Tag: Ambode

  • We’re committed to restructuring, says Ambode

    Lagos State Governor Akinwumi Ambode has reiterated the state’s commitment to the call for restructuring of the country.

    The governor said the position of the state remained the same, as stipulated in the All Progressives Congress (APC) manifesto.

    He assured the residents that the state was committed to fulfilling the stipulations in the party’s manifesto.

    Ambode, who spoke yesterday at the unveiling of the statue of the former Premier of the defunct Western Region, the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, at Ikeja, the state capital.

    The governor said the story of the struggle, which led to the nation’s Independence on October 1 in 1960 would not be complete without including the mane of the late Pa Awolowo.

    He said the commitments of the late sage to the growth and development of Nigeria was further demonstrated during the post-independence era.

    Ambode said: “The position of Lagos State on restructuring remains the same, as stipulated in the manifesto of our great party, APC, which states that ‘the APC shall initiate action to amend the constitution with a view to devolving powers, duties and responsibilities to states and local governments in order to entrench true federalism and a federal spirit’; hence, we welcome the Restructuring Committee of APC presently going round the country. “We, as a people, are serious in making sure that this part of the party manifesto comes to pass.”

    The governor noted that the giant statue created by an artist, Mr. Hamza Atta, at the roundabout on Lateef Jakande/Obafemi Awolowo Way interception, is erected by the state government to celebrate the legendary achievements and contributions of the late Awolowo.

    According to him, the statue is not about beautifying the environment or serving as a tourist attraction, but more as a constant reminder to the present and future generations on the need to value the sacrifices of the nation’s heroes and strive to promote the ideals they stood for.

  • We must embrace Awolowo’s leadership principles – Ambode

    We must embrace Awolowo’s leadership principles – Ambode

    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwumi Ambode, on Tuesday stressed the need for new generation of Nigerian leaders to embrace the ideals and principle of late Chief Obafemi Awolowo.

    Ambode made the remark while unveiling the new statue of the late sage in Ikeja.

    The event was attended by prominent members of the Awolowo family including the wife of the Vice President, Mrs. Dolapo Osinbajo, Dr. Tokunbo Dosumu and eminent politicians.

    The governor said Awolowo’s legacies and landmark achievements, particularly in the Western region had endured and remained a source of inspiration and benchmark for progressive leadership in the country.

    He said Awolowo was a symbol of Western Nigeria during his lifetime.

    “His achievements remain indelible across the nation. The vision of new generation leaders like us is to consciously rise up to his ideals and principles,” Ambode stated.

    He said the need to sustain the ideals of Awolowo was what prompted Lagos to join hands with five other Western States in the Oodua Investment Conglomerate to champion the political and economic integration of Western Nigeria

    He recalled Awolowo’s commitment to the growth and development of Nigeria, especially during the post-independence era, adding that he was a shining light among his contemporaries and displayed an incredible ability to use leadership as a tool for advancement of the people’s welfare.

    He said: “In a few days time, it will be 57 years since our nation attained independence. The story of the struggle that led to that momentous occasion on October 1, 1960 will not be complete without mentioning late Pa Obafemi Awolowo. He was a leading voice among eminent nationalists of his time who successfully negotiated our nation’s liberation from the colonial masters.

    “30 years after his death, his thoughts and ideas on a wide range of issues relating to the economy, fiscal federalism and education among several others, are still as relevant today as they were back in time. His legacies and landmark achievements, particularly in the Western region including Lagos colony, had endured and remain a source of inspiration and benchmark for progressive leadership in the country.

    “Awolowo was a symbol for the aspiration of Western Nigeria during his lifetime. His achievements remain indelible across the nation. The vision of new generation leaders like us, is to consciously rise up to his ideals and principles.”

     

     

  • Ambode donates 120 5KVA generating sets to police

    Ambode donates 120 5KVA generating sets to police

    •We’ll utilise facility to ensure effective law enforcement, says commissioner

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode yesterday handed over 120 5KVA generating sets to the Lagos State Police Command to power police formations across the state, with a pledge of continuous support to security agencies.

