Tag: Abule Egba

  • Communities seek  repair of roads

    Communities seek  repair of roads

    Communities in New Oko-Oba and Abule Egba have appealed to Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, to repair roads destroyed during building of the flyover.

     The communities, in a letter to the governor, listed Jibowu Road, Sanni Balogun, Karaole/Adetoun, Olu Ajayi/Majek, Sule Abiodun, Agbe Road, Ile Ogbo Street, Bayo Aderinye Street, Funmilayo George Street, Agent Temple, Alhaji Ashafa, Paul Street, Segun Akinola, Arowolo, among others.

    Baale of Karaole Ojokoro, George Dada, said the people  informed Sanwo-Olu of the challenges and hardship caused them by the construction of Abule Egba flyover.

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     Congratulating the governor on his re-election, Dada said former Governor Akinwunmi Ambode assured them “please bear with us, before you know, it we will be back to repair, we will reconstruct all your roads and streets.”

     “As feared by leaders and residents, years after completion of the bridge and our roads destroyed, no one has come to us to assure us something will be done or to repair any of the streets. Today, our streets and roads are a nightmare” he said.

  • Abule Egba gets ultra modern cinema centre

    Chief Executive Officer of Micro Media Group Mrs. Shileola Ibironke of the newly inaugurated Heritage Mall, Abule Egba, Lagos has said the country was yet to fully tap into Cinema business.

    Addressing reporters at the commissioning, she said Nigeria can actually boost its revenue base, if investor were encouraged. She said the mall would provide different services for those watching films and shopping for their home needs.

    She said: “Heritage mall is actually and entertainment centre, comprising shopping and cinemas. We have space for artistes to come to perform, producers who are interested in showcasing new talents.”

    Shileola said Heritage Mall, Abule Egba was sited there because of the need to make residents watch good cinemas instead of travelling to highbrow areas.

    Read Also: It’s time to bring back Cinema culture- Oga Bello

    “So, we intend to open up this community, particularly as we observe that cinemas are mostly concentrated in highbrow areas.

    “It is going to open employment opportunities for the youth. Those who are roaming the street doing nothing will do something meaningful for themselves.

    “It will accommodate people with skills and those who do not have the expertise but could be deployed to activities that would enhance their lives.

    “The Alimosho Local Government Area is obviously lacking in terms of Cinemas where people can find time to relax for the weekend.

    ‘’Most of these people now go to high brow areas before they can actually watch good films.”

  • Orphanage celebrates 25th anniversary

    Founder Little Saints Orphanage Mrs. Dele George has announced that the orphanage will turn 25 on June 4.

    She called on all friends and donors to visit the orphanage located in Warri, Ibadan, Itele, Ogudu, Akowonjo and Abule-Egba on the said day to celebrate with the children.

    In a statement made available to reporters, she said the orphanage which was founded on June 4, 1994, was the first indigenous non-governmental orphanage approved by the Lagos State government.

    She said: “Being the first private orphanage to be registered by the Lagos State government in 1994, Little Saints Orphanage has blazed the trail of institutional care of vulnerable children. With an outstanding network of support, excellent facilities, a dynamic team of social workers and care givers, the orphanage has raised hundreds of children who have been able to overcome their negative childhood experiences and blossomed into young adults ready to make their mark in the world.

    “Little Saints Orphanage can also boast of having the highest number of children to be adopted by any orphanage. The orphanage works in collaboration with the Lagos State Ministry of Youth and Social Development and the Ministry of Women Affairs in other states of operations on issues of adoption, care and protection.

    “The orphanage has, in the past 25 years, rehabilitated, reformed and re-integrated children who have had  to overcome their traumatic experiences such as abandonment, rejection, abuse and even modern day slavery,” she said.

    The orphanage has received numerous awards for their demonstration of excellence in charity and child welfare.

    The orphanage currently operates in four states of the country and is a member of the Association of Orphanages and Homes Operators in Nigeria (ASOHON).

  • UPDATED: Four feared killed in Lagos train accident

    At least four persons were Tuesday morning feared killed after a train crushed a tricycle in Lagos.

    The incident occurred around 6:45am, at Toyin in Iju Ishaga, a Lagos suburb, shortly after the train left Ike Aro.

    It was gathered that the tricycle carrying passengers had attempted to cross the railway when it got trapped and was eventually crushed by the Abule-Egba bound train.

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    The Nation learnt that while other motorists and passers by halted to give way for the train sighted from afar, the tricyclist attempted a quick move but got trapped and was eventually ran over.

    A witness said the remains of the crushed remains of the victims littered the track, causing panic among people around.

