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Nigerian Railway Corporation

Nigerian Railway Corporation (commonly abbreviated as NRC) is the state-owned enterprise with exclusive rights to operate railways in Nigeria.

Railway system of Nigeria 2021
Nigerian Railway Billboard after invention.

History and legislative background

 
The railway passing through valleys.

The Nigerian Railway Corporation traces its history to the year 1898, when the first railroad in Nigeria was constructed by the British colonial government. On October 3, 1912, the Lagos Government Railway and the Baro-Kano Railway were amalgamated,[1] starting nationwide rail service under the name Government Department of Railways. With the passing of the Nigerian Railway Corporation Act of 1955, the company gained its current name as well as the exclusive legal right to construct and operate rail service in Nigeria.[2] The rail network reached its maximum extent shortly after Nigerian independence, in 1964. Shortly after that, the NRC entered a long period of decline, inept management, and eventually a complete lack of maintenance of rail and locomotive assets. In 1988, NRC declared bankruptcy, and all rail traffic stopped for six months. After that, trains resumed, where the tracks were usable. By 2002, passenger service was again discontinued altogether.[3] Starting in 2006, plans were made to restore the rail lines and add new locomotives with foreign assistance. In December 2012 regular, scheduled passenger service was restored on the Lagos to Kano line.

The Nigerian Railway Corporation recorded record revenues of 2.12 billion naira (approximately €4.664 million) in the first half of 2021, an increase of 31% over the same period in 2019, which recorded the previous record revenue. At the same time, revenue from freight transport was down, with gains coming mainly from passenger transport between Lagos and Ibadan on the new standard gauge.[4][5]

Infrastructure and operations

 
Main railway station Lagos in Ebute Metta, artistic impression
 
New railway station in Lagos suburb Agege, artistic impression
 
New railway station in Ibadan, artistic impression
 
New railway station in Abeokuta, artistic impression

Rail lines

Nigerian Railway Corporation operates a network of 3,505 kilometers (2,178 mi) of single track lines 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) gauge, as well as 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) from Abuja to Kaduna.

General None of the NRC's lines is electrified. 157 kilometers are double-tracked. These are located between Lagos and Ibadan. The rail lines are mostly built of rails with a weight per meter of 29.8 kg, 34.7 kg or 39.7 kg. In total, the NRC network is almost 4,000 kilometers long. The government is considering converting the existing rail network from cape gauge to standard gauge.

Cape gauge lines

The Nigerian Railway Corporation operates a 3,505-kilometer Cape Gauge network consisting of the following lines:

Lagos-Agege-Ifaw-Ibadan-Ilorin-Minna-Kaduna-Zaria-Kano, 1126 kilometers. Ifaw-Ilaro, 20 kilometers Minna-Baro, 155 kilometers Zaria-Kaura Namoda, 245 kilometers Kano-Nguru Kaduna-Kafanchan-Kuru-Bauchi-Maiduguri, 885 kilometers Kuru-Jos, 55 kilometers Kafanchan-Makurdi-Enugu-Port Harcourt, 737 kilometers Under construction is the 1,443-kilometer Eastern Rail Line from Port Harcourt to Maiduguri since March 9, 2021, with construction activities including renovation or reconstruction of existing lines. The project also includes new branch lines to Owerri and Damaturu, increasing the total length 2,044 km. Completion is scheduled for 2024.[6][7]

Funding for the Lagos-Calabar rail line along the Nigerian coast to be built under Chinese management was released in early 2021, but the start of construction appears to be delayed to a date after the Nigerian general election in 2023.[8]

The line to Gusau has been closed since a bridge collapsed in 2002.[9]

The NRC network does not yet connect to the rail network of neighboring states. However, in February 2021, construction began on a cape-gauge link from Kano to Maradi, the second-largest city in Niger, under the auspices of Portugal's Mota-Engil SGPS SA, with planned inauguration in 2023, which will be one of the first rail lines in Niger.[10]

In September 2022, after a 10-year interruption, the Cape Gauge service from Bauchi to the suburb of Inkil resumed. Train services in this area, northeastern Nigeria, were at a standstill due to the Boko Haram unrest and were subsequently renovated.[11]

Standard gauge lines

A standard gauge network is developing.