    Speaking at Lagos House,  Ikeja, while handing over the sets to the police, the governor reiterated his administration’s commitment to ensure safety of life and property.

    Ambode, who was represented by Chairman of Lagos State Security Trust Fund (LSSTF) Mr Oye Hassan-Odukale, said the security of residents and investors remain a cardinal objective of his administration.

    He said the generating sets were procured by LSSTF.

    According to him: “Lagos is the safest state in the country and we hope to make it among the safest in Africa. Anything about security is given priority by our administration. Lagosians are now feeling safe. The safety that we are experiencing don’t come cheap but I like to assure that we are always willing to move at any time to ensure that we keep Lagos safe,” he said.

    The governor congratulated the Commissioner of Police, Mr Imohimi Edgal, and pledged to work with him.

    He said besides the generating sets, LSSTF would install the equipment in all divisions and area commands in the state.

    The governor urged the command to protect the sets and use them to keep the people safe.

    Executive Secretary of LSSTF  Abdulrazak Balogun said the sets would be distributed across the 107 divisions and 13 area commands.

    He said they were procured to fulfill the administration’s Light Up Lagos Project.

    “The procurement is also in tandem with Governor Ambode’s vision of a secured and investment-friendly Lagos. Police formations are critical to securing life and property in the state and it is important that these stations function optimally. This is why the Lagos State Security Council recommended the provision of power generating sets for these stations and the State Security Trust Fund expeditiously approved the expenditure.”

    Edgal thanked Ambode for the gesture, saying that the generating sets came at a better time.

    While assuring that the sets will be put to optimal use, Edgal said the facility would ensure that the divisional and area commands were well lit up.

    He said: “You can imagine the confidence the public will have if divisional headquarters and area commands are lit with the confidence that their matters would be earnestly addressed.

    “Power is essential. Our communication gadgets, especially phones need to be charged. You cannot function anywhere, you can’t take complaints, you can’t give directives to field officers when there is no power. These generating sets are valuable to us.”

  • Ambode revives Awo’s legacy of public finance

    Ambode revives Awo’s legacy of public finance

    Ahead of today’s unveiling of Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s statue by Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, the governor’s Special Adviser on Communities and Communications, Kehinde Bamigbetan, in this piece, highlights the late sage’s policy of welfarism in the former Western Region.

    It is forty years and 139 days after he joined the saints on May 9, 1987. Many folks – loyalists and admirers- will flock to the site of his imposing statue Tuesday September 26 to watch the dramatic re-emergence of the philosopher, statesman and politician. A few acquainted with his interest in metaphysics may tarry till the veil has been cast away. As one of Moses Olaiya’s comic offerings remind, the dead may resurrect amidst the celebration!

    That would not be necessary in this instance because Obafemi Awolowo, never died. His works thunder across the landscape of the Western Region in the architectural prominence of pioneer accomplishments. His words speak to the thought systems of mankind and echo to the future the paths lit yet uncharted. Awolowo engaged all the philosophers who contributed to modern knowledge in formulating the principles which guide his politics, culture and economics. Popular democracy from Plato. Dialectics from Hegel. Democratic socialism from Marx and Engels. Metaphysics from Aristotle and the theologians. Public finance from Maynard Keynes.

    The decision of the Lagos State Government led by Governor Akinwumi Ambode to position the sage appropriately for eternal adulation in the precincts of the power corridor of the state and within walking distance of the premier shoppers and tourists rendezvous highlights the need to bring the multi-dimensional impact of this avatar back into our daily narrative.

    Consider, the legacy of taxation as an instrument of planning .Such a didactic exercise should be seen in the context of our current national political economy particularly the increasing state failure to perform basic obligations to workers, grow internally generated revenue to hedge mounting bills and attract loans for long term capital development. The disastrous consequence of a recessed economy is not in the low purchasing power of the citizens, the inflationary spirals and the cuts in production. It is the collapse of the world and culture of work. When days of joblessness roll into weeks and weeks into months, the simple act of waking up in the morning is dis-incentivised by the sheer fact that there is no place to prepare to go.

