Tag: Babajide Sanwo-Olu

  • No pilgrim should elope, Sanwo-Olu warns

    Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu on Wednesday warned the Christians pilgrims to Israel not to run away.

    He told them to be good ambassadors of the state.

    Sanwo-Olu told them to exhibit high standard and the sterling characters of good Christians, adding that no pilgrim should elope or do things that would “portray us in a bad light or bring us to disrepute.”

    He spoke at the Prayer Session and Seminar for the Easter Pilgrimage to Jerusalem at the Chapel of Christ the Light, Alausa, Ikeja.

    Represented by Ministry of Home Affairs Permanent Secretary Mrs. Adebunmi Elizabeth Adebukola, the governor urged the pilgrims who were about to be airlifted, to show humility, dignity, dedication and sincere spirituality during the pilgrimage rites and forever afterwards.

    Read Also: Sanwo-Olu: Forging ahead with courage and confidence

    He said “right here in Nigeria”, the pilgrims must more than before, begin to reflect on why they “are leaving families, friends, other loved ones, homes and work behind to make this important journey.”

    She said as the pilgrims would be “walking the path of Jesus,” their prayers and supplications would easily be answered.

    The governor appealed to them to pray for sustenance of peace and growth of Lagos and the nation.

    The officiating Minister, Rev. Olu Ayo Oladotun in his sermon, advised the intending pilgrims to separate themselves from habits and people that would diminish their spirituality.

    He said they must do away with drunkenness and anger so that they “can be able to assume the higher plane of spirituality which is the main purpose of their pilgrimage.”

  • Southwest governors draw up anti-crime battle plan

    The six Southwest governors were on Tuesday united against criminal activities in the region.

    They restated their preference for state and community police as part of the permanent solutions to the growing crime rate in the region and the country at large.

    The governors made their position known at the opening of a three-day Southwest security summit in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.

    At the summit were governors Seyi Makinde (Oyo), Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (Ondo), Babajide Sanwo-Olu (Lagos), Kayode Fayemi (Ekiti), Gboyega Oyetola (Osun) and Dapo Abiodun (Ogun).

    The summit was organised by the Development Agenda for Western Nigeria (DAWN) Commission.

    Welcoming his colleagues, heads of security agencies, security experts, Yoruba socio-cultural groups, professionals and other participants, Makinde said there was no equivocation that the six governors have resolved to work together for security of lives and property.

    The only member of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) among the governors described the security situation as worrisome, stressing that the summit came at the right time.

    He recalled that kidnapping started in other regions but that it has spread to Southwest giving leaders serious concern. He emphasized that it is the duty of governors to keep people and property safe for the socio-economic well-being of the region.

    He said no meaningful development could take place in an insecure atmosphere, hence the need to tackle the challenge headlong.

    The governor affirmed his support for community policing, stressing that it was the joint position of the governors.

    “Here in Oyo State, we support state police. We speak with one voice, our united voice in strengthening security,” Makinde said.

    He praised DAWN Commission and promised that the governors will support it to attain higher level of performance.

    In his short welcome speech, DAWN Director General Mr Seye Oyeleye said the importance attached to the summit was epitomized by the presence of the six governors.

    Explaining that insecurity is not peculiar to Southwest or Nigeria, Oyeleye said the goal of leaders in the region is to sustain the status of the region as the safest to live, invest and recreate. “Western Nigeria is the safest region in Nigeria and we will keep it as the safest. Southwest is open to business and it will remain so,” he said.

    Also welcoming participants, the Chairman of governors in the region, Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, said the summit became pertinent given the spate of kidnapping and other crimes in the region. He said members of all classes in the society have fallen victim, stressing that no one is safe.

    “The anxiety of our people is palpable. There is great fear in the minds of the traditional rulers. This great fear is against the development of Yoruba land,” Akeredolu said.

    He believed that more efforts would be made in addition to the summit as a one-off solution can not solve the problem.

