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NIMASA goes tough on untrained, uncertified boat skippers

By Sulaimon Salau
22 July 2020   |   3:37 am
Worried by the fatal boat mishaps on the country’s inland waterways, the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), has threatened to get tough with untrained...
Director-General, NIMASA, Bashir Jamoh

Worried by the fatal boat mishaps on the country’s inland waterways, the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), has threatened to get tough with untrained and uncertified boat skippers, who often ignored safety procedures and endangered the lives of passengers.

The Director-General, NIMASA, Bashir Jamoh, who made this threat during a courtesy visit by the General Manager, the Lagos State Waterways Authority (LASWA), Oluwadamilola Emmanuel, suggested the development of cohesive safety enforcement guidelines and regulations for implementation across the littoral states.

He said the harmonisation of standards and procedures for safety in the territorial waters would go a long way in minimising unsafe practices by operators of non-conventional vessels, which are not subject to international standards, but rely mainly on national regulations.

He said: “We have a number of boat skippers that are not trained, and not knowledgeable enough and they do not have certification. They only know how to manoeuvre the boat and risk people’s lives.

“We will now start to check that. The issue is important, that is why I would start to take it more seriously, because charity begins at home. If we have enforcement officers and they are laid back, they will continue to watch what is happening without doing anything.”

He added, “I am glad to see the synergy and collaboration that is developing with the Lagos State Waterways Authority because we all have as our common mandate the job of ensuring safety in our waters.”

Jamoh said the Federal Ministry of Transportation was also in the process of building unified enforcement guidelines for safety in the country’s waters, stressing that the synergy between NIMASA and the Lagos State Government would help to fast track the process.

He urged greater supervision of officers engaged in the enforcement of safety standards.

“Our responsibility is to ensure that we monitor and supervise the staff that are given the responsibility of enforcing the issue of safety at sea,” he stated, adding that safety procedures, such as availability of adequate lifejackets, good condition of the boat, and time of use must be verified by enforcement officers before a boat sets sail.

On his part, the LASWA General Manager promised to intensify information sharing between his agency and NIMASA, as part of efforts to improve collaboration for maritime safety.

“We have the database of small craft, which I believe that we would be ready to share with NIMASA,” Emmanuel said.

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