden Avenue, Enugu: The
difference is clear!
On
April 27, 1957, Olabisi Ajala, began a trip "around the world" and ultimately, he visited India, Soviet
Union, Iran, Jordan, Israel, Palestine, Egypt, and finally, Australia, all of
them on his Vespa scooter. I did not know him but I know the music dedicated to
his exploits by the one and only Ebenezer Obey. So, when one junkets around and
about, he is indulging in ‘Ajalanisation’! I left Lagos to
Ago-Iwoye and Ijebuode, my regular route, on Monday 29/3/21 and on Friday,
2/4/21, my running-mate and I left Ijebu-Ode for Igbo-Ukwu, with the son-of-man
on the steering. I won’t tell you our time of departure but by 10am, we were
refuelling the car at NNPC Mega-Station, Asaba. The road was free as the usual
traducers of travellers were not yet many on the road. However, we had an
encounter just before we entered Benin. The men in black stopped us, asked for
vehicle ‘partikolas’ and I gave them the usual things:
driving-licence, insurance certificates and 2021 vehicle certificate. He then queried:
is that all? And then he started mentioning some strange papers but I told him
that these were the only ones I had known since I started driving in 1982. He
then ‘confiscated’ the papers and went away. I waited for about 10 minutes and
I left him with the papers-all photocopies.
Immediately
I got home, I joined the Holy Friday and other Catholic Easter programmes and
thereafter, the usual 1001 meetings, funerals and weddings. But there were some
special programmes at home including the Communal Prayers by the town (to checkmate the activities of some man-made malevolent spirits), the centenary birthday
celebration of Nze Umeokonkwo Umennadi, the
onye-isi-nze ( oldest ozo-titled man) and the only living mgburichi
( scarified face) in Igboukwu); the first Igbo-Ukwu History Project lecture(
delivered by Professor Njoku and Enigma Obikwelu) and the 98th
birthday ceremony of the Iconic Ide JNC
Ezeife, retired Principal Special Class, the first Igbo-Ukwu graduate, and the
oldest/longest serving member of the Idu-Cabinet.
Nze
Umeokonkwo, 100years ; Iconic Ide JNC
Ezeife,98 years ; Ide Ezesuokwu at his
Mill
I also took out time to pay an industrial visit to Ide Ezesuokwu, a fellow Cabinet Member, who operates in the original ‘oil sector’ (runs an oil mill) creating value as well as employment with a staff strength of about 30. The technology was however old, which led operational inefficiency and physical stress. And I asked: Where is the FG support for agro-allied industry? May be, tomorrow! My wife ‘ won the prize’ of a keg of fresh and enticing palm oil. I was also at Awka to celebrate with my sister, Uju Chiekezie who ‘washed’ her professorship at the magnificent St Aquina’s Catholic Church, GRA, Awka.
@
St Aquinas and @ St Michaels Dedication
Of Course, not less should be expected of a
Church located at the GRA. The dedication of St Michaels Catholic Church, Ngo,IgboUkwu also took place and I had the
good fortune of breaking the kola to declare the occasion open. It was a joyous
occasion for us because, at a time, it
looked as if that day would never come. But it came, courtesy of the commitment of the Parishioners and the
determination of the Parish Priest, Fr Offordum.
The
following week, I left for Aba through Ezinifite, Uga, Akokwa Arondizuogu
Okigwe and Umuahia. At Arondizuogu, we encountered a local Vehicle Inspection squad
led by a woman. She checked this and that and found that the one of the trafficators,
one of the break-lights and one other thing was not working and billed us N11000.
Afterall said and done, she, on a ‘compassionate ground’, collected about
N3500, which my wife told her was all the cash in her wallet. I was wondering
how to handle the situation when I noted that she actually wrote the amount in
the charge-sheet. It was later that I saw that instead of N3500, she had
written N2500, thereby cheating the
state and probably her colleagues of the ‘surplus’. When we joined the smooth
Enugu-PH expressway, a similar group ‘arrested’ us and when we protested that
we had been charged and discharged, they argued that the first group did not
charge us properly. When I told them
that it was their internal affair after which they collected the first charge-sheet
and reissued another one. One interesting development was that they kept on
asking: how much exactly did they collect from you, to which they did not
receive any answer beyond what was written on the charge-sheet.