    Stressing the need for regional approach in confronting the challenge, Akeredolu said no state could achieve greatness in isolation. “Yoruba people stand to benefit from our resolve to remain central to the development of Nigeria. There should be no problem in delivering best services to our people while working together. Political differences should not stand in the way of working for the progress of our people and region,” Akeredolu said.

    The governor described the Yoruba as “very hospitable” and “accommodating”, adding that this accounted for why so many non-Yoruba have migrated into the region. But he said that the region will not allow anyone to ruffle the peace and security for which the region is known.

    He said: “There is the urgent need that compels a review of our hospitality. Our people are under a siege, and this threatens the ethnic fraternity that exists here. This is caused by the criminals among us. We must dig deep into the cause of this problem.”

    In his view, the security agencies seem overwhelmed by the challenge. Even schools are no longer safe for children, Akeredolu said, adding that the governors  have submitted a document detailing their own ideas on how to solve the problem.

    According to him, the overall objective of the efforts to tackle insecurity should be to ensure public safety, peace and protection of public assets and democratic institutions. For this to be achieved, they came up with the four specific targets of reducing crimes and criminality, readiness to work to achieve the set goal, response in times of need and recovery of lost assets.

    He also stressed the need for coordination of all stakeholders for directed efforts and sharing of intelligence and information.

    Read Also: Southwest governors get wake-up call on security

    Osun State Governor Gboyega Oyetola said the gathering was the realisation of the need to unite against the menace.

    He said: “Our gathering is in realisation of the fact that we are stronger when we work together and when we muster concerted strength to face our common foes.

    “For us as governors, today’s event, the Stakeholders’ Security Summit of the South West Region, is a call to duty.

    “We are resolved to accomplish our most sacred duty to our people in line with Section 14 Sub Section 2 (b) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), which says the security and the welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.

    “I strongly believe that this security summit will offer us an opportunity to better secure our region.

    “The Southwest region, noted for its peaceful and mutual coexistence, never witnessed peculiar crimes or violence on the present scale.

    “The ongoing mindless killings, kidnapping, rape, banditry and insurgency across the country are strange to the Southwest.   They are an anathema to the Omoluabi ethos of peace, development, security, unity and good neighbourliness which our founding fathers handed over to us, and which have governed all the aspects of our lives as a people.

    “These security challenges are a threat to lives, and livelihoods of our people as well as the economy of our region. If not checked, the Yoruba nation will be threatened like never before. Livelihood will be eroded. Safety and security will be compromised in an unprecedented manner. Our people, feeling vulnerable and disillusioned, might be constrained to resort to self-help. The time to act to avoid these untoward developments is now. But government cannot do it alone. We require our collective wisdom and professional expertise to address the untoward situation.

    “It is instructive and commendable that when recently crimes spread to our region on an unparalleled scale, our governors rose to the occasion by collectively strategising to deal with the situation, including convening this summit to interrogate the issues and brainstorm with all stakeholders to stave off these alien crimes and violence so as to achieve peace and prosperity for our people.”

    Oyetola described the acts as sheer criminality, pointing out that members of all ethnic groups are involved.

    He said Osun State had been hailed for fighting crime last year. He also highlighted the efforts of his administration in tackling crimes at the moment.

    “Since its creation in 1991, The State of Osun has addressed security issues with dispatch and the highest level of resoluteness, which culminated in its ranking as the most peaceful State in the nation in 2018.

    “Following the ban on mining activities in Zamfara State earlier in the year, as a result of unbridled banditry and the movement of some of the displaced artisanal miners to our state, we adopted a proactive approach by promptly calling a statewide security stakeholders meeting attended by our political leaders, royal fathers, religious leaders, opinion leaders, security chiefs, top government officials, market women, artisans, professional bodies and other distinguished citizens on April 18, 2019.

    “We followed it up with a decentralised method, beginning with a stakeholders’ meeting in the mining area in Ife- Ilesa zone about one month later, precisely, on May 21, 2019, to ensure a cordial relationship between our people and mining vendors.

