Mr. Boboye Oyeyemi |
The Corps Marshall of the Federal Road
Safety Commission, Mr. Boboye Oyeyemi, has said that the agency will no
longer insist on
any deadline for the enforcement of the new number
plate.
Oyeyemi, who stated this on Wednesday in
an interview with journalists when he paid a courtesy visit on Governor
Theodore Orji at the Government House in Umuahia, said the agency would
abide by the court ruling which restrained it from enforcing the
proposal.
He explained that motorists who still
had the old number plate would rather get the new ones when they go to
renew their vehicle licences.
Oyeyemi said, “We will abide by the
court ruling. It was a case of double taxation to be compelled to have
the new one if your licence has not expired. It is a phase approach. If
your driving licence expires, you go and renew it. It is a 12-month
cycle. There is no deadline again.
“That does not mean that if you carry a fake number plate or driving licence that you will not be prosecuted, “ he said.
The corps marshal, however, vowed that
the agency would not back down on the June 1, 2015 deadline for the
enforcement of the speed limit device.
He said that by 2016, all imported vehicles in Nigeria must have speed limit device installed in them.
The policy, according to him, has become
necessary because of the discovery that over 15.8 per cent auto crashes
in the country was speed related.
Oyeyemi, however, noted that Nigeria
recorded 25 per cent reduction in road accidents in 2014 and lesser
incidents in January 2015, expressing the hope that with the new device,
auto crashes would reduce by 80 per cent in 2016.
He called on state governments to set up
traffic management agencies to man state roads so that the FRSC could
focus on interstate and federal roads for more effective results.
The FRSC boss had earlier during an
audience with Orji offered to train Abia traffic officers at the
agency’s training school at Udi in Enugu State.
Responding, Orji appealed to the FRSC to
assist the state to shore up its internally generated revenue through
number plate registration and renewal of vehicle licence.
He frowned on the sharp practices of
some syndicates who defraud the state of revenue through sale of fake
number plates. He also advocated for the setting up of a joint task
force to crack down on the perpetrators.
Orji said his administration had
commenced expanding some internal roads in the state to accommodate more
vehicles and lessen road accidents.
He thanked the FRSC personnel in the
state for their efforts in reducing auto crashes, and pledged the
continued support of his government for the agency.
Source:Punch Newspaper
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