    The crisis has become a major cause of frustration and produced aggression of various grades manifesting in the clamour to review the federal constitution in the hope that autonomy for the sub-units or component parts (aka restructuring) will restore prosperity and autochthonous development. We are reminded that the period when we had regions was the best as if reversion to regionalism is enough magic wands to achieve stable economy.  The unassailable fact that the men who made it happen in Western, Eastern and Northern region- Awolowo, Azikiwe and Bello- aspired to apply those principles to the country from the centre is comfortably ignored. For instance, the Action Group made it clear that it adopted federalism because it was the best for a country with many ethnic groups and believed that federalism would make it easier for smaller states to join Nigeria to form a United States of West Africa.

    It is clear that the most generous and accommodating structure of appropriation in a confederal or more federal system will only transfer the present patterns of accumulation from the centre to the units, enabling rapacious elite to gain greater access to the gravy while the commonwealth bleeds. Such a prebendal ambition, premised on the tweaking of the rentier state, would inflict serious injury on the memory of Awolowo, who, in his post-1974 period had begun to question the magnitude of the challenge posed to governance by primitive accumulation.

    The fact of history is that Awolowo believed in taxation as the act by which responsible citizens contribute from their means to enable the community meet collective objectives. In his most quoted speech on taxation, delivered during the proceedings of the House of Representatives on August 15, 1954, he said: “; there is that broad, smooth road, with promises of no taxation, and efforts to get money from other places, leading nowhere but perdition, poverty, disease and economic enslavement; and there is the other road people who go therein pay tax. They also have to apply self-help and self-sacrifice to get where they want. But this road, Mr. President, leads to success, prosperity and to the exploitation of natural resources by the people of this country …”

    Awolowo arrived at this conclusion in his quest to discover how to accelerate domestic capital formation to liberate the economy from the foreign domination that the long years of colonial rule established. His strategy was the empowerment of the domestic middle class to emerge as the national bourgeoisie that would create a fully indigenous economy where the production and distribution of goods and services would meet the needs of Nigerians. This was not possible without the creation of surplus funds for investment. Taxation of the dominant productive forces in the colonial economy- workers and farmers- was a key element of that strategy. Hitherto, taxation had been employed by the colonialists to service the metropole. In Awo’s template, this fiscal device will be used to empower the country.

    The heritage of welfarism that the Western region, following the rise to power of the Action Group, bequeathed to the successor regimes was captured by the concept of Freedom for All, Life More abundant. It is based on the taxation of all adults who are rewarded with the implementation of social services such as education for all, health for all,  jobs for all, sound management of public resources and infrastructures to facilitate the promotion of goods and services.

    In April 1953, as Leader of Government Business, Awolowo introduced 10 shillings capitalization tax on all adult tax payers to raise revenue. To reward taxpayers, he introduced Free Health Scheme for all children below 18 same year, the first minimum wage in 1954 and Free Education in 1955. The collection was so efficient that the folktales regale with stories of men who ran into the federal territory of Lagos to evade payment.

    Although the rival National Council for Nigerian Citizens campaigned so negatively that the Action Group lost votes by 19 to 23 in the 1954 polls, the deployment of the revenue to the construction of public projects and programmes made it a temporary setback.

    With these antecedents, the romantic celebration of the historic exploits of the Western Region government must therefore proceed with the admission that taxation and the judicious deployment of its proceeds for development is the template for any truly honest and purposeful government.

    After two years of experimenting with other strategies for generating surplus funds for development, the Ambode administration has returned to the feet of the great master to pay homage to his heritage of public finance. As an administration that hit the ground running as soon as the governor was sworn into office, it began with the low hanging fruits of loans to activate infrastructural renewal. Gradually, the loans gave way to the bonds- longer term instruments- for financing public works.