    “Our administration’s Committee on Peaceful Co-existence between Fulani/Bororo and Crop Farmers, is leading the efforts to ensure peace between our people and herdsmen.

    “The committee engaged with governments and communities in all the states that border Osun – Oyo, Ogun, Ondo, Ekiti and Kwara – to prevent the influx of criminals. A security synergy with our neighbouring States will drastically reduce trans-border criminal activities and keep our Region safe.”

    The governor also mentioned some other efforts it was making to handle criminality. He also stressed the need for states to collaborate in confronting insecurity.

    Also speaking in favour of state police, Oyetola said: “The nation is grossly under-policed and the Police Force is sorely underfunded. Contrary to the United Nations’ ratio requirement of one policeman to 400 citizens, the Nigeria Police has less than 400,000 officers to cover 180 million people. The Force said it needs 155,000 more men to police the nation’s population. The implication of the above is that we need to recognise this situation as an emergency and treat it as such. The Police should be adequately funded and provided with enough personnel and other logistics support to do their job.

    “Perhaps on account of the security challenges that we face today, there might be no better time to revisit the call for state police as local officers are better suited to secure our communities.

    “However, the security agents are squarely battling the current security breaches. But given better support, they can do more.”

    Fayemi praised DAWN Commission for its effectiveness in the last six years. He said the governors were not happy with the level of insecurity in the region and the country at large. “Everywhere we go, they ask us what we are doing about insecurity in the region. The questions are legitimate because they elected us to offer them security, not to give excuses, hence this summit. All the criminal activities are heavy but they are not insurmountable.”

    He also reeled out the efforts of his administration in addressing the problem, declaring that they were yielding results. He said the problem would soon be over.

    “All your governors are working together, regardless of party affiliation to ensure that life is worth living for all our people. “

    Fayemi said security had been the key issue at the federal and regional levels since he became the Chairman, Nigerian Governors’ Forum, last month.

    He also spoke in favour of state police, believing it to be a major solution to policing lapses in the country. He, however, praised the Nigerian Police Force for introducing community policing.

    Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, also stressed the need for cooperation among governors to be able to generate a strong and effective solution.  He also pointed out that criminality is not peculiar to any particular ethnic group.

    His words: “As a country, we are one.  Criminality is not peculiar to any region. In Lagos, we continue to strengthen our judicial system. We also do a lot of advocacy, engaging different stakeholders to ensure that community policing serves as the bedrock for security.”

    Ogun State Governor, Dapo Abiodun said security was required to create the enabling environment for businesses to thrive. He also emphasised the need for collaboration among states and other stakeholders. He said security had been the key issue being discussed at all levels since he was sworn in as governor.

    Abiodun said: “I assure you that all of us that you gave your mandate are ready to support all efforts being made to ensure security of lives and property in Nigeria. We must set up collaborative schemes with the private sector to embrace technology and make the work easier and more effective for security agencies.”

    He, however, stressed the need to address causes of criminality, such as drug abuse, illiteracy, poverty and unemployment. He also praised the DAWN Commission.

     

  • Inching towards order on Apapa Ports roads

    For over 32 days, the Presidential Task Team battled to restore sanity on Apapa Ports road in Lagos. Two days to the expiration of its deadline on Wednesday, the gridlock remains, but the team reckons that it has done the groundwork for its removal. ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE reports.

     

    BEFORE the Presidential Task Team on Restoration of Law and Order in  Apapa (Traffic Gridlock) swung into action 32 days ago, the threat of truckers overrunning bridges and roads in that part of Lagos was real.

    That threat is  gone today, courtesy of the task team, which has left no stone unturned since May 27 in the discharge of its Raindate of clearing the Apapa  ports roads of all trucks.

    During his visit to Lagos at the weekend, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo could not hide his admiration for the team. He assured the public that the Mile 2 end of the Apapa-Oshodi Expressway would soon be cleared to ease traffic.

    According to him, the remediation of the ports falls within what could be classified as the short, medium and long term. All these, he said, were receiving attention as the government is committed to ensuring an intermodal system that would see trains  evacuate cargoes at the ports  to the relief of road users.

