They are not finding it easy to return to their various
places of abode due to increase in transport fares.
As such,
most of intending travellers have decided to stay back pending when the fares
would be reduced by transporters.
P.M.NEWS
investigation showed that unlike in the case after previous festivities,
passengers have not besieged transport companies after the yuletide season. In
spite of the few passengers around, transport companies have almost doubled the
fares to various destinations.
Some of
the companies our reporter visited in some states in the east include GUO
Motors, Libra Motors, God Is Good Motors, Peace Motors, among others.
In major
towns in Anambra, Imo, Enugu, Ebony states, transporters have increased fares
astronomically.
Transporters
whose buses are plying Lagos, Abuja, Ibadan from Onitsha, Ogidi, Ekwolobia,
Awka and Ihiala charge between N7,000 and N8,000 unlike in the past when the
fares were drastically reduced after Christmas.
Our
reporter also gathered that in states such as Cross River, Akwa Ibom and Abia,
passengers now pay between N9,000 and N12,000 for trips to Abuja, Lagos, Ondo
and Ogun respectively.
In Asaba,
Delta State capital, the fares are slightly different as transporters collect
between N6,000
and
N8,000 for a trip to Lagos, depending on the transport company.
Libra
Motors manager, Gabriel Offor, offered explanation on why the fares were almost
doubled.
He said
any bus that loaded from the east to Lagos or Abuja will return empty and the
driver will buy petrol so they have to pass the burden to travellers.
Offor
noted that in the past, after Christmas celebration the fares usually reduced,
adding it was not the case this year due to fuel scarcity.
One of
the passengers who spoke to our reporter, Mrs Rose Okeke, said she was stranded
in Onitsha due to the high fare.
She said
she travelled to their town, Ogidi, in Anambra State, with her four children
who are supposed to go back to Lagos to resume school after Christmas.
She said
she was shocked when she was told that the fare had been increased to N8,000
for the trip back to Lagos.
Mrs.
Okeke said she had to go back home because she could not afford the fare.
Another
passenger, Mike Obialor said he was surprised about the fare increase.
He said
in the past, the fares were increased before Christmas and after Christmas,
transporters reduced them so that people could easily go back to their bases
after spending so much during the festivities.
He
attributed the cash crunch people are facing to the economic situation in the
country and urged the Federal Government to do something to alleviate the
plight of Nigerians.
Mrs
Ifesinachi Ubah who was supposed to go back to Abuja with her husband and their
five children said when they came to Ontisha park to board a bus, her husband
discovered that he had no such money to take all of them back to Abuja.
She said
they split the children and he took two of them to Abuja while the other three
remained with her in Ontisha until her husband gets to Abuja to raise some
money and send to her.
P.M.NEWS
gathered that it is the same story in most states as some men have abandoned
their wives and children and returned to their bases pending when the transport
fares would reduce.
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