Editor's Choice
MWUN condemns living conditions on Ship & Shore Services Ltd Vessels

The Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria (MWUN) through its President General, Comrade Francis Bunu, has expressed strong condemnation over the dehumanizing living conditions faced by its members who are seafarers on board vessels belonging to Ship & Shore Services Ltd in Lagos. The affected vessels include the “MT Bawarza” tanker vessel and two tugboats, “Battle Axe” and “MT Spain”.
MWUN’s Concerns:
– Deplorable living conditions: The union highlighted the poor and unhygienic living conditions on board the vessels, which expose seafarers to various infections and communicable diseases.
– Inhumane treatment: MWUN expressed dismay over the inhumane treatment of its members, which compromises their health and safety.
– Neglect of safety standards: The union noted that the living conditions on board the vessels neglect safety, health, and humane living standards, which are fundamental rights of seafarers.
MWUN’s Actions:
– Reporting to government agency: The union has reported the matter to the appropriate government agency for immediate intervention.
– Demanding improvement: MWUN has vowed not to let the issue fizzle away and will work to ensure that the living conditions on board the vessels are improved to meet safety and health standards.
MWUN’s Commitment:
The Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria remains committed to protecting the rights and welfare of its members. The union will continue to work tirelessly to ensure that seafarers are treated with dignity and respect, and that their working conditions meet international standards.
Editor's Choice
MARAN President Onigbinde Wins Maritime Reporter of the Year at Transport Day Awards

MARAN President Onigbinde Wins Maritime Reporter of the Year at Transport Day Awards
By Ighoyota Onaibre | Waterways News
Oluyinka Onigbinde, President of the Maritime Reporters’ Association of Nigeria (MARAN), has been named Maritime Reporter of the Year at the 12th Nigerian Transport Lecture and Awards organised by Transport Day Media — a recognition that underscores the growing visibility of dedicated maritime journalism within Nigeria’s broader transport discourse.
The award was presented before an assembly of senior stakeholders from Nigeria’s transport, ports, and blue economy sectors, with organisers citing Onigbinde’s consistency in industry reporting, his in-depth policy coverage, and his sustained commitment to advancing informed public conversation on Nigeria’s maritime development.
This year’s lecture, themed “Intermodal Transportation Safety in Nigeria: Prospects, Challenges and Contributions to National Growth,” drew policymakers, regulators, transport operators, and media professionals. Former Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) Corps Marshal Boboye Oyeyemi delivered the keynote, focusing on safety improvements across all modes of transport in Nigeria.
Onigbinde, who also serves as Assistant Editor of Shipping Position Daily, has built a reputation over the years for rigorous coverage of Nigeria’s ports, shipping operations, customs administration, freight forwarding, and blue economy policy. His work has included investigative reports, exclusive interviews, and analysis of port reform and trade facilitation issues that directly shape the operating environment for maritime industry practitioners.
His emergence as MARAN President adds a leadership dimension to his journalism profile. In that role, he has pledged to strengthen the association’s engagement with industry stakeholders and uphold the standards of credible maritime reporting in Nigeria.
Receiving the award, Onigbinde dedicated the recognition to colleagues, mentors, MARAN members, and the wider industry community that has supported his career. He described the honour as both humbling and a renewed obligation to pursue factual, balanced, and impactful reporting — one that contributes meaningfully to the growth of Nigeria’s maritime and transport sectors.
The Transport Day Media Awards are widely regarded as one of the sector’s key platforms for acknowledging individuals and organisations whose work has advanced Nigeria’s transport ecosystem through policy advocacy, operational excellence, and media coverage.
Nigeria Watch
The recognition of a maritime journalist at a national transport forum carries significance beyond the individual being honoured. It reflects a growing acknowledgement within Nigeria’s policy and industry circles that quality maritime journalism is not peripheral to sector development — it is part of the infrastructure of accountability.
Nigeria’s maritime sector operates in an environment where regulatory opacity, concession disputes, cabotage compliance gaps, and port efficiency challenges remain persistent concerns for operators. The quality of journalism covering these issues directly affects how well-informed stakeholders, investors, and policymakers are when making decisions that shape the blue economy.