    Between 2017 and last year, Osinbajo circled Apapa in a chopper twice, but on Saturday, he drove, for the first time, from Mile 2, through the bad portions of Berger/Sunrise/Coconut bus stops to Tin Can and from there, via Liverpool,  to Ijora/Wharf roads. He also inspected the Tin Can Trailer Park and the Lilypond Truck Terminal close to Marine/Wharf road.

    This is unprecedented in the life of this administration. As head of the task team, he is happy that members have been cooperating with the Vice Chairman, Kayode Opeifa, former Lagos State Commissioner for Transportation, to transform Apapa.

    Osinbajo, accompanied by Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) Managing Director Hadiza Usman and other government top brass, was taken round by Opeifa.

    Osinbajo said: “I am quite pleased with the scope of work done. I think the most important thing is what we are trying to do right now. We will improve the infrastructure In the port areas and the call up system so that there’s no pressure within the ports”

    The initial two weeks deadline, given the team expired on June 12, and it was extended till June 26, to ensure the completion of the job.

    Over the years, the government has tried to restore  sanity in Apapa. But the series of efforts to do so, which started in 2011, have failed.

     

    What’s in a name?

     

    What’s in a name? Plenty. Stakeholders believe that the difference in the government’s intervention in Apapa this time begins with the name.

    Hitherto, the government believed in the use of task force to whip the  truckers into line. But did it work?

    The reality is that task forces have been short in bringing the much-needed relief to Apapa. Rather, they have compounded the crisis, stifling growth and development and deliberately foisting a situation close to anarchy on Apapa.

    To Tunde Olaosun, a logistics expert, what happened in Apapa in the past, was man-made confusion. He may be right. From Berger Underbridge to Tin Can, is a world of its own. A world dreaded by truck drivers. A world where crime and sleaze walk and the law and its enforcers propagates their own terms.

    Speaking in the same vein a chieftain of the Amalgamated Transport Union Operators in Apapa, who asked not to be named, said: “Task forces, headed by officers of the Nigerian Navy were regularly established, but each end up becoming worse than their predecessors. Each ends up complicating the already compounded situation. The situation is so bad that they now brazenly extort money from us and our drivers. To allow a 20- foot container we pay as much as N65,000, and N120,000 for a 40-ton trailer. They collect this daily. And this is just to get us to the road. You pay more if they must guide your truck, in which case, they sit with you in the truck.”

    Opeifa said what the team met on May 23 was “an urban shanty.” The government, he said, guided by the failures of the past, deliberately avoided the word force to describe the name or terms of reference.

    He said: “By naming it a task team, members of the committee, which are drawn from all Ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs)  within Apapa, such as; the Nigerian Shippers Council (NSC), NPA, Nigerian Customs Service (NCS), Federal Ministry of Power, Works and Housing (FMPWH), the Lagos State Government, truck owners and operators, licensed customs agents, freight forwarders, the police, Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) came together to bring creative solutions to bear on Apapa.

    “After a month of intense work, the team has restored law and order in Apapa, and sanity which took flight especially on the Apapa-Oshodi Expressway axis over a decade ago is now back,” Opeifa said.

    According to him, transport unions, area boys and some military personnel turned the 10-lane dual carriage road to a truck park, an extortion field, or ATM plaza, with trucks moving in all directions against traffic despite the deplorable condition of the road and perennial flooding as a result of collapsed drainage channel.

    He said over N35 million was at play daily in the black economy that developed round the jungle that Apapa had become. But the cartel, he said was busted.

    He alleged that the “cartel of extortionists” is run by navy officers comprising task force operatives, adding that they turned their ad-hoc assignment of controlling traffic and maintaining the law into money-making ventures.

    Opeifa said the team’s squad  is headed by Hakeem Odumosu, a Commissioner of Police, assisted by Commander of MOPOL 41, Bayonle Sulaimon an Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP).  Traffic control has also been taken away from the Navy, and given to LASTMA.