    Although bombarded by investors and bankers to take more loans and issue more funds, the administration recognizes that the interest sharks are out to post profit for their shareholders. Both windows work as advances on expected inflows. The logic, which Pa Awolowo defined long ago, came to the rescue. It is better to generate the inflows and reduce the interest paid to the creditors.

    Governor Ambode will be relying on the achievements of his predecessors in generating revenue. A key contributor to this legacy is Asiwaju Bola Tinubu who fought tooth and nail to reclaim the taxable items on the residual list of the 1999 Constitution which the central government had hijacked during military rule. He also maximized the opportunities for revenue available on the concurrent list.

    As the world celebrates the resurgence of Awoism in Lagos State today, it should expect a more efficient, hardworking, productive governance powered by the real franchise of development- the tax- delivered by those who have a stake in developing a new Lagos- the taxpayers.

    For Governor Ambode, the unveiling of Awo’s statue comes with a challenge to surpass what was done by a man who put his brains and brawn at the service of the people over six decades yet stands head over shoulders over his peers till today.

  • Ambode revives Awo’s legacy of public finance

    Ambode revives Awo’s legacy of public finance

    Ahead of today’s unveiling of Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s statue by Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, the governor’s Special Adviser on Communities and Communications, Kehinde Bamigbetan, in this piece, highlights the late sage’s policy of welfarism in the Western Region.

    It is forty years and 139 days after he joined the saints on May 9, 1987. Many folks – loyalists and admirers- will flock to the site of his imposing statue Tuesday September 26 to watch the dramatic re-emergence of the philosopher, statesman and politician. A few acquainted with his interest in metaphysics may tarry till the veil has been cast away. As one of Moses Olaiya’s comic offerings remind, the dead may resurrect amidst the celebration!

    That would not be necessary in this instance because Obafemi Awolowo, never died. His works thunder across the landscape of the Western Region in the architectural prominence of pioneer accomplishments. His words speak to the thought systems of mankind and echo to the future the paths lit yet uncharted. Awolowo engaged all the philosophers who contributed to modern knowledge in formulating the principles which guide his politics, culture and economics. Popular democracy from Plato. Dialectics from Hegel. Democratic socialism from Marx and Engels. Metaphysics from Aristotle and the theologians. Public finance from Maynard Keynes.

    The decision of the Lagos State Government led by Governor Akinwumi Ambode to position the sage appropriately for eternal adulation in the precincts of the power corridor of the state and within walking distance of the premier shoppers and tourists rendezvous highlights the need to bring the multi-dimensional impact of this avatar back into our daily narrative.

    Consider, the legacy of taxation as an instrument of planning .Such a didactic exercise should be seen in the context of our current national political economy particularly the increasing state failure to perform basic obligations to workers, grow internally generated revenue to hedge mounting bills and attract loans for long term capital development. The disastrous consequence of a recessed economy is not in the low purchasing power of the citizens, the inflationary spirals and the cuts in production. It is the collapse of the world and culture of work. When days of joblessness roll into weeks and weeks into months, the simple act of waking up in the morning is dis-incentivised by the sheer fact that there is no place to prepare to go.

    The crisis has become a major cause of frustration and produced aggression of various grades manifesting in the clamour to review the federal constitution in the hope that autonomy for the sub-units or component parts (aka restructuring) will restore prosperity and autochthonous development. We are reminded that the period when we had regions was the best as if reversion to regionalism is enough magic wands to achieve stable economy.  The unassailable fact that the men who made it happen in Western, Eastern and Northern region- Awolowo, Azikiwe and Bello- aspired to apply those principles to the country from the centre is comfortably ignored. For instance, the Action Group made it clear that it adopted federalism because it was the best for a country with many ethnic groups and believed that federalism would make it easier for smaller states to join Nigeria to form a United States of West Africa.

    It is clear that the most generous and accommodating structure of appropriation in a confederal or more federal system will only transfer the present patterns of accumulation from the centre to the units, enabling rapacious elite to gain greater access to the gravy while the commonwealth bleeds. Such a prebendal ambition, premised on the tweaking of the rentier state, would inflict serious injury on the memory of Awolowo, who, in his post-1974 period had begun to question the magnitude of the challenge posed to governance by primitive accumulation.