    Details later

  • Abule-Egba pipeline explosion, hell of our own making

    SIR: In the wee hours of Wednesday, December 19, 2018, residents of Abule-Egba and environs were jolted out of their beds by a raging fire which engulfed the area. Residents scampered for safety as they ran for dear lives. The fire outbreak was said to have been caused by suspected pipeline vandals who were trying to steal fuel from Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) pipelines dotting parts of the community. Reports have it that the blaze occurred when a spillage from a fuel tanker used in siphoning fuel from a vandalized pipeline spewed the product that meandered through drainage channels to the Abattoir area of Abule-Egba. No life was lost in the ensuing inferno, but 100 houses and shops, and about 50 cars were said to have been destroyed, leaving the residents in sorrow and tears.

    On December 26, 2006, there was a pipeline explosion that rocked this same area causing many fatalities as hundreds of people were killed and properties destroyed in the blast.

    Sometime in 2016, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, said Nigeria recorded 1,600 cases of pipeline vandalism between January and August of the same year. Pulling the records backwards, the minister also revealed that the country recorded over 3,000 pipeline vandalism cases from 2010 to 2015. These staggering figures apparently show how highly under-secured our pipelines are, and the extent of havoc wreaked on these pipelines.

    Residents of pipeline host communities would be doing themselves a great deal of good by promptly reporting suspected acts of vandalism and anti-social tendencies of a few bad eggs living among them to appropriate authorities. The people around pipeline areas are the first and primary line of defense for these pipelines, so they are expected to report any strange or unauthorised tampering with the facilities to security agents around them.

    Beyond the regular surveillance and the physical presence of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) operatives at various pipeline designated control centres, we advise that intelligence-based security checks be employed by the government as part of measures to curb the illicit activities of these oil thieves. The other day, the NSCDC deployed drones to halt the incessant cases of pipeline vandalism in the creeks of Niger Delta. The drones are to be used to access remote locations. If the drones have been effective enough in the creeks, then we urge the government to deploy this same technology in other major pipeline communities in the country. As these drones detect any attempt by saboteurs to vandalise pipeline, an immediate intervention system must be put in place to arrest and prosecute anyone caught. These drones can only monitor and detect any infiltration, they can’t intervene by arresting the vandals.

    NNPC is also duty-bound to regularly carry out routine maintenance checks on its pipelines all over the country to easily identify faulty, corrosive or leaky pipelines. It is also important that the quality standards and integrity of all pipelines – crude oil, finished products or gas, must not be compromised by this corporation.

    Apart from the huge economic losses incurred by the government through shortage and scarcity of petroleum products, pipeline vandalism leads to environmental pollution and fire outbreak which results in loss of lives and properties.  There is arguably no end to what fire can destroy. So it is safer and easier to prevent fire outbreak than to start fighting it when it is unleashed.

    It is time this wanton willful destruction of lives and properties occasioned by acts of vandalism, carelessness and lack of value for human lives by these unscrupulous elements in the society is nipped in the bud.

    The Abule-Egba fire outbreak-triggered vandalism was not the first in Nigeria and certainly may not be the last if strict appropriate measures are not taken by the government to curb the nefarious acts of pipeline vandals.

     

    • Kayode Ojewale, Idimu, Lagos.
  • Abule Egba on fire

    • It’s time to act to save lives and property of hapless Nigerians

    Vandalisation of public utilities and facilities has become so commonplace in Nigeria that very few people are bothered about the outcome. Even when lives and property are lost in the process, hardly does it deter further attempts. One such form of vandalisation that has become recurrent is rupturing of pipelines bearing petroleum products across the country.

    On December 19, the Abule Egba community of Lagos State witnessed another episode of explosion occasioned by pipeline vandalisation. The attendant fire outbreak razed eight houses, about 53 motor vehicles and 98 shops. Although residents have commended the security, safety and emergency agencies for prompt response to their distress call, there is a need to probe into what the government has done, or is doing to curb the regular occurrence.

    In October, a similar pipeline explosion in Osisioma in Abia State took many lives and property, and the federal authorities were quick to blame it on greedy and careless people. The pledge to put in place measures to prevent another outbreak did not stop the Abule-Egba explosion. And, it was not the first in that vicinity. In December 2006, tragedy struck in Abule Egba, as some residents thought breaking into pipelines, buried under the ground where they had chosen to build houses and shops could be a shortcut to wealth. In the process, about 200 people were said to have died, including those of them who failed to realise the danger in scooping fuel that gushed out of the ruptured pipelines, and other innocent residents, visitors and passersby. The outcry led to empty promises that are only being repeated now – 12 years after.