The oldest standard-gauge line is the original 217-kilometer line from Oturkpo to the Ajaokuta steel mill. An earlier standard gauge line of 51.5 kilometers operated between the Itakp mines and the Ajaokuta steel mill. On September 29, 2020, an extension, the Warri-Itakpe Railway, was officially opened by President Muhammadu Buhari in a virtual ceremony.[12] In 2018, employees of China Civil Engineering Construction working on the project had been attacked twice by "bandits."[13] Passenger trains have been running on the standard gauge line since October 2020[14] and freight trains since April 2021.[15] There are also plans for an extension here: from Ajaokuta to Abuja. This would give the line a length of 500 kilometers. Another planned line runs from Port Harcourt to Makurdi over a length of 463 kilometers.

Construction of the Abuja-Kaduna line[16] by the Chinese construction company CCECC began in February 2011, and it was finally inaugurated on July 26, 2016. The total cost was US$870 million. The 186.5-kilometer line, which begins in Idu 20 kilometers west of central Abuja, requires two hours of travel time for high-speed trains with a maximum speed of 100 km/h. In August 2020, NRC reported that about 50% of the revenue of its entire rail network (about 4,000 km) would be generated by the standard gauge Abuja-Kaduna line (186 km).[17][18][19] That Nigerians like to take the train between the capital Abuja and the next largest city Kaduna also has very serious reasons. Indeed, the "highway" between the two cities is a constant target for muggers. A train journey is thus the safer alternative to a car for residents of both cities. In 2019, a train traveler says, "I was kidnapped and now only travel by train!"[20] Celebrities are also affected: As recently as November 20, 2021, Zamfara State governorship candidate Sagir Hamidu died in a robbery on the said Abuja-Kaduna Expressway.[21] Train traveler Agatha Ameh says, "Although, I know some people who still travel by road, possibly because it’s cheaper, I will prefer the train services any day, any time. It’s safer, smoother, and even faster." She particularly praises the e-ticketing platform on the Abuja-Kaduna line.[22] - On 28 March 2022, the Abuja-Kaduna line was the target of a terrorist attack in which a large number of passengers and train staff were killed or kidnapped.[23] Some of the 168 abductees were gradually released for ransom. The line was shut down. Five months later, the terrorists still hold some hostages. However, there are increasing voices, especially from Muslim associations, to restart the train service between Abuja and Kaduna anyway.[24]

The Lagos-Ibadan double-track line has been under construction by CCECC since March 2017 and was inaugurated at the new Lagos Central Station on June 10, 2021.[25] It is 157 km long and passes through Abeokuta. It is the first double-track standard gauge line in West Africa. A Lagos-Ibadan journey takes two and a half hours, half as long as the equivalent car journey. All compartments (standard class, business class and first class) are air-conditioned and have three overhead screens. The window seats are equipped with power outlets and USB charging stations.[26] Criticisms include the fact that tickets are not available online and only for cash payment, and that there are only two trips a day in each direction. There is praise for the punctuality and cleanliness of the trains.[27] The Cape Gauge tracks, which continue to exist, are to be shared by the "Red Line" of the Lagos Light Rail, which is currently under construction.

Modern station buildings have been constructed along all new standard gauge lines. The new main station of Lagos, Mobolaji Johnson, for example, offers air-conditioned waiting rooms, handicapped access to the tracks, airport-like display boards of departure times, clean toilets, trained personnel for medical emergencies, etc.

Stations

Trains

Trains offer relatively new rolling stock consisting of Couchette-type sleepers, air-conditioned first class sitting coaches and non-air conditioned economy class coaches. Trains to/from Lagos also offer buffet cars. Between Lagos and Ifo, a distance of 48 kilometers (30 mi), a local service operates on working days on behalf of the city of Lagos.

