ADVERTISEMENT
The Moment Nigeria
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Interviews
  • Life and Styles
  • Sport
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Interviews
  • Life and Styles
  • Sport
No Result
View All Result
The Moment Nigeria
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Interviews
  • Life and Styles
  • Sport

The unfortunate Political Manipulation of the original design and alignment of Akwa Ibom section of Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway

By Emem Benson, Esq

by Honesty Victor
February 9, 2026
Reading Time: 2 mins read
The unfortunate Political Manipulation of the original design and alignment of Akwa Ibom section of Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on WhatsappShare on LinkedIn

 

 

The Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway was conceived as a bold and strategic national infrastructure corridor, one deliberately designed to trace Nigeria’s Atlantic coastline, stimulate coastal economies, enhance maritime-linked commerce, promote tourism, strengthen climate resilience and provide direct connectivity to historically underserved coastal communities.

RELATED STORIES

Making big shifts: Why Africa’s boldest leaders are heading to Lagos

Making big shifts: Why Africa’s boldest leaders are heading to Lagos

February 9, 2026
What if the problem isn’t just the Government?

What if the problem isn’t just the Government?

February 6, 2026

In its proper sense, a coastal highway is not merely a long-distance road that bears the word “coastal” in name alone. Rather, it is defined by an alignment whose engineering logic, economic purpose and socioeconomic impact are intrinsically connected to the coastline it is meant to serve.

Measured against this standard, the western segment of the project, particularly the Lagos–Ogun axis, largely reflects the original vision. The alignment remains genuinely coastal, engaging the shoreline environment and delivering the expected environmental, economic and logistical benefits associated with a true coastal transport corridor.

Regrettably, the same cannot be said of the Akwa Ibom section of the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway currently under construction. Contrary to the project’s stated objectives, the Akwa Ibom alignment departs significantly from the coastline, veering far inland and away from the state’s coastal belt. This deviation fundamentally undermines the very essence of a coastal highway. A road that neither interfaces with the coastline nor serves coastal communities and industries cannot, by any reasonable or technical definition, be described as “coastal.”

What is being delivered in Akwa Ibom is, at best, a conventional inland highway misleadingly branded as a coastal one.

This troubling deviation raises critical and unavoidable questions:

1. Why should a project justified on the basis of coastal integration deliberately avoid the coastline in one of Nigeria’s most naturally endowed coastal states?

2. Why should communities that were intended to be direct beneficiaries of the project be excluded through an alignment that bypasses them entirely?

3. Why should the core objectives of national economic integration, maritime development, tourism promotion, and coastal resilience be selectively applied?

The answers to these questions appear to be less technical and more political.

The distortion of the Akwa Ibom section of Highway strongly suggests that what began as a well-intentioned and ambitious national infrastructure project has been subjected to unfortunate political manipulation. Instead of adhering to a consistent, purpose-driven design philosophy grounded in sound engineering and national development planning, the project appears to have been altered to accommodate narrow and parochial interests. Such interference undermines principles of equity, transparency and rational infrastructure development.

The implications of this unfortunate situation are profound and far-reaching. Coastal communities are denied access to infrastructure specifically intended to transform their livelihoods.

Opportunities for blue-economy growth and maritime-linked investments are forfeited. Environmental and climate-resilience planning becomes fragmented and incoherent. Most critically, public confidence in the integrity of national infrastructure projects is eroded.

Ultimately, Nigeria risks losing the full transformative value of what should have been a coherent, integrated coastal corridor of national significance.

If the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway is to retain legitimacy and faithfully deliver on its lofty original objectives, its alignment must be guided by principle, professional judgment and national interest, not by political expediency. A genuine coastal highway must be coastal in all its sections, not selectively so.

Anything less constitutes a betrayal of both the project’s founding vision and the people it was meant to serve.

Next Post
TV series ‘Tales of Ramadan’ season 2 returns

TV series ‘Tales of Ramadan’ season 2 returns

More Articles...

Lekki buyers drag RevolutionPlus CEO, Onalaja

Lekki buyers drag RevolutionPlus CEO, Onalaja

February 9, 2026
Court fixes October 31 for Judgment on PDP convention suit

FULL LIST: PDP unveils caretaker committee in Abia

February 9, 2026
Joan Laporta resigns as Barcelona President

Joan Laporta resigns as Barcelona President

February 9, 2026
TV series ‘Tales of Ramadan’ season 2 returns

TV series ‘Tales of Ramadan’ season 2 returns

February 9, 2026
The unfortunate Political Manipulation of the original design and alignment of Akwa Ibom section of Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway

The unfortunate Political Manipulation of the original design and alignment of Akwa Ibom section of Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway

February 9, 2026
Fear of persecution silenced my colleagues, says Senator Natasha

Appeal Court upholds Natasha’s suspension

February 9, 2026

STANBIC IBTC ADVERT

About Us

Themomentng.com is an online community of reporters and social advocates dedicated to bringing you features, news reports by Africans, but from a global perspective.

Contact Us

+447771081433
+2348051966180(WhatsApp/SMS Only)
Email: themomentng@gmail.com

Categories

  • Business
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Events
  • Featured
  • Food
  • Foreign
  • Health
  • Interviews
  • Life and Styles
  • Metro
  • Motoring
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Society
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • Top Story

Follow Us

Facebook Twitter Instagram

Copyright © Themomentng.com. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Interviews
  • Life and Styles
  • Sport