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When the winds tore through Enugu last Sunday, they did more than rattle rooftops, they sparked a serious conversation about infrastructure, accountability, and preparedness. Holy Ghost Terminal 1 at the Enugu Central Station suffered visible damage, from shattered windows and torn roofing sheets to affected internal ceilings. But beyond the debris lies a deeper question: was this simply nature’s fury, or a stress test that exposed structural vulnerabilities? On this compelling conversation segment of our Morning Show, Around The Region, we sit down with Maazị Tochukwu Ezeoke: Political Economist, Project Management Consultant, and Media Practitioner, to unpack the issues arising from the incident and what they mean for public infrastructure management in Enugu State. Having assessed the structure alongside other analysts prior to the incident, Maazị Ezeoke offers a layered reaction to the extent of the damage. Was the destruction within reasonable expectations for a facility of that scale? Or does it raise red flags about material quality, supervision, and compliance with engineering standards? We also examine the long-term measures the state government should implement to protect critical public assets from recurring climate-related threats. From wind-load engineering standards and reinforced roofing systems to routine structural audits and climate-resilient urban planning, the conversation moves beyond immediate repairs to future-proofing Enugu’s transport architecture. Interestingly, despite the visible damage, commercial activities at the terminal continued uninterrupted. Passengers queued. CNG buses moved. Traders traded. Does this reflect commendable crisis management and operational resilience at the transport hub? Or does it highlight a culture of adapting quickly in the absence of formal emergency communication? And then comes the question of transparency. With terminal management declining to comment publicly, how critical is open communication in maintaining public trust during emergencies? In an age where information travels faster than storms, silence can sometimes create more turbulence than clarity. Our guest weighs in on the role of institutional transparency in crisis situations, and whether proactive disclosure strengthens or weakens public confidence. Accountability is also on the table. Who, if anyone, should be held responsible? To what extent does liability fall on contractors, structural engineers, supervising agencies, or maintenance teams? At what point does natural disaster end and human oversight begin? Finally, we take a closer look at the structural integrity of Holy Ghost Terminal 1 itself. Are such public transport facilities built to withstand increasingly extreme weather patterns? Or is it time for a comprehensive audit of construction benchmarks across major public projects in the state? This is not just a conversation about broken windows and roofing sheets. It is a broader reflection on governance, infrastructure durability, crisis leadership, and the future of public asset protection in a changing climate. Storms may pass, but the questions they raise demand answers. Join us on Afia TV as we go beyond the headlines and into the heart of policy, planning, and public accountability. #EnuguCentralStation #HolyGhostTerminal #EnuguRainstorm #AfiaTVMorningShow #AroundTheRegion #InfrastructureAccountability #climateresilience #PublicAssetManagement #crisismanagement #southeastnigeria