MARAN, under new leadership, has an opportunity to push for stronger press accreditation standards at key maritime regulatory bodies — including NIMASA and the NPA — greater information flow from government agencies to the maritime press, and structured platforms for engagement between reporters and technical experts in shipping, logistics, and port operations.
Nigerian maritime journalism, when at its best, performs a watchdog function that complements the work of regulators. Recognising its practitioners at the highest levels of the transport sector is a step in the right direction.
Blue Economy
NPA, Stakeholders Chart Course to End Lekki Port Corridor Traffic Crisis

NPA, Stakeholders Chart Course to End Lekki Port Corridor Traffic Crisis
By Okeoghene Onoriobe | Waterways News
The Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) has convened a high-level stakeholders’ meeting to tackle the chronic traffic gridlock that has paralysed access roads to Lekki Deep Seaport and its surrounding industrial corridor for over a year, with participants agreeing on concrete measures to restore order to one of Nigeria’s most strategically important port gateways.
The meeting, chaired by Lekki Port Manager Emmanuel Anda, brought together representatives of the Lagos State Government, Lekki Port management, Dangote Refinery, truck owners’ associations, and the Electronic Truck Call-Up System operator, Mycallup — signalling a coordinated multi-agency response to a problem that has long frustrated port users and logistics operators.
A central resolution from the meeting was the outright prohibition of stationary trucks and tankers along the Lekki port corridor. Going forward, all trucks must remain in designated holding bays and waiting areas until they receive electronic clearance to proceed to the port or adjacent industrial facilities.
The agreement followed a joint inspection of the Lekki access roads by meeting participants, who observed firsthand the scale of the congestion. Stakeholders subsequently resolved that the situation could no longer be allowed to continue unchecked.
Dangote Refinery Trucks Identified as Key Factor
Mycallup’s representative, Timi Koteolu, identified trucks servicing Dangote Refinery outside the electronic scheduling platform as a significant contributor to the bottleneck. He noted that many drivers operating with Dangote’s Authority to Collect (ATC) permits had been parking indiscriminately along corridor roads while awaiting refinery access — and that these trucks are currently not integrated into the port’s electronic call-up system.
Dangote Refinery’s representative, Jaiyeola Moshood, clarified that the ATC permits represent the approved access mechanism for tankers entering the refinery. However, Mycallup maintained its position: trucks without an active call-up must not approach the port corridor and should remain in designated waiting areas until required.
Lekki Port Manager Anda specifically urged Dangote Refinery to fully integrate with the electronic truck call-up platform, noting that such collaboration would substantially reduce indiscriminate truck presence on access roads. He further assured participants that discussions with Dangote Refinery management would continue to strengthen coordination of truck movements, with ATC-permit vehicles only permitted to proceed when duly cleared.
The Association of Maritime Truck Owners (AMATO) and the National Association of Road Transport Owners (NARTO) pledged support for the initiative, committing to sensitise their members while calling for firm enforcement of traffic regulations. NUPENG’s Dangote Refinery Coordinator, Ademola Adeshina, also assured stakeholders of his members’ readiness to comply with the established Standard Operating Procedures.
Nigeria Watch
The Lekki port corridor gridlock is more than a traffic management problem — it is a symptom of the infrastructural and coordination deficit that continues to shadow Nigeria’s ambitions for a world-class port ecosystem.
Lekki Deep Seaport was designed as a transformational asset: a deep-draft facility capable of receiving the large vessels that historically bypassed Nigeria for Lomé, Abidjan, and Tema. Its proximity to the Dangote Refinery — the largest single-train refinery in the world — amplified that promise, creating what should be a uniquely powerful industrial and logistics corridor on the Lagos coast.
Yet the gridlock that has persisted for over a year on those same access roads tells a different story. It exposes a coordination gap that was foreseeable: two enormous, truck-intensive operations — a major seaport and a 650,000-barrel-per-day refinery — sharing corridor infrastructure without a unified traffic and scheduling framework from the outset.