     

    Never this bad

     

    Opeifa insisted that the traffic situation in Apapa was never this bad until 2015. Though it started rearing its head at  the turn of the millennium, traffic congestion had always been limited to the activities of  petroleum tankers, which surfaced whenever there was fuel crisis.

    He said Apapa’s situation gradually went from bad to worse from 2015 when LASTMA was  withdrawn after the killings of some of its operatives.

    The situation was compounded by the ports and terminal operators’ dwindling handling capacity and a deterioration of the road infrastructure, which made Apapa practically inaccessible by the truckers that lay siege to it.

    The absence of a traffic controlling agency, Opeifa insisted, was the greatest undoing. According to him, it left truckers to their own devices resulting in the blocking of all access roads and bridges, with spill over into the heart of the city.

    Noting that  the team has done a lot in the last one month, he said trucks have not disappeared from the Marine Beach/Ijora Bridge because of the ports’ inability to handle empty container return and other deliveries with the right of way to the place.

    Opeifa believes the team’s job was not to proffer lasting  solution to the gridlock, but to create an enabling environment for such solution.

    According to him, the team’s  main task is to restore law and order, that eliminate extortion of money and make Apapa and environs free of gridlock.

    He said: “We have restored law and order to the area. We have stopped the issue of extortion levelled against the military task force earlier set up for management of traffic in the axis.

    Pointing out that the economy cannot be shut down, Opeifa said what Apapa and environs needed was sanity.  Port activities, he said, must go on alongside all efforts to sanitise the area and sustain all initiatives put in place to make it liveable.

    He said once the roads were repaired, they would improve access on both carriages as all the 10 lanes would be fully in use.

    “Once this is achieved, the backlog of trailers on the road at Mile 2, Kirikiri and Ajegunle would be reduced and moving in and out of Apapa would be greatly enhanced.”

     

    Things are getting better

     

    But drivers are  happy with what the team has done. A driver, Sulaiman Bello, who arrived in Lagos from Katsina on Wednesday, said he was surprised he made it smoothly to Lilypond on Saturday and was called to approach the port to load.

    “Before now, I paid between N65,000 and N120,000 to even approach the Tin Can Island Port. We pay some faceless people who we may not even see again once we paid and you dare not pay as they wield huge cudgels menacingly and do not care to damage anything in your vehicle. I was surprised that  I paid only N1000 at Lilypond for parking and no molestation whatsoever. I thank the government for helping us flush out these people,” he said.

    Auwalu Aliu and Abubakar Idris, who came from Kano a new wind was blowing in Apapa, adding that it should continue.

    LASTMA General Manager Olawale Musa said  rickety trucks were a major challenge to port operations.

    He said 70 percent of the down time at the port was usually caused by the break down of such trucks, adding that there are also instances where trucks are denied access at the gate because of non- compliance with safety regulations.

    NSC’s Executive Secretary Mallam Hassan Bello said the agency and the NPA had met with ship owners and terminal operators to address the demurrage and granting of more days of grace to importers.

    Shippers, he said, had agreed to increase their days of grace from five to 15, and terminal operators, three to eight days.

    These new reforms according to Bello, were sacrifices made by these groups to help decongest the port and assist the Task team in its national assignment.

    “If these new regimes fully come into play, the pressure on importers to return their empties would be reduced and the roads would be better for it,” Bello added.

    NPA’s Traffic Manager and a task team member, Victor Oginni, said Apapa Port Terminal Limited (APTL), Greenview, Eko Support, AP Miller Terminal (APMT) Apapa Bulk Terminal Ltd (ABTL) ENL Consortium, Tin Can Island Container Terminal (TCICT), Josepdam Terminal Five Spar Logistics and Sifax Port and Cargo have pledged their commitment to decongesting the ports roads.

    He said pending the start of the electronic call up in August, its manual counterpart was now in use.

    NPA, he promised, would ensure that the era of Apapa gridlock becomes a thing of the past. Will it? Time will tell.