I was at Aba for about two weeks, and spent
the period in Umuga Community, off Opobo Road in Ogbor Hill , a very serene rural community, where everybody knew
everybody, still tended their farms in the morning before going anywhere and still relied on bicycles
for transportation.
Bicycle
Mass-Transit; Tanu Group: The
abandoned factory, with Lady Umeweni, the CEO
It was very far from the maddening crowd. I paid an industrial visit to Tanu Group, one
of the land-marks of good old Ogbor Hill. Tanu Group was one of the industrial
giants at Aba (Aba is more into commerce), and was manufacturing Varta Batteries
and Cascamite industrial glue. But this is now history due to policy infidelity,
foreign exchange crunch, high cost of credit and all that. I looked at the idle
factory buildings and the decaying machines and… Jesus Wept. I also visited the National Institute for
Nigerian Languages, a Federal Government establishment with a revolutionary
mandate and which needs more attention than it is getting.
@
NINiL
I
met the ebullient and committed working
DG, Prof Emejulu, who is doing
EVERYTHING to turn things around and in
the process, trying to catch the lion with bare hands.
One
day, I ventured into Aba proper. The well laid out Aba Central, ( Ehi, Azikiwe,
Faulks and Asa roads et al), which I
first visited for the first time on holidays in 1972 as a Class 2 student of St
Josephs, Awka-Etiti, had become a shadow of their former selves and every
square inch was an untidy, ‘bedlamic’ market place. However, when I really wept was
when I got to the great Port-Harcourt road.
The stretch of land which was once a road was at the same time a gully,
a swimming pool, a slimy pond and some
elements of very ROUGH patches of earth and consequently, a haven for traffic .
The driver had to swim through the waters, meander through peoples’ compound
off the road, cross the disused railway track and did other acrobatics to pass
through the famous PH Road. The trip from Ogbor hill, which would have taken
about 30 minutes in ordinary times, took 3hours + and I felt like giving the
driver more than he charged. He informed that he spent N600 daily to wash the
underneath of his micro-bus (not the whole vehicle). As a first generation Aba resident
, Nwaogalanya Ebele Umeweni , who has his shop at PH road and lives in the neighbourhood told me, ‘one cannot do
anything in Aba without going to or through PH road’. He further regretted that,
any time it rained, he would not go to his shop for two or three days neither
could he go anywhere else. His vehicle is also permanently parked because it
lacked the swimming capabilities required to navigate PH road. The National Tourism Board should recognise
PH road as the greatest tourist attraction at Aba because no one should visit
Abia State, without having a taste of the sights and sounds of PH Road.
Still
@ PH Road
We left for Enugu and for the first time, I was
persuaded to board ‘Peace Mass Transit’ an experience I never thought I would
have. There is this law of customer
relations: Rule 1: the customer is always right. Rule 2: if he is wrong,
remember Rile 1. At Peace Mass Transit, the customer is NEVER right!
During the check-in on the day we left for Enugu, one of the customers misplaced his ticket during
and he was asked to step down. Eventually, the ticked was found but the people
insisted that the chap must follow the next bus. It was more surprising because
that seat remained vacant throughout the trip. So, why deboard the passenger
and extend his travel time for another 1 or 2 hours, depending on when the next
bus would fill up? On the way back, we
encountered the queer customer relations of Peace Mass. I failed to sign the manifest before
boarding, which appeared to be their custom.