All trains are diesel locomotive operated. The railways owns nearly 200 locomotives, of which up to 75% are not operational. It also owns about 54 shunters, 480 passenger coaches and over 4900 freight wagons; less than 50% of the coaches and wagons are in serviceable conditions.

No trains have run on the Gusau branch since a bridge collapsed in Tsafe in 2002.[28]

Recent history

 
Nigerian Railway Yard Minna, Niger state.jpg

NRC went more than once into bankruptcy during the last 20 years. Lack of maintenance on infrastructure and rolling stock and a high number of employees the railway produced huge deficits, not taken over by the state. In 2005 after several re-organisations of the system passenger transport was reduced to four departures weekly from Lagos of which two went to Kano, one to Jos and one to Maiduguri; from Port Harcourt four trains every week ran to Kano (two weekly), one weekly to Jos and one to Maiduguri.

Status in 2008

According to the critique by Mazi Jetson Nwakwo, acting managing director of the NRC the rail system is suffering from the lack of political will by the nation's politicians. While the NRC had employed about 45,000 people between 1954 and 1975, current employment is only 6,516.[29] He pointed out that no new wagons had been bought since 1993, and some wagons date back to 1948. Track condition limits trains to a speed of 35 km/h.

See also

Specifications

References

  1. ^ Stocker, John. Nigerian Railway Jubilee, 1901-1951: An Illustrated and Descriptive History of the Nigerian Railway (Lagos Railway, Wushishi Tramway, Baro Kano Railway), 1951. Retrieved November 12, 2013.
  2. ^ "nrc-ng.org". nrc-ng.org. Retrieved 2022-04-24.
  3. ^ "Nigeriaworld Feature Article - The urgent need for rail transportation in Nigeria". nigeriaworld.com. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  4. ^ Benjamin Alade (2021-09-24). "Demand for rail services rises as NRC generates N2.1bn in six months". The Guardian. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  5. ^ Isah Abdul-Azeez (2021-09-10). "Nigeria's rail revenue rises as passengers pick safer option". International Centre for Investigative Reporting. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  6. ^ Patrick Mulyungi (2021-08-14). "Port Harcourt-Maiduguri rail line reconstruction project flagged off". Thisday. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  7. ^ "CCECC secures $3.02bn contract on Nigerian Eastern Railway in Nigeria". 2021-04-29. Retrieved 2021-12-05.
  8. ^ Tony Iyare (2021-11-12). "Shifting goalpost on Lagos-Calabar railway". Thisday. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  9. ^ Railways Africa, ed. (2021-04-28). "Rail closure prejudices economy". Retrieved 2010-11-17.
  10. ^ "Nigeria-Niger (Kano-Maradi) Railway line construction begins". Construction Review Online. 2021-08-14. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  11. ^ "Nigeria Railway Corporation resumes services in Bauchi after 10 years - P.M. News". Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  12. ^ Johnbosco Agbakwuru und Dirisu Yakubu (2020-09-29). "Updated: FG commissions Itakpe-Warri rail line". Vanguard. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  13. ^ Dorcas Daniel (2018-09-17). "How Gunmen Attacked Chinese Contractor CCECC At Itakpe". Dailytrust. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  14. ^ Abuja Okechukwu Nnodim (2020-10-19). "NRC begins Warri-Itakpe rail line passenger services". The Punch Newspaper. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  15. ^ Dirisu Yakubu (2021-04-16). "30 years after, freight services begin on Warri-Itakpe rail line". Vanguard. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  16. ^ . Railways Africa. 2011-02-14. Archived from the original on 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2011-02-19.
  17. ^ Keith Barrow (2016-07-26). "Nigeria inaugurates Abuja – Kaduna railway". Railjournal. Retrieved 2016-08-22.
  18. ^ Katrin Gänsler (2019-05-31). Bahn fahren in Nigeria: Sichere Ankunft statt Entführung. Die Tageszeitung: taz. ISSN 0931-9085. Retrieved 2019-06-01.
  19. ^ "NRC generated N3bn from train services in 2019 - MD". pulse.ng. 2020-08-07. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  20. ^ "I was kidnapped and now only travel by train". BBC News. 2019-11-07. Retrieved 2021-12-05.
  21. ^ "Bandits reportedly kill Zamfara 2023 governorship aspirant, Sagir Hamidu". 2021-11-22. Retrieved 2021-12-05.
  22. ^ "Abuja-Kaduna: We now prefer to travel by train, Nigerians speak". 2021-08-30. Retrieved 2021-12-05.
  23. ^ Maishanu, Abubakar Ahmadu (2022-04-04). "One week after Kaduna train attack, 168 passengers still unaccounted for - NRC". Premium Times Nigeria. Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  24. ^ Nwachukwu, John Owen (2022-09-02). "Abuja-Kaduna train: You're making big mistake - Islamic group warns those stopping rail services". Daily Post Nigeria. Retrieved 2022-09-04.
  25. ^ Segun Adewole (2021-06-10). The Punch Newspaper (ed.). "Buhari inaugurates Lagos-Ibadan Railway project". Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  26. ^ Olatunji Saliu (2021-09-02). "(Hello Africa) Chinese-built Lagos-Ibadan railway brings convenience, opportunities in Nigeria". XINHUANET.com. Retrieved 2021-12-01.
  27. ^ Gbenga Akinfenwa (2021-10-31). "Unpleasant tales from Lagos-Ibadan train service". The Guardian. Retrieved 2021-12-01.
  28. ^ "RAIL CLOSURE PREJUDICES ECONOMY". Railways Africa. Retrieved 2010-11-17.
  29. ^ Railways Africa report, accessed 2/6/2008
  30. ^ a b "trans zambesia locomotive, AEI, malawi locomotive, nigeria locomotive". www.derbysulzers.com. Retrieved 2017-08-30.

