The Anambra State Government has engaged a Canadian firm to design a masterplan for the construction of rail lines to ease transportation and boost the state economy.
This is fulfilling its recent promise to construct a rail line that will connect cities and communities of in the state.
Mr. Okey Ezeobi, the General Manager of the Anambra State Bureau of Public Procurement (ANSBPP), made this known in an interview with newsmen in Awka, the state capital, on Tuesday.
According to him, the Canadian-based infrastructure advisory organisation, CPCS Transcom Limited would see to the preparation and designing of the rail lines masterplan for the state.
While noting that the aim of the rail lines construction is to ease transportation and boost the state’s economy, Mr. Ezeobi said that the rail lines would run from Onitsha, the state’s commercial nerve centre, to Ihiala, targeting the Oseokwa Port through Nnewi, Igbo-Ukwu, Ekwulobia, Oko down to Umunze, the border town to Abia and Imo.
He further said a rail line would run to Awka, and another through Anambra North, heading towards the state’s boundary with Kogi.
Commending the vision, Ezeobi described Governor Soludo as a visionary leader who thinks about the future.
He said, “The Governor is futuristic.
“He is thinking about the state’s economy in the next 10 to 20 years and there is need to jumpstart it by providing the enabling environment for the economy and people to thrive.
“And for us to have a vibrant economy with an increased GDP, transportation is one huge infrastructure that we need.
“We are already courting the Federal Government to have ports in Onitsha and Oseokwa in Ihiala area.
“If you bring in containers, the fastest and cheapest way to move them out of the port is by rail.
“These are sustainable developments that, when the feasibilities are out, they are bankable projects.”
Speaking further, Mr. Ezeobi said the level of compliance to due process in public procurement was 100 per cent at the state level but still poor at the local government level. He added that the Bureau had plans underway to organise a six-day capacity building programme for Transition Committee Chairmen in the 21 LGAs and their procurement officers.
He said: “Procurement is a process that must reflect transparency.
“It tells the people what the government is doing and affords them enough information to interrogate public officials.
“As public officials, the local government leadership must be accountable in their handling of public funds.
“The state procurement process must be well-defined so that residents would know that the taxes collected from them are being deployed appropriately.”