    The fact of history is that Awolowo believed in taxation as the act by which responsible citizens contribute from their means to enable the community meet collective objectives. In his most quoted speech on taxation, delivered during the proceedings of the House of Representatives on August 15, 1954, he said: “; there is that broad, smooth road, with promises of no taxation, and efforts to get money from other places, leading nowhere but perdition, poverty, disease and economic enslavement; and there is the other road people who go therein pay tax. They also have to apply self-help and self-sacrifice to get where they want. But this road, Mr. President, leads to success, prosperity and to the exploitation of natural resources by the people of this country …”

    Awolowo arrived at this conclusion in his quest to discover how to accelerate domestic capital formation to liberate the economy from the foreign domination that the long years of colonial rule established. His strategy was the empowerment of the domestic middle class to emerge as the national bourgeoisie that would create a fully indigenous economy where the production and distribution of goods and services would meet the needs of Nigerians. This was not possible without the creation of surplus funds for investment. Taxation of the dominant productive forces in the colonial economy- workers and farmers- was a key element of that strategy. Hitherto, taxation had been employed by the colonialists to service the metropole. In Awo’s template, this fiscal device will be used to empower the country.

    The heritage of welfarism that the Western region, following the rise to power of the Action Group, bequeathed to the successor regimes was captured by the concept of Freedom for All, Life More abundant. It is based on the taxation of all adults who are rewarded with the implementation of social services such as education for all, health for all,  jobs for all, sound management of public resources and infrastructures to facilitate the promotion of goods and services.

    In April 1953, as Leader of Government Business, Awolowo introduced 10 shillings capitalization tax on all adult tax payers to raise revenue. To reward taxpayers, he introduced Free Health Scheme for all children below 18 same year, the first minimum wage in 1954 and Free Education in 1955. The collection was so efficient that the folktales regale with stories of men who ran into the federal territory of Lagos to evade payment.

    Although the rival National Council for Nigerian Citizens campaigned so negatively that the Action Group lost votes by 19 to 23 in the 1954 polls, the deployment of the revenue to the construction of public projects and programmes made it a temporary setback.

    With these antecedents, the romantic celebration of the historic exploits of the Western Region government must therefore proceed with the admission that taxation and the judicious deployment of its proceeds for development is the template for any truly honest and purposeful government.

    After two years of experimenting with other strategies for generating surplus funds for development, the Ambode administration has returned to the feet of the great master to pay homage to his heritage of public finance. As an administration that hit the ground running as soon as the governor was sworn into office, it began with the low hanging fruits of loans to activate infrastructural renewal. Gradually, the loans gave way to the bonds- longer term instruments- for financing public works.

    Although bombarded by investors and bankers to take more loans and issue more funds, the administration recognizes that the interest sharks are out to post profit for their shareholders. Both windows work as advances on expected inflows. The logic, which Pa Awolowo defined long ago, came to the rescue. It is better to generate the inflows and reduce the interest paid to the creditors.

    Governor Ambode will be relying on the achievements of his predecessors in generating revenue. A key contributor to this legacy is Asiwaju Bola Tinubu who fought tooth and nail to reclaim the taxable items on the residual list of the 1999 Constitution which the central government had hijacked during military rule. He also maximized the opportunities for revenue available on the concurrent list.

    As the world celebrates the resurgence of Awoism in Lagos State today, it should expect a more efficient, hardworking, productive governance powered by the real franchise of development- the tax- delivered by those who have a stake in developing a new Lagos- the taxpayers.

    For Governor Ambode, the unveiling of Awo’s statue comes with a challenge to surpass what was done by a man who put his brains and brawn at the service of the people over six decades yet stands head over shoulders over his peers till today.

  • Discharge your duties with wisdom, Ambode tells new CJ

    Discharge your duties with wisdom, Ambode tells new CJ

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode yesterday swore in Justice Opeyemi Oke as the state’s Acting Chief Judge (CJ).