A staff came into the bus with the manifest, asking about those who had
not filled the manifest and I raised my hand but rather than give me the
document to fill, he took it out, placed it on top of the bonnet and ordered me
to go and fill it there or the bus would
not move! I simply ignored him and he walked away. It was one of the passengers
who eventually went down to bring the manifest. Furthermore, the bus, beyond
carrying more passengers than required in the ‘new-normal’ protocols, filled
all available space with luggage of all sorts, and insisted that passengers should carry their hand-luggage on
their laps and that one of the
passengers should fold her long legs, or
probably cut the legs( in a journey that
would last 4 hours), so that there would be more space for the cargo. And what was the cargo? Raw meat parked in
rice-sacks! Because this was not done,
they also suspended the boarding of the vehicle for another 30 minutes. The bus
was also weak, making all the motion with little movement to the extent that even
tippers were overtaking us on the road but nothing to worry because I only
complain whenever a driver was too fast (not
when he was too slow). It was when I got to Enugu that the degree of
road-decadence at Aba became very pronounced. The roads at Enugu were and are
so smooth, wide and clean that one would not mind lying down on then. Okpara
Garden and Chime Avenues Ogui,
Azikiwe, Awknanaw Abakaliki , Presidential
and Chime roads are all magnificent boulevards. Enugu even surpasses Lagos when
the smoothness, width and cleanliness of the roads are concerned.
The ESUT Business School, Garden
Avenue and Sanctuary of Holy Ghost Cath Church
I visited the ESUT Business School, Enugu, where I
had served as the first Asst Director of Corporate Development at its Lagos
office before Educational Politics forced the school to relocate from Marina,
Lagos, to Enugu and also attended mass at Holy Ghost Cathedral, one of the
oldest Catholic Churches in Nigeria
And then, it was time to return to Ijebu-Ode,
Ago-Iwoye and Lagos; back to the madding crowd. I was reluctant but it has to
be done. The return trip was smooth and uneventful. I thank God for seeing me
throughout this Ajalaistic adventure and with this out of the
way, I will now face more serious issues of the moment, hoping that the
outstanding backlog will allow me!
While I was away!
Life was going on at OOU in my absence with lectures seminars, meetings and result computation deadlines. One thing I missed was the First Prof A.J Abosede Colloquium and presentation of a festschrift in Honiur of the first home-made professor in our Department. The colloquium, with theme, Repositioning of Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises for Nigeria’s economic Recovery and the book of readings on Finance, Management and Entrepreneurship was hosted by the Department in conjunction with the Institute of Managerial Economics on 20/4/21.The intellectual feast was an epochal event because many people have colloquia and festschrift in their honour after they had died or as a send-forth activity. But Professor Abosede was there live and is still in active service. May he continue to profess.
-Ik
Muo, PhD. Department of Business Administration, OOU. Ago-Iwoye. 0803026625
“Find a great mentor, someone who has already been through the many challenges of being an entrepreneur..” -Jodi Levine
Entrepreneurshipin Practice: Cases, Challenges and Lessons By IK, MUO PHD is now available on Amazon, since 14/5/21. Click here to view
Ajalanization indeed! Great details, Great experience! Better experience next time, especially with the highway merchants.
ReplyDeleteDr. Mou will not stop amazing us.... Please, I request that you do Bus 500(Life After School lectures) for the current business administration students at their second semester..... The last one you did for 2019 Graduate was a life changing.
ReplyDeleteIndeed Dr.I.K Mou is a mentor worthy of emulating. Current on recent findings and consistent on issues of heart. God bless you. Dr.
ReplyDeleteDoc, just as you locally ajalanised in the physical, I must say that I did ajalanise in the muo(spirit).
ReplyDeleteWith my mind's eye and leg (boarding the vehicles as well),this superb narration did take me round the entire places within minutes. And these were places of yore to me also.
And Igboukwu, one of the cradles of Igbo civilization is a very close neighbour to Ekwulumili,my hometown.
Many thanks for making me have a great feel of these places again through your great ajalanisation story.
Sir, keep on doing the good work, this and many more Ajalanisation shows the state of the nation. I pray I get that new book Sir.
ReplyDelete