* Commuters lament high transport fares, resort to trekking
Acute scarcity of the Premium Motor Spirit aka petrol has hit Abia State capital Umuahia and the commercial city of Aba.
The development has resulted in a sharp increase in the price of the product in service stations belonging to independent marketers.
The product now sells at between N190 and N220 per liter.
Major marketers, however, sell at the official pump price of N162, where the product is available.
Meanwhile, transport fares in Aba have shot up by about 100 per cent.
A short distance trip in the metropolis by bus, which hitherto cost N50 per passenger, has risen to N100.
From Osisioma, on the Aba-Port Harcourt Expressway, to any part of the metropolis, fares have gone up from N100 to N150.
Also, from Asannetu Market on the Aba end of the expressway into the metropolis by tricycle popularly called Keke, the fare, which was N300 before now, has gone up to N500 per commuter.
Unsuspecting commuters, who came out on Tuesday morning to go to their respective places of work, expressed shock over the development.
Some of them decried the situation, lamenting that it would add to their economic hardship.
A resident of Aba, Mrs. Onyinyechi Amarawuchi, described the hike as unexpected and coming at a time many families are struggling to provide food.
“This is unfair and government should intervene to restore normalcy in the supply of petrol to the state to put an end to the development.
Amarawuchi feared that the fare increase could have a consequential effect on the price of food items.
“You know the price of commodities in the country, especially food items, has a direct link with the cost of transportation.
“Bearing this in mind, government must strive to keep the cost of transportation in check to save the poor from abject poverty,” she said.
A tricycle operator, Eugene Ohalete, said he bought the commodity at N220 per liter, hence the hike in his fare.
“I hiked my fare because filling stations increased the price of petrol and I cannot buy fuel for N220 or N250 and collect N50 as fare per commuter.
“How do you want me to service my tricycle, pay the owner, who gave it to me on hire purchase and still feed my family, if I do not increase my fare?
“I don’t know why fuel prices went up. They cannot increase fuel price and expect transport fare to remain the same,” Ohalete said.
Several commuters in the city, who could not afford the sharp fare increases, resorted to trekking long distances to their destinations.
The scenario is not different in Umuahia, the State capital.
There were long vehicular queues in a few service stations belonging to major marketers selling the product at the official pump price.
Some motorists said the scarcity and hike in the price of the prodcut could heighten inflation rate and also worsen the economic situation in the area.
They, therefore, appealed to the government and relevant agencies and groups involved in the supply to urgently address the situation.
– NAN