    He urged her to discharge her duties with wisdom, candour and integrity.

    Justice Oke, who was appointed to the Bench of the State High Court about 20 years ago, is taking over from Justice Olufunmilayo Atilade, who retired on September 24, having attained the statutory retirement age of 65.

    At the swearing-in ceremony at Lagos House in Ikeja, the state capital, Ambode said her appointment was in line with judicial precedence and the long-aged tradition of succession by seniority on the bench.

    He said while the State awaits the recommendation of the National Judicial Council (NJC), he considered it expedient to administer oath of office on Justice Oke in acting capacity without delay to avoid a vacuum in the leadership of the state Judiciary.

    He said: “Over the years, the Lagos State Judiciary has been a beacon of promise for Nigeria, given its reputation for intellectual judicial pronouncements that have stood the test of time at our appellate courts.

    “I am, therefore, confident that as you take up the leadership of the Judiciary today, though in an acting capacity, your Lordship will discharge the duties of this office with exemplary wisdom, candour and integrity.”

    The governor noted that though the Judiciary is an independent arm of government, he said the success of government lies in collaboration and inter-dependence of the three arms of government.

    According to him, the collaboration must be actualised without inhibiting the independent discharge of the functions of all.

    Ambode assured Lagos residents that under his watch, the Executive and the Legislature would work with the Judiciary to entrench the rule of law and the safety of life and properties of the people.

    The governor reiterated his administration’s commitment to improving the welfare of judicial officers as well as increasing their numbers to scale up justice dispensation.

    He added: “Let me also reiterate this administration’s commitment to improve the welfare of judicial officers and increase the number of judges to dispense justice adequately and effectively. In the coming days, we will inaugurate the First DNA forensic centre in Nigeria.

    “This is geared towards improving the quality of evidence gathered by security agencies, especially the police, and achieving a more scientific-led investigation, which invariably increases the confidence of the courts in arriving at a just conclusion of cases.”

    Ambode expressed appreciation to Justice Atilade for her dedication and commitment to the service of the people.

    Justice Commissioner Adeniji Kazeem said though Justice Oke was appointed on the basis of her seniority, but it came with the opportunity of having a seasoned jurist and judicial administrator to lead the state’s Judiciary.

  • Ambode mourns Lagos Chief Imam, Ibrahim

    Ambode mourns Lagos Chief Imam, Ibrahim

    •Burial today at Lagos Central Mosque

    The Chief Imam of Lagos State, Sheikh Garuba Akinola Ibrahim (Gana V) died yesterday at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Ikeja. He will be buried today at the Lagos Central Mosque, Idumota.

    He died at about 3pm after a brief illness.

    He was 79. Sheikh Ibrahim would be 80 in December.

    Bashorun of Lagos Alhaji Sikiru Alabi Macfoy and Chief Mufasir of Lagos Sheikh Tijani Gbajabiamila, confirmed his demise in a chat with The Nation.

    “As we speak, his remains are being transported from LASUTH to Lagos Island. I am going for a meeting at the Lagos Central Mosque now, I will speak with you later,” Alhaji Macfoy said.

    Sheikh Gbajabiamila said: “It is true that the Chief Imam is dead. He died at LASUTH this afternoon. Arrangement is on to bring his remains to the Island.”

    The late Chief Imam was survived by a wife and nine children.

    At 63, he was decorated with turban and presented with staff of office as the 9th Chief Imam of Lagos on July 30, 2000 following the demise of his predecessor, the late Alhaji Liadi Alade Ibrahim, (OBE), in 1998.

    He was honoured with Order of the Niger (OON) by former President Goodluck Jonathan in 2009.

    The late Sheikh Ibrahim had lost three of his four wives.

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode expressed sadness over the Chief Imam’s death.

    In a condolence message by his Chief Press Secretary Habib Aruna, the governor described the Imam’s death as a great loss to the Muslim Community, the state and the country.