External links

  • Official website

nigerian, railway, corporation, commonly, abbreviated, state, owned, enterprise, with, exclusive, rights, operate, railways, nigeria, railway, system, nigeria, 2021, nigerian, railway, billboard, after, invention, contents, history, legislative, background, in. Nigerian Railway Corporation commonly abbreviated as NRC is the state owned enterprise with exclusive rights to operate railways in Nigeria Railway system of Nigeria 2021 Nigerian Railway Billboard after invention Contents 1 History and legislative background 2 Infrastructure and operations 2 1 Rail lines 2 1 1 Cape gauge lines 2 1 2 Standard gauge lines 2 2 Stations 2 3 Trains 3 Recent history 4 Status in 2008 5 See also 6 Specifications 7 References 8 External linksHistory and legislative background Edit The railway passing through valleys The Nigerian Railway Corporation traces its history to the year 1898 when the first railroad in Nigeria was constructed by the British colonial government On October 3 1912 the Lagos Government Railway and the Baro Kano Railway were amalgamated 1 starting nationwide rail service under the name Government Department of Railways With the passing of the Nigerian Railway Corporation Act of 1955 the company gained its current name as well as the exclusive legal right to construct and operate rail service in Nigeria 2 The rail network reached its maximum extent shortly after Nigerian independence in 1964 Shortly after that the NRC entered a long period of decline inept management and eventually a complete lack of maintenance of rail and locomotive assets In 1988 NRC declared bankruptcy and all rail traffic stopped for six months After that trains resumed where the tracks were usable By 2002 passenger service was again discontinued altogether 3 Starting in 2006 plans were made to restore the rail lines and add new locomotives with foreign assistance In December 2012 regular scheduled passenger service was restored on the Lagos to Kano line The Nigerian Railway Corporation recorded record revenues of 2 12 billion naira approximately 4 664 million in the first half of 2021 an increase of 31 over the same period in 2019 which recorded the previous record revenue At the same time revenue from freight transport was down with gains coming mainly from passenger transport between Lagos and Ibadan on the new standard gauge 4 5 Infrastructure and operations Edit Main railway station Lagos in Ebute Metta artistic impression New railway station in Lagos suburb Agege artistic impression New railway station in Ibadan artistic impression New railway station in Abeokuta artistic impression Main article Rail transport in Nigeria Rail lines Edit Nigerian Railway Corporation operates a network of 3 505 kilometers 2 178 mi of single track lines 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in gauge as well as 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in from Abuja to Kaduna General None of the NRC s lines is electrified 157 kilometers are double tracked These are located between Lagos and Ibadan The rail lines are mostly built of rails with a weight per meter of 29 8 kg 34 7 kg or 39 7 kg In total the NRC network is almost 4 000 kilometers long The government is considering converting the existing rail network from cape gauge to standard gauge Cape gauge lines Edit The Nigerian Railway Corporation operates a 3 505 kilometer Cape Gauge network consisting of the following lines Lagos Agege Ifaw Ibadan Ilorin Minna Kaduna Zaria Kano 1126 kilometers Ifaw Ilaro 20 kilometers Minna Baro 155 kilometers Zaria Kaura Namoda 245 kilometers