    Why has the Pipelines and Storage Company, a unit of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), failed to take adequate steps to forestall the recurring disaster? Is the technology needed for proper monitoring and protection of the pipelines unavailable or beyond the means of the octopus NNPC? Why is such pipelines violation mainly peculiar to Nigeria, when there are other major petroleum producing and consuming nations, even in Africa? Since the incident in Jesse, Delta State, in 1998, when the danger buried underground was exposed by the fire disaster that reportedly claimed no less than 500 lives in similar circumstances, what has government done to sensitise the people to act as protectors of the pipelines nationwide?

    It is unfortunate that Nigerians have allowed pervading poverty to push them into engaging in activities that could snuff life out of them or wipe out their means of livelihood. There is no assurance that appropriate lessons have been learnt even now as the main culprits are said to have escaped. We call on the federal authorities to probe the action or inaction of the security forces in the area, given the allegation by some residents that there could have been some collusion with the vandals.

    It should be realised that security and safety are the responsibility of all citizens. Information about trucks being brought to the area to siphon fuel just been volunteered now would have been more useful if passed to the relevant agencies earlier.

    The Lagos State town and physical planning agencies cannot be absolved of blame. No houses, shanties or shops should be condoned on or around such combustible facilities. In like manner, what did the local government do to prevent the disaster? Unless urgent and adequate action is taken, a repeat of the tragedy is inevitable.

    Yesterday, it was Jesse, Warri, Ijegun and Abule Egba, who knows where next? As long as such looming danger is ignored, no one is safe as fire could travel faster than human efforts, and sometimes defy safety network. In such a case, it is obvious that proactive measures are needed now.

  • Abule-Egba fire: Adeola sympathizes with constituents over incident  

    The Senator representing Lagos west, Solomon Adeola, on Thursday commiserated with his constituents that lost millions of naira in the fire incident that took place around Abule-Egba and Agege area of Lagos State on Wednesday.

    Adeola said that the fire that gutted the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) pipeline in Abule-Egba and Agege axis of Lagos State destroyed property including houses, shops and vehicles.

    The senator, who expressed pain at the magnitude of the loss by his constituents preparing for the Yuletide, condemned economic saboteurs that engage in oil bunkering.

    Read Also: Panic in Lagos suburb as vandals cause explosion

    He wondered why some people would choose to engage in vandalization of oil pipelines and steal petroleum products.

    The criminal activities of the vandals, he said, resulted in major losses for fellow citizens living their peaceful lives in legitimate endeavours.

    He said, “I commend the emergency services for their effort in curtailing the magnitude of the destruction that spread to a nearby petroleum filling station. Without their efforts, it is possible that many lives would have been lost in a similar incident in 2016 which resulted into the loss of over a hundred lives.”

    Senator Adeola urged security agencies particularly the Nigerian Security and Civil Defense Corps (NSCDC) to intensify measures to prevent vandals engaged in the nefarious activities that resulted in the fire incident.

    He also urged the National Emergency Management Agency and its state counterpart to provide palliative measures to those affected to cushion their losses.

  • Houses, shops, vehicles razed in pipeline fire

    Charred remains of vehicles, shops and houses littered the scene  yesterday, as fire swept through Abule Egba to abattoir in Agege, Lagos.

    The fire followed the explosion of a Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) pipeline from which vandals were scoping fuel.

    Over 50 vehicles, including the 19 parked in a shop and a filling station were destroyed. Three other car shops were affected.

    About 100 houses and shops were razed in the fire which started around 2am.

    It could not be ascertained at press time if there were casualties. But a 38-year-old widow, Ruth Joseph, her son, Samuel and three others suffered burns.

    The fire was said to have started in front of a school at 4, Segun Akinola Street, opposite Tipper Garage, near Awori bus stop, Abule Egba, following the activities of the vandals, who came with three tankers to siphon.

    The widow said they were sleeping when she heard a loud sound and people screaming.

    “We were sleeping when we started hearing shouts. I woke up and saw fire inside my home with plenty heat. The first thing that came to my mind was to rescue my children. I was able to get two out unhurt, but when I went for Samuel, the fire caught up with us.

    “I am a poor widow and do not have money for hospital bill. This is why I am happy the police commissioner has directed that me and my son be taken to the General Hospital, Ikeja for treatment.”

    Residents said the vandals, who dug a hole to connect their hose to the NNPC pipelines, dropped the hose inside the gutter without shutting the valves.

    Petrol was said to have flowed through the gutter to abattoir where it sparked fire, apparently due to the activities of butchers, who were working then.

    Areas affected included Arowolo, Shogbawole, Adefegba, Katonwi, Santos, Taiwo Adewole, Wamon Taofeek, Owode and Akinlere streets.