The NPA deserves credit for convening this meeting and driving a stakeholder-wide response. Equally important is the frank identification of the Dangote Refinery’s ATC-permit trucks as a key factor — an acknowledgement that is necessary before any durable solution can take hold. The call for the refinery to integrate with the Mycallup electronic call-up platform is the right prescription. Until the corridor’s two dominant traffic generators operate on a single, synchronised scheduling system, ad hoc enforcement alone will struggle to hold.
For Nigeria’s maritime sector, the stakes extend beyond Lekki. The port’s performance directly influences how global shipping lines and terminal operators assess Nigeria’s readiness to handle increased cargo volumes — and whether the country can translate its port infrastructure investments into measurable trade competitiveness. A corridor choked with waiting tankers and unscheduled trucks undermines that case.
The broader lesson is one that NPA, NIMASA, and Lagos State should absorb as Badagry Deep Seaport, Ibom Deep Seaport, and other greenfield port projects advance: corridor traffic management frameworks must be designed and agreed before operations begin, not retrofitted after a crisis has taken hold.
Editor's Choice
UK Commandos Board Russian Shadow Fleet Tanker in Historic English Channel Seizure

UK Commandos Board Russian Shadow Fleet Tanker in Historic English Channel Seizure
First British-led operation targets oil revenues bankrolling Moscow’s Ukraine war
By Okeoghene Onoriobe | Waterways News
Royal Marine Commandos have boarded and seized a sanctioned Russian shadow fleet tanker in the English Channel in what is being described as a landmark escalation by the United Kingdom in the global effort to choke off the oil revenues sustaining Russia’s military campaign in Ukraine.The vessel, identified as the Smyrtos and sailing under a Cameroon flag, was intercepted in the early hours of Sunday in a joint operation involving Chinook helicopters, surveillance aircraft, a Royal Navy frigate, and a Royal Navy minehunter — a deployment that underscored the seriousness with which London is now approaching sanctions enforcement on the high seas.Officers from the National Crime Agency (NCA) accompanied the commandos onto the vessel, scrutinising cargo records and shipping documents as part of ongoing investigations. Footage released by the British government showed commandos fast-roping onto the tanker’s deck in the pre-dawn darkness.
It is the first time Britain has taken the lead in directly interdicting a vessel linked to Russia’s shadow fleet — a murky network of ageing, obscurely-owned tankers that Moscow has deployed to move its crude oil beyond the reach of Western sanctions.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the operation sent an unambiguous message to those propping up the Kremlin’s war chest. “This successful operation delivers yet another blow to Russia and reminds those fuelling Putin’s war in Ukraine that we will not let them hide,” he posted on X.
The Smyrtos will remain detained off England’s south coast pending further investigation. Paris co-operated closely with London in the operation, the UK government confirmed.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky welcomed the seizure and called on European governments to go even further, urging legislative action that would permit not just the detention of tankers but the outright confiscation of their cargoes. “This will certainly help bring peace closer,” he wrote.
Britain has been steadily tightening its grip on shadow fleet activity. Since launching its crackdown, London has sanctioned close to 600 vessels associated with the network. In March, Prime Minister Starmer authorised the British military to board and detain Russian-linked ships suspected of sanctions evasion — authority that was used operationally for the first time on Sunday.
What it means for global shipping
The operation carries significant implications for maritime commerce worldwide, including for Nigerian shipping operators, freight forwarders, and vessel owners with international exposure. Flag states — including African nations whose flags have been exploited by shadow fleet operators seeking cover — may face increased scrutiny from European maritime authorities.
Nigeria, as a prominent flag-of-convenience registrant and a major oil-exporting nation, has a stake in how the international community tightens regulations around tanker ownership transparency, beneficial ownership disclosure, and sanctioned-cargo tracking. The Cameroon flag flown by the Smyrtos at the time of its seizure is a reminder that African maritime registries can be drawn into geopolitical disputes well beyond the continent’s shores.
Maritime legal experts say the British action may embolden other nations to adopt more aggressive enforcement postures, potentially reshaping the legal landscape around vessel detention in international and territorial waters.
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