Kano Nguru Kaduna Kafanchan Kuru Bauchi Maiduguri 885 kilometers Kuru Jos 55 kilometers Kafanchan Makurdi Enugu Port Harcourt 737 kilometers Under construction is the 1 443 kilometer Eastern Rail Line from Port Harcourt to Maiduguri since March 9 2021 with construction activities including renovation or reconstruction of existing lines The project also includes new branch lines to Owerri and Damaturu increasing the total length 2 044 km Completion is scheduled for 2024 6 7 Funding for the Lagos Calabar rail line along the Nigerian coast to be built under Chinese management was released in early 2021 but the start of construction appears to be delayed to a date after the Nigerian general election in 2023 8 The line to Gusau has been closed since a bridge collapsed in 2002 9 The NRC network does not yet connect to the rail network of neighboring states However in February 2021 construction began on a cape gauge link from Kano to Maradi the second largest city in Niger under the auspices of Portugal s Mota Engil SGPS SA with planned inauguration in 2023 which will be one of the first rail lines in Niger 10 In September 2022 after a 10 year interruption the Cape Gauge service from Bauchi to the suburb of Inkil resumed Train services in this area northeastern Nigeria were at a standstill due to the Boko Haram unrest and were subsequently renovated 11 Standard gauge lines Edit A standard gauge network is developing The oldest standard gauge line is the original 217 kilometer line from Oturkpo to the Ajaokuta steel mill An earlier standard gauge line of 51 5 kilometers operated between the Itakp mines and the Ajaokuta steel mill On September 29 2020 an extension the Warri Itakpe Railway was officially opened by President Muhammadu Buhari in a virtual ceremony 12 In 2018 employees of China Civil Engineering Construction working on the project had been attacked twice by bandits 13 Passenger trains have been running on the standard gauge line since October 2020 14 and freight trains since April 2021 15 There are also plans for an extension here from Ajaokuta to Abuja This would give the line a length of 500 kilometers Another planned line runs from Port Harcourt to Makurdi over a length of 463 kilometers Construction of the Abuja Kaduna line 16 by the Chinese construction company CCECC began in February 2011 and it was finally inaugurated on July 26 2016 The total cost was US 870 million The 186 5 kilometer line which begins in Idu 20 kilometers west of central Abuja requires two hours of travel time for high speed trains with a maximum speed of 100 km h In August 2020 NRC reported that about 50 of the revenue of its entire rail network about 4 000 km would be generated by the standard gauge Abuja Kaduna line 186 km 17 18 19 That Nigerians like to take the train between the capital Abuja and the next largest city Kaduna also has very serious reasons Indeed the highway between the two cities is a constant target for muggers A train journey is thus the safer alternative to a car for residents of both cities In 2019 a train traveler says I was kidnapped and now only travel by train 20 Celebrities are also affected As recently as November 20 2021 Zamfara State governorship candidate Sagir Hamidu died in a robbery on the said Abuja Kaduna Expressway 21 Train traveler Agatha Ameh says Although I know some people who still travel by road possibly because it s cheaper I will prefer the train services any day any time It s safer smoother and even faster She particularly praises the e ticketing platform on the Abuja Kaduna line 22 On 28 March 2022 the Abuja Kaduna line