     

  • Lagos to clerics: help spread road worthiness campaign to followers

    LAGOS State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu has taken his zero tolerance to traffic congestion and voluntary compliance to all traffic regulations to religious leaders in the state to help sensitiwe their followers.

    Addressing religious leaders at an Inter-faith safety seminar organised for members of the Nigeria Inter-Religious Council (NIREC) from all the 20 local governments and 37 LCDAs by the Ministry of Home Affairs in conjunction with the Lagos State Computerised Vehicle Inspection Service Centre, (LACVIS), Sanwo-Olu said the collaboration becomes necessary to ensure more Lagosians voluntarily comply with the laws to avoid embarrassment.

    The seminar took place at LACVIS head office at Ojodu-Berger.

    The governor, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary Ministry of Transportation, Dr Taiwo Salaam, said government is seeking the religious leaders’ collaboration because of the influence they have on their followers and adherents.

    He said the state recorded marginal improvement in road accidents and deaths since the traffic law was introduced in 2012 from less than 300 in 2013.

    He however lamented the situation had dipped such that about 5000 deaths were recorded over the past four years as a result of road accidents.

    The governor said government is worried the rising spate of accidents and deaths were traceable to non-renewal of drivers or vehicle licence, absence of road worthiness certificate, insurance certificate and other documents that could certify that the road user is fit to be on the road and to use it.

    He therefore urged Christian to “assist the government reach the public on how to use the road. What we need is attitudinal change and we are pleading with you to help us pacify them to continue to support the government.”

    He said the government is willing enforce and we are going to sustain the enforcement.

    NIREC’s Co-Chairman and Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) Apostle Alexander Bamgbola praised the government for making traffic and transportation a major focus of his administration.

    He said the traffic congestion is already taking a toll as many people are already leaving the state for neighbouring southwestern states.

    He assured the governor of “real support” of NIREC leadership. “Our cooperation is going to real because we are also affected by the effect of traffic congestion in this state.

    Read Also: Ex-Lagos commissioner launches book on stewardship

    “We are not surprised that Sanwo-Olu is making the road priority, it is a response to our collective prayers.”

    VIS Director Engr Hafeez Toriola said the government since 2017 has started the establishment of computerized testing centres in order to reduce incidences of manual testing, which has been the bane which impacts on traffic.

    He urged the clergies to appeal to their members and followers to take their vehicles to any of the centres close to them, adding that four new ones would be commissioned in Ojota, Olowu, Yaba, to bring the figure to 14 that has been established across the state.

    LACVIS Managing Director Prince Segun Obayendo said the computerised testing would help address mechanical and electrical issues relating to vehicles on the roads.

    Obayendo, who took the religious leaders on facility tour of the operations of the centre, said what obtains at Ojodu is replicated in all the 14 stations and the intention is for the government to have one in each of the 20 local governments.

    About 100 religious leaders all members of NIREC from all the local governments in the state attended the seminar.

     

  • Apapa gridlock: FG committed to building new sea ports – Osinbajo

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has assured that the federal government is committed to its plans to build new Sea Ports across the country to decongest the highly congested Apapa Port in Lagos State.

    Osinbajo, who visited Lagos on Saturday morning and went on inspection tour with Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babajide Sanwo-Olu, and other top government officials to Apapa and other areas in the axis locked down by perennial vehicular gridlock, stated this after the inspection while addressing the press.

    The Vice President said the government has decided to clear the trailers and tankers on the road so that there can be easy access to the port, adding that there is considerable improvement in the Apapa congestion after enforcement of presidential order in Apapa. “The Mile 2 end is the axis where we think that there are difficulties. But we think that in the next couple of days, it will be resolved, especially with the opening of the Tin Can Island trailer parks and the palliative work that is ongoing all the way to Mile 2 which Hi-tech is handling. And we should be able to resolve that congestion in the Mile 2 end.