    The inferno also affected Justrite Shopping Mall, Samar Filling Station and the canal near Agege Abattoir.

    Others included Charity Road Junction opposite Oko Oba Market and parts of Ile-Epo.

    A woman, Stella John, said residents fled their homes when they heard the explosions, with many injured in the ensuing melee.

    “I did not care to pick anything. The first thing that came to my mind was to run for safety. People were wailing, running in different directions. Many people sustained injuries.

    “It is not true that people were scooping fuel. If at all people did something like that, maybe those were the people who did not witness the December 26, 2006 fire incident when hundreds of people scooping fuel were roasted alive,” she said.

    A resident, who refused to give his name, said “why wouldn’t there be pipeline vandalism and explosion here again when the one of December 26, 2006 was not investigated?”

    He said the only way to stop the Abule Egba pipeline vandalism was to investigate the explosions of 2006 and yesterday.

     

    Victims count losses

    A victim said he became suspicious when he saw two 33,000 fuel tankers heading for the tipper garage.

    Another victim, Moses Amaechi, said he lost goods worth N3.7.million to the fire. He said he sold machines such as generators, inverter batteries, grinding machines and wheelbarrows. Amaechi said he also lost cash which he kept in his shop on Old Abeokuta Road.

    Mrs. Module Soyola said she lost the N250,000 she wanted to use to replenish her stock.

    Mrs. Adepoju of 7, Shogbawole Street, said all she had was burnt by the fire. She said her wedding gown, bed, chairs, expensive fabrics, money, food, among others were burnt, adding that she was only left with the clothe on her back.

    A barber, whose shop was razed, refused to speak to our reporter. He shouted: “I will not give you my name. I will not comment because the government cannot do anything. There were more than five fire service vehicles, but they were not able to put out the fire.”

    The residents accused fire service officials of arriving late, noting that emergency responders got there around 4am.

     

    We responded promptly, says LASEMA GM

    Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) General Manager (GM) Adesina Tiamiyu, Police Commissioner Imohimi Edgal, officials of NNPC and other agencies visited the scene.

    Rapid Response Squad (RRS) Commander Tunji Disu, an Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP), was on the spot with his men, to curtail hoodlums. Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) and Red Cross officials were also on ground.

    Tiamiyu said the fire affected nine streets, destroyed 38 vehicles, four tricycles, 71 shops, 30 rooms, two blocks of flat and a church auditorium.

    He said: “LASEMA and other stakeholders responded to the fire, which occurred as a result of the activities of suspected bunkerers around the NNPC pipeline in Abule Egba, Ojokoro Local Council Development Area (LCDA), which destroyed properties worth millions of naira.

    “No fatality was recorded. The few people injured were immediately attended to by the Lagos State Ambulance Service (LASAMBUS) and the agency’s paramedics.

    “On arrival on the scene, we found out that the spillage from the bunkering activities came in contact with an ignitable source. This resulted in an inferno that ravaged houses and cars.

    “The prompt intervention by the Lagos Fire servicemen and LASEMA Response Unit (LRU) firemen, who immediately deployed fire trucks and personnel to combat the inferno, curtailed further spread to adjoining buildings and the nearest filling station in the area.

    “Belongings were salvaged around the axis, including Justrite Mall, petrol stations and other facilities around Abule Egba bus stop to Awori U-Turn.

    “Investigations are ongoing to ascertain the cause and people involved. The situation has been brought under control and people are free to go about their activities.”

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    Edgal: residents are complicit

    Edgal accused the residents of complicity, adding that they could not claim they were not aware of the vandals’ activities.

    “However, intelligence report gathered by some of my operatives revealed that this area is notorious for activities of pipeline vandals. While I am not confirming, I would not completely rule out that this fire was an attempt by some vandals to puncture some of the pipelines. So our investigation is also going to extend in that direction.

    “Already, I have received credible intelligence on some of these vandals and their locations. I can assure Lagosians that very soon, I will be leading the operation to arrest some of these vandals and the reason is obvious; we will not allow the greed or unpatriotic and economic sabotage of a few to affect the vast majority of Lagosians.

    “You can see that a lot of innocent people have lost valuable properties. Fortunately for us, nobody died. However, the incident is bad enough because millions of naira have gone down the drain. We are pursuing this from two angles as we said. When we get a report from the experts, who are currently investigating the cause of the fire, we will let Lagosians know the actual cause of the fire.”

  • Two traders allegedly beat up task force officials

    For allegedly beating two Lagos Task Force officials and causing bodily harm to them, two market traders were on Friday hauled up before an Ikeja Magistrates’ Court.