was the target of a terrorist attack in which a large number of passengers and train staff were killed or kidnapped 23 Some of the 168 abductees were gradually released for ransom The line was shut down Five months later the terrorists still hold some hostages However there are increasing voices especially from Muslim associations to restart the train service between Abuja and Kaduna anyway 24 The Lagos Ibadan double track line has been under construction by CCECC since March 2017 and was inaugurated at the new Lagos Central Station on June 10 2021 25 It is 157 km long and passes through Abeokuta It is the first double track standard gauge line in West Africa A Lagos Ibadan journey takes two and a half hours half as long as the equivalent car journey All compartments standard class business class and first class are air conditioned and have three overhead screens The window seats are equipped with power outlets and USB charging stations 26 Criticisms include the fact that tickets are not available online and only for cash payment and that there are only two trips a day in each direction There is praise for the punctuality and cleanliness of the trains 27 The Cape Gauge tracks which continue to exist are to be shared by the Red Line of the Lagos Light Rail which is currently under construction Modern station buildings have been constructed along all new standard gauge lines The new main station of Lagos Mobolaji Johnson for example offers air conditioned waiting rooms handicapped access to the tracks airport like display boards of departure times clean toilets trained personnel for medical emergencies etc Stations Edit Main article Railway stations in Nigeria Trains Edit Trains offer relatively new rolling stock consisting of Couchette type sleepers air conditioned first class sitting coaches and non air conditioned economy class coaches Trains to from Lagos also offer buffet cars Between Lagos and Ifo a distance of 48 kilometers 30 mi a local service operates on working days on behalf of the city of Lagos All trains are diesel locomotive operated The railways owns nearly 200 locomotives of which up to 75 are not operational It also owns about 54 shunters 480 passenger coaches and over 4900 freight wagons less than 50 of the coaches and wagons are in serviceable conditions No trains have run on the Gusau branch since a bridge collapsed in Tsafe in 2002 28 Recent history Edit Nigerian Railway Yard Minna Niger state jpg NRC went more than once into bankruptcy during the last 20 years Lack of maintenance on infrastructure and rolling stock and a high number of employees the railway produced huge deficits not taken over by the state In 2005 after several re organisations of the system passenger transport was reduced to four departures weekly from Lagos of which two went to Kano one to Jos and one to Maiduguri from Port Harcourt four trains every week ran to Kano two weekly one weekly to Jos and one to Maiduguri Status in 2008 EditAccording to the critique by Mazi Jetson Nwakwo acting managing director of the NRC the rail system is suffering from the lack of political will by the nation s politicians While the NRC had employed about 45 000 people between 1954 and 1975 current employment is only 6 516 29 He pointed out that no new wagons had been bought since 1993 and some wagons date back to 1948 Track condition limits trains to a speed of 35 km h See also EditAgo Egba Jaekel House Lagos Terminus railway station Nigerian Railway locomotives Rail transport in Nigeria Transport in NigeriaSpecifications EditCouplers ABC 30 Brakes Vacuum 30 References Edit