NIGERIA – Lagos Secure Anchorage Area (SAA) Contract Suspended by Nigerian Authorities

NIGERIAN AUTHORITIES TO DEVELOP MARITIME ARCHITECTURE ABLE TO ENSURE SAFEGUARDING OF NATIONAL WATERWAYS
SAA

Patrol vessel and ships in the Lagos Secure Anchorage Area (SAA).

Nigerian Ministry of Transportation Declared the SAA Operation Officially Suspended

The Secure Anchorage Area contract is officially suspended, the Minister of Transportation, Mr Rotimi Amaechi said on Monday. According to Amaechi, the operation of the Secure Anchorage Area Contract was suspended because it is illegal to create anchorage for purposes of providing security.

Amaechi spoke at a media briefing on the Deep Blue project organized by the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) in Lagos.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that a Secure Anchorage Area is an area outside the Lagos port that the Nigerian Navy, with a private company, has defined as a secure place where vessels can anchor safely from the threat of pirate attack. The secure anchorage area was in contention between the Nigerian Ports Authority and the Ocean Marine Services Ltd., who were providing security at the anchorage.

The NPA dismantled the Secure Anchorage Area (SAA) operated by OMSL over security concerns. It insisted that provision of security in the nation’s waters is not a business venture, but a constitutional responsibility of the NIMASA, Nigerian Navy and Marine Police.

Amaechi said: “I took the decision to stop the secure Anchorage project, because the issue is that an individual cannot protect a country; it shows that there is a failure in the system.

“Government must protect both persons and investment to ensure orderliness,” he said. The minister said that government was reintroducing a maritime architecture that would ensure that infrastructure was in place to safeguard the country’s waterways.

He said that the upsurge of threats and insecurity on the waterways was alarming and people doing business on the waters were getting worried, hence the need to reassure them that all was well.

Amaechi noted that NIMASA was on top of the situation. He said that government was paying a huge amount of money for surveillance, and this would ensure that crime on the waterways stop.

“Those that go into the water do not live in the water; those criminals live with us, and the military both in terms of intelligence and physical assets will go and comb them out.

“Problem of insecurity is a problem of hunger, education and poverty and so we need to invest in infrastructure which will create employment for the poor man,” the added.

The Director-General of NIMASA, Dr Dakuku Peterside, said that the country was not handing over its waterways to the Israeli to man. According to him, they are there to provide training and assets for the security operatives who will man the assets on the country’s waterways.

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