    Read Also: Photos: Wike receives Osinbajo in Rivers

    “And you will see that the entry route to the port has been cleared. So, we need to understand that there are short term and mid to long term solutions. One of the mid-to-long term measures is to decongest the cargo traffic coming into the port. We need to understand that this is a port that was designed to take 34 million metric tonnes daily but is currently taking over 80million. With this, it is obvious that there is need to find alternative quickly. And to expand, where that is possible, of course the Lekki Port is an ongoing project which will be a great help when completed because it will support the Apapa and Tin Can ports. Also, we are dredging the Warri Port, which are aimed towards decongesting the traffic into an out of the Apapa and Tin Can ports are done effectively.”

    He added that the Lagos-Kano rail is also starting from the Apapa Port, saying “we expect that we should be able to get cargo out of the Apapa Port using the rail than to take cargo out of the port using the hinterlands. And some are using badges at the moment. So, I can tell you that there are different approaches towards getting better movement in and out of Apapa.

    The Vice President was accompanied by the state governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, the General Manager of Nigerian Port Authority, NPA, Hadiza Usman, Lagos Head of Service, HOS, Mr. Hakeem Muri-Okunola and others. They were conducted around the axis by the Vice Chairman of Presidential Task Team on the Restoration of Law and Order in Apapa, Mr. Kayode Opeifa, who narrated the achievements recorded since commencement of the enforcement.

  • Sacked lecturers to Sanwo-Olu: save us from starvation

    The 37 teachers recently sacked at the Adeniran Ogunsanya College of Education {AOCOED}, Ijanikin, Lagos State, have implored Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu to save them from salvation and untimely death.

    Their spokesman, Gabriel Oguntuase, told reporters in Ijanikin, Lagos, on Friday that they were initially employed as workers of the institution.

    He said they were later transferred to teach in the primary and secondary school sections of the institution, adding that the remaining workers were given harmonization letters as bonafide officials of the college.

    Oguntuase said their ordeal began in 2010 when their promotions in the two schools were stopped.

    “We wrote many letters to the management on the matter but got no response.

    “This continued until 2015 when our salaries were reduced by more than half and all the benefits due to us as statutory employees were taken away.  

    Read Also: Little things Sanwo-Olu cannot afford to ignore

    “From then, we were deprived of all allowances, including annual increment.

    “Then on May 2, 2019 the council and management of the institution terminated our employment, giving redundancy as reason,” he said.

    Oguntuase appealed to Governor Sanwo-Olu and other Lagosians to intervene and save them from the inhuman treatment meted out to them.

    Said he: “We have worked diligently in the institution between 10 and 27 years, with letters of recommendation given to us by the management council of the school.

    “We have our appointment, confirmation and promotion letters duly signed by the college. AOCOED should not be allowed to take away what belongs to us.” 

  • Coordinator: Lagos will get more corps members, if…

    The Lagos State Coordinator of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Mr Sunday Aroni, has urged Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu to build a befitting permanent orientation camp on the land the state allocated for the scheme at Agbowa, Epe.

    He said doing so would increase the number of corps members deployed in the state.

    Aroni spoke at the opening of the three-week orientation course for 2,560 Batch “B” Stream I corps members at the Iyana Ipaja camp.

    He said: “Let me at this juncture express my sincere appreciation once again to the government of Lagos State for the allocation of 10 hectares of land at Agbowa Epe Local Government Area. It is our ardent belief that our amiable and youth friendly Governor will put all necessary measures in place for the construction of a very befitting permanent orientation camp in the Centre of Excellence. Lagos State will not only come out as one of the best camps but will guarantee the increased number of corps manpower to the state.”

    Read Also: NYSC to corps members: don’t present fake papers

    Of the 2,560 corps members registered before the ceremony, Aroni said there were 888 men and 1,732 women graduates mobilised to serve the state.

    They were led in the oath of allegiance by Justice Owolabi Afeez, who represented the Chief Judge of Lagos State.

    Sanwo-Olu, who was represented by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Mrs Folasade Jaji, counseled the corps members to use the Skills Acquisition and Entrepreneurship Development (SAED) programme of the NYSC to gain skills that would make them employers of labour after the service year.