    The accused, Francis Azuka, 41 and Nwachukwu Alexander, 44,whose  residential addresses were not provided, are facing a three-count charge of conspiracy, assault and breach of peace.

    The Police prosecutor Insp. Raphael Donny, told the court that the duo committed the offences on Nov. 7, at Super International Market, Abule-Egba in Lagos.

    He said that they conducted themselves in a manner likely to cause  breach of the peace.

    According to the prosecutor, the traders prevented one Adeyemi Olusegun and Akinyemi Rasheed, task force officials, from carrying out their lawful assignments.

    Donny alleged that the accused unlawfully beat up the complainants by giving them punches, which caused them bodily harm.

    He said that the complainants went to the said market to remind  traders to tidy up their environment when the accused suddenly beat them to a pulp, following an argument.

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    “The complainants were sent on an official assignment to remind the traders of the regular environmental sanitation exercise.

    ‘The accused beat them after a disagreement,” he said.

    Both accused persons, however, pleaded not guilty to the charge.

    The Chief Magistrate, Mrs. B. O. Osunsemi, granted the accused bail in the sum of N200, 000 with two sureties in like sum.

    Osunsemi said that the sureties must be gainfully employed with evidence of three years tax payment to the Lagos State Government and should have their addresses verified by the court.

    The offences contravened Sections 168, 137 and 411 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015 (Revised).

    The Section 137 provides three years for assault while Section 411 prescribes two years for conspiracy.

    The Magistrate adjourned the case until Jan. 30, 2019 for trial.

  • Communities urge Ambode to provide U-turn on Lagos/Abeokuta expressway

    Four communities along Idi-Mango/Onipetesi to Dopemu under bridge on the Lagos/Abeokuta expressway have appealed to Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to create a ”U”-turn on the road to ease difficulties and ensure safety of lives.

    Chairman of Onipetesi Community Development Association, OCDA, Elder Kunle Amosun made the appeal at a press conference he addressed at the secretariat of OCDA at Onipetesi over the weekend.

    He also called on the Federal Government especially the Minister of Works, Power and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola to intercede on “this matter of urgent public importance.”

    The communities concerned are: residents of Onipetesi, Onilekere, Cement and Santos Layout with a population of about 980,000.

    Amosun said though the communities have been agitating for the “U”-turn since 2001, they are however stepping up the agitation because of the on-going construction of BRT lanes in the axis, so that government could take advantage of the construction to creat at least two “U”-turns for the communities.

    This he said would save residents coming from Oshodi the difficulty of having to go as far as to Egbeda, a distance of about 5km to turn back to their homes or for residents who want to go to Iyana Ipaja to go to Agege Motor road, a distance of about 2km to turn.

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    “It is important to know that the expressway was constructed many years ago without regard to the fact that there would be rapid development with the adjoining communities and they are disadvantaged because of location as it is bounded to the East by Murtala Mohammed International Airport, making the expressway the only route that leads to the community”.

    The chairman wondered why their case should be different because “similar projects like the Lagos/Ikorodu road and the Agege Motor road have “U” turns almost at every Bus stop.

    “Our frustrations are premised on the fact that if the construction continue without a “U” turn in our axis it will creat untold hardship for residents.

    “A lot of man-hour will be wasted, lives have been lost as a result of traffic gridlock in the expressway as many patients who would have ordinarily be saved have died in such traffic gridlock and furthermore the traffic on completion of the BRT lanes will be heavier than experienced at present”,

    “We strongly believe that one or two “U”-turn along this axis will save citizens the needless  hassle of facing agonising traffic to Dopemu and beyond, it will also alleviate the traffic gridlock for those going beyond our communities to destinations such as Egbeda, Idimu, LASU, Abule Egba, Ota etc.”, Amosun said.

    Speaking on efforts the communities have made before now, Amosun said a lot has been done in the area of sensitization and correspondences with the relevant authorities.

    “Two former Ministers of Works were contacted with promises to look into the issues but to no avail”; they have also written to the state government on the matter but the “commissioner of works gave flimsy excuse in one of his replies that a “U”-turn in the axis would further worsen already heavy traffic on the road; this is false, on the contrary it will ease traffic.

    “We met the contractor working on the road but they said there was nothing they could do as they were working on a plan given by the Lagos state government, their client”, though they said “U”-turn can be created if they are so directed, Amosun said.

    Present with him at the briefing were other prominent elders and exco members of OCDA like: Mr. Sam Emiowele, a chartered quantity surveyor, Chief Victor Oyolu, a chartered accountant, Ayo Omobowale, Engr. Jimi Taylor, vice president of OCDA etc.