A few states have banned okada. Do you have any plans to do same?
I
think it’s, for me, a class issue and I belong to the working class, so
I cannot ban Okada. First, I believe that okada is a response to
certain deficit in our intra-urban transportation system. From the 60s
to the 70s to the 80s, we never had okada. If you ask a lady to take a
ride on a motorbike it was like a taboo. Now it has became fashionable
to have a woman and two children on top of a bike. It is not a culture
choice. It is as a result of deficit in our intra-city transportation
system.
If I must get rid of them, I should provide an
alternative first. For me, the way to deal with it is to deal with the
supply side. By this I mean, provide good city transportation, then
people would have to choose among a taxi that is available, a
comfortable and clean bus that is available, and an Okada. People would
now choose what will offer them more comfort. So, it is the result of
certain weaknesses in our transportation system, and I think it can only
be solved by dealing with those weaknesses. I cannot use state power to
prohibit Okada. I am not sure of the legal status of doing that.
Number
two, in Edo State, we probably have up to three to four thousand people
who are riding bikes on commercial basis. If I must get rid of them, I
must provide 4,000 jobs for those people. Therefore in Edo State, we
will not ban Okada.
People have argued that they use motorbikes
to commit crime, like armed robbery and kidnapping. Yes, there is
evidence that people have used motobikes for kidnapping, armed robbery,
and even assassination, but is it not also true that others have used
four-wheel drive vehicles and SUVs to kidnap and rob? There is no
evidence that this is a function of the number of
four-wheel drive or SUV vehicles. People have used luxury cars,
motorbikes, to commit crime. Some have committed crimes even walking on
bare foot. Again, I do not believe that if you abolish Okada, crime will
disappear. I think the issues are far more complicated.
I see it
as a class issue. If you don't have the experience, you wouldn't
understand what I am talking about. . . . I cannot blame the victims of a
system. These guys are victims. On a good day if the world was perfect,
nobody will opt for a motorbike. Go to the hospitals, a lot of our bike
people are there, both the bike riders and some of their passengers.
Too bad.
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