    “This novel idea was put in place to empower corps members with requisite skills in the course of their service to become employers of labour and not job seekers.

    “As you commence your national service year, I encourage you to always reflect on the successes the scheme has recorded in the sustenance of national unity, integration and economic development,” he said.

    He also admonished them to adhere strictly to the rules and regulations of the scheme.

    Though there was a downpour, which  cut short the ceremony, but it did not stop the NYSC dance troupe from performing.

     

  • Extreme poverty in Nigeria worrisome, says Osinbajo

    Worried by the living standard of Nigerians, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has said that the problem of extreme poverty keeps awake at night.

    He was responding during the question and answer session moderated by the Chairman of Metis Capital Partners, Hakeem Bello-Osagie, at a dinner and interactive session with Faculty Members at the Harvard Business School (HBS) on Tuesday in Lagos.

    Prof. Osinbajo spoke alongside Srikant Datar, a professor of Business Administration at the HBS and Bayo Ogunlesi, an indigenous investment banker.

    He said: “I think what keeps me up at night has to do with extreme poverty; the issue is that the largest number of those who vote for us are the very poor.

    “The promises that government makes to them is that their lives will be better and obviously they are looking at their lives being better in the shortest possible time.

    “I will like to see Nigeria being an industrialized nation in the next 10 years; a very strong middle class and most people living above the poverty line.’’

    According to him, some government policies take into account those on the rung of the financial ladder with a focus on agriculture and making credit facilities accessible to farmers to achieve self-sufficiency.

    He said that many farmers in the country had been lifted out of poverty by this administration.

    A lot of attention had also been given to the Social Intervention Programmes (SIPs) which factored in the provision of cheap credit to petty traders at the bottom of the pyramid.

    The vice president told his audience that Nigeria was open to business with its various potentials and urged Nigerian investors abroad to look homewards.

    He said: “If you are going to do business anywhere in Africa, it has to be Nigeria. This is where you have the energy; you have the drive. We are already seeing that kind of activity; business people will always be driven by profit.

    “Talent will always go in the direction where it is best rewarded; one can’t afford to be sentimental about that. As people see that the environment is getting better for business, they will come back; the opportunities for making huge profits are here.

    Read Also: Lawan meets Osinbajo, says mandate bipartisan

    “Practically everything we are doing in to ensure that there is an environment for business to thrive. People are leaving but people are coming back.’’

    The vice president said that the Federal Government, through the Special Economic Zones (SEZs) was encouraging local manufacturers, adding that the government was looking at natural economic clusters and had set up shared facilities and power.

    He said a lot was going on in the agro-allied sector and of course, resolving the power challenges.

    “In the next few months, we will unveil a plan that deals with most of the critical issues in the power sector,” he said.

    On climate change, Osinbajo said that the momentum was in favour of renewable energy and Nigeria was doing a lot of investment in renewable energy; solar power and opening up opportunities.

    Prof Datar said he was particularly proud of Osinbajo as an academic in governance, adding that academics provide enabling environment for good governance.

    He pledged HBS’s support in providing needed support for human capital development in Nigeria and proffering solutions to tackling Nigeria’s infrastructure challenges.

    Ogunlesi said that the era of depending on government for infrastructure was gone, adding that the Federal Government had no business running infrastructure, citing airports as examples.

    Emir of Kano, Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi II, who gave the vote of thank, called for urgent action to tackle the high poverty rate, especially in the Northwest.

    He also advocated for a committee on girl-child education to boost enrolment in schools and uplift their living standards.

    At the event were Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, United States (U.S.) Ambassador to Nigeria, Stuart Symington, immediate past Trade and Investment Minister Okechukwu Enelamah, and the former National Planning Minister Udo Udoma, among others.

     

  • Lagos to open viewing centres for 2019 AFCON

    In fulfillment of Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s commitment to engendering community engagement, Lagos For-All and Unity among