    He said the late cleric would be sorely missed and remembered for his bold and courageous sermons which stood him out.

    He said: “It is with deep sense of great loss but total submission to the will of God that I note the demise of the Chief Imam of our dear state, Alhaji Garuba Akinola Ibrahim. He was indeed a respected cleric who was always mindful of his integrity and used his sermons to engender positive changes.

    “He was a devout Muslim; humanist and bridge builder and will be remembered for his fairness, boldness and thought-provoking sermons.

    “On behalf of my family and the people of Lagos State, I specially commiserate with the immediate family of the deceased and the Muslim Community for this great and irreparable loss.”

    Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) Director Prof Ishaq Lakin Akintola said the late Chief Imam was highly respected and God-fearing.

    “We’ll miss him. He was close to all Islamic groups and find time to attend their function or delegate his second-in-command. He does not look down on people,” he said.

    Executive Secretary/Chief Executive Officer Jaiz Zakat and Waqf Trust Fund Imam Abdullah Shuaib, said the late Sheikh Ibrahim was an amiable person.

    “He was an advocate of peaceful co-existence among all religious groups in the state. He encouraged Muslim youths and supported them to be the best. He cherished knowledge and encouraged many to acquire it so as to add value to humanity.

    “It is sad that his demise came at a time when Lagosians and Nigerians are expecting to tap from his wealth of wisdom and knowledge to move the nation forward. May Allah overlook his shortcomings and grant him paradise,” Imam Shuaib said.

    President, Muslim Students’ Society of Nigeria (MSSN) Lagos State Area Unit, Dr. Saheed Ashafa, described him as a worthy leader.

    “The Muslim students in Lagos State sympathise with the Muslim Community on the loss of our father, His Eminence, Sheikh Garuba Akinola Ibrahim. We pray that Allah forgives him and grant him Al-Janat ul-Firdaus.

    “He was indeed an epitome of unity for the Nigerian Muslims and a worthy father for all. He would be remembered for keeping Muslims together in the state and beyond.

    “Although, the vacuum he left behind may appear difficult to fill but his legacy would create a source of guidance for the Muslim community.”

    Ashafa urged other Islamic leaders to emulate the deceased, saying that his promotion of unity was outstanding

  • Ambode to unveil Awolowo’s statue

    Ambode to unveil Awolowo’s statue

    Lagos State Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode, will on Tuesday unveil the new statue of the late sage and nationalist, Chief Obafemi Awolowo. The imposing bust located on Obafemi Awolowo Way by the Lagos Television (LTV) junction in Ikeja, is a befitting replacement for the old one that was removed from the Allen Avenue round-about in Ikeja.

    Standing at 20 feet, the new Awo bust will be unveiled by Governor Ambode alongside notable dignitaries across the state. The unveiling ceremony is also expected to be witnessed by members of the Awolowo family and Awoists across the country, with minimal traffic disruption between 11am and 12noon on Tuesday.

    Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr. Steve Ayorinde, in a statement on Saturday, said that Tuesday’s ceremony will reinforce Ambode’s commitment to acknowledging the contributions of patriots whose deeds and ideals were instrumental to making Lagos State in particular and the South-West region in general a formidable political and intellectual force within Nigeria.

    ”It has always been Governor Ambode’s desire to honour patriots and nationalists like Chief Obafemi Awolowo whose impeccable record and immense contribution to regional and national development inspired new generation of brilliant and forward-looking politicians like the governor himself,” the commissioner said.

    He added that erecting the bust on the same road that was named after the former Premier of Western region several years ago and beside the television station that was the first to be owned by a state government “is a unique way to keep the Awo legacy alive in Lagos State.” Designed and produced by Hamza Atta, the Awo bust symbolises and projects his true value and reminds visitors and history enthusiast about the legacy of the foremost statesman.

     

  • Ambode to swear in acting CJ Monday

    Ambode to swear in acting CJ Monday

    Lagos State Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode, will swear-in Justice Opeyemi Oke as the Acting Chief Judge of the state on Monday.