Stocker John Nigerian Railway Jubilee 1901 1951 An Illustrated and Descriptive History of the Nigerian Railway Lagos Railway Wushishi Tramway Baro Kano Railway 1951 Retrieved November 12 2013 nrc ng org nrc ng org Retrieved 2022 04 24 Nigeriaworld Feature Article The urgent need for rail transportation in Nigeria nigeriaworld com Retrieved 2017 08 30 Benjamin Alade 2021 09 24 Demand for rail services rises as NRC generates N2 1bn in six months The Guardian Retrieved 2021 12 04 Isah Abdul Azeez 2021 09 10 Nigeria s rail revenue rises as passengers pick safer option International Centre for Investigative Reporting Retrieved 2021 12 04 Patrick Mulyungi 2021 08 14 Port Harcourt Maiduguri rail line reconstruction project flagged off Thisday Retrieved 2021 12 04 CCECC secures 3 02bn contract on Nigerian Eastern Railway in Nigeria 2021 04 29 Retrieved 2021 12 05 Tony Iyare 2021 11 12 Shifting goalpost on Lagos Calabar railway Thisday Retrieved 2021 12 04 Railways Africa ed 2021 04 28 Rail closure prejudices economy Retrieved 2010 11 17 Nigeria Niger Kano Maradi Railway line construction begins Construction Review Online 2021 08 14 Retrieved 2021 12 04 Nigeria Railway Corporation resumes services in Bauchi after 10 years P M News Retrieved 2022 09 04 Johnbosco Agbakwuru und Dirisu Yakubu 2020 09 29 Updated FG commissions Itakpe Warri rail line Vanguard Retrieved 2021 12 04 Dorcas Daniel 2018 09 17 How Gunmen Attacked Chinese Contractor CCECC At Itakpe Dailytrust Retrieved 2021 12 04 Abuja Okechukwu Nnodim 2020 10 19 NRC begins Warri Itakpe rail line passenger services The Punch Newspaper Retrieved 2021 12 04 Dirisu Yakubu 2021 04 16 30 years after freight services begin on Warri Itakpe rail line Vanguard Retrieved 2021 12 04 Nigeria s Abuja Kaduna rail project Railways Africa 2011 02 14 Archived from the original on 2011 07 15 Retrieved 2011 02 19 Keith Barrow 2016 07 26 Nigeria inaugurates Abuja Kaduna railway Railjournal Retrieved 2016 08 22 Katrin Gansler 2019 05 31 Bahn fahren in Nigeria Sichere Ankunft statt Entfuhrung Die Tageszeitung taz ISSN 0931 9085 Retrieved 2019 06 01 NRC generated N3bn from train services in 2019 MD pulse ng 2020 08 07 Retrieved 2021 12 04 I was kidnapped and now only travel by train BBC News 2019 11 07 Retrieved 2021 12 05 Bandits reportedly kill Zamfara 2023 governorship aspirant Sagir Hamidu 2021 11 22 Retrieved 2021 12 05 Abuja Kaduna We now prefer to travel by train Nigerians speak 2021 08 30 Retrieved 2021 12 05 Maishanu Abubakar Ahmadu 2022 04 04 One week after Kaduna train attack 168 passengers still unaccounted for NRC Premium Times Nigeria Retrieved 2022 09 04 Nwachukwu John Owen 2022 09 02 Abuja Kaduna train You re making big mistake Islamic group warns those stopping rail services Daily Post Nigeria Retrieved 2022 09 04 Segun Adewole 2021 06 10 The Punch Newspaper ed Buhari inaugurates Lagos Ibadan Railway project Retrieved 2021 12 04 Olatunji Saliu 2021 09 02 Hello Africa Chinese built Lagos Ibadan railway brings convenience opportunities in Nigeria XINHUANET com Retrieved 2021 12 01 Gbenga Akinfenwa 2021 10 31 Unpleasant tales from Lagos Ibadan train service The Guardian Retrieved 2021 12 01 RAIL CLOSURE PREJUDICES ECONOMY Railways Africa Retrieved 2010 11 17 Railways Africa report accessed 2 6 2008 a b trans zambesia locomotive AEI malawi locomotive nigeria locomotive www derbysulzers com Retrieved 2017 08 30 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nigerian Railway Corporation amp oldid 1108432777, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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