A Lagos based content creator has raised concern over the return of long early morning queues and severe delays at the Ikorodu Bus Rapid Transit terminal.
Her recent videos and posts have sparked fresh debate about the state of public transport on one of the city’s busiest routes.
The creator, known on TikTok as darkskinnedella (@ella_the_fashionistar), has been documenting her daily commute from Ikorodu to Lagos Island since relocating to the city in late 2025.
In her clips, hundreds of commuters are seen packed into long queues at the terminal before sunrise, waiting up to two hours or more for available buses.
In one viral video, another user, @Teeniiola (Teniola), films the queue stretching across the terminal and laments that “waking up early is useless in Lagos” because the buses are not enough to meet demand.
She appeals directly to the Lagos State Government to increase the number of BRT buses serving the Ikorodu corridor.
The footage shows anxious passengers repeatedly checking the time as the line barely moves, with a caption reading “1 hour later” and the queue still almost unchanged.
Some commuters can be heard worrying aloud about getting to work late despite leaving home as early as 4:30 a.m.
Following the exposure, the content creator alleged that some BRT staff harassed her for filming and speaking about the bus shortages.
She claimed they tried to intimidate her into stopping the recordings instead of addressing the underlying problems.
Many Lagos residents responded online, saying the scenes at Ikorodu reflect their own daily struggles on the BRT corridor.
Several people recounted spending years leaving home before dawn, standing in queues for hours and returning home late at night due to insufficient buses and breakdowns.
Transport officials have previously blamed long waiting times on high passenger numbers from residential areas like Ikorodu, as well as rising costs of maintaining imported spare parts.
They noted that dozens of buses were also destroyed during past protests, reducing the active fleet on key routes.
The renewed outcry comes shortly after a 13 percent fare increase on BRT and standard bus routes approved by the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority.
Commuters say the combination of higher fares, long queues, rickety buses and frequent delays shows that the system is drifting far from its original promise of fast, reliable mass transit.
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