    Justice Oke, who is the most senior judge in the state judiciary, is taking over in acting capacity following the retirement of Justice Olufunmilayo Atilade who will attain the statutory retirement age on September 24.

    Justice Atilade on Monday paid a courtesy visit to the Governor at Lagos House to officially announce her retirement from the state’s judiciary.

    Receiving the outgoing CJ, Governor Ambode pledged his administration’s determination to prioritize the welfare of serving and retired judges in the state to enable them to continue giving their very best to the economic prosperity of the state.

     

     

  • ‘Governors should emulate Ambode, Ayande’

    ‘Governors should emulate Ambode, Ayande’

    Senator Ajayi Boroffice (Ondo North) urges governors to emulate two of their colleagues, Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and his Cross River State counterpart, Prof. Ben Ayade, by replicating their people-oriented projects in their states.

    When Ayi Kwei Arhma wrote his novel “The Beautiful ones are not yet born” it was a mirror of the dawn of post independence Ghana. An era characterised by  despair and political disillusionment among Ghanaians. It was a prevalent situation nurtured by embezzlement of public fund and, lack of patriotism.

    The novel was borne out of a yarning for a generation of leadership -the beautiful ones, that will rescue Ghana from the clutches of corruption. Several decades ago when this novel was written many countries, including Nigeria shared with Ghana this state of hopelessness generated by corruption. Over five decades after independence Nigeria is still confronted with a systemic corruption, which has almost become enigmatic.

    A nation that is so blessed with natural resources fertile landmass and very clement climate continue to grapple with poverty and underdevelopment. The impact of corruption has been compounded by insurgency provoked by religious and tribal myopism. I couldn’t contradict a friend who said Nigeria is full of contradictions. Those who are supposed to be excellencies turn out to be excellent thieves, the honorable are far below honour and the distinguished are far from dignity. While I could not argue with him is because be backed up his view with concrete examples.

    Yet, I believe that some beautiful ones have been born. One of them is Professor Ben Ayade, Cross River State governor. Professor Ben Ayade was my student at the University of Ibadan and he was  my colleague as a senator in the seventh Assembly. He has built on what he learnt in my genetics class to move governance to a higher level in his state. Genetic evolution produces new characters that advance development propelled by natural selection. Ben has utilised intellectual selection to prioritise his development objectives and goal for the socio economic development of his state. The trajectory he has charted for his development strategies will lift up the state.

    Professor Oloyede, who is the Registrar of JAMB is another beautiful one that has been born. I have known him as far back as when he was the Vice  Chancellor of University of Ilorin. Among the Vice Chancellors he was in a class of his own in terms of foresight, hard work and commitment to the ideal of an academic institution designed for learning research and building of character. As a member of Senate Committee on Education I was excited to find out that Professor Oloyede is the Registrar of JAMB. In the 2017 budget hearing our committee challenged Prof Oloyede to fund his Agency from internally generated revenue. He accepted the challenge and I assured the committee that he would achieve that feat. I am, therefore, not surprised that JAMB has generated internally a revenue of N7 billion Naira.

    This leads me to the most beautiful of them Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State. Two years before he was elected as the Governor of Lagos State he never dreamt or prayed to be Governor of Lagos State. Divine purposed destiny bestowed on him that burden.

    When I attended the book launch in. Lagos where his governorship ambition was made public I had an insight in to his personality. I saw him as an engine of a Mark Truck in the body of a Volkswagen. He was struggling to contain his energy for work, for passion to transform Lagos, furry of anger to combat corruption. As a Governor he has worked tirelessly do what is in the overall interest of Lagos State. He tackled the Mile 2 manace without succumbing to tribal sentiment. He faced the problem of Tejuoso market without bothering about insinuations of tribalism. The roads and Bus terminals constructed are a beauty to behold. Lagos State is better for it.

    His decision to construct a befitting Lagos Airport road came like a meteorite that illuminates an eclipsed hope of a nation.Airports all over the world is the gateway to a nation. It gives a first time visitor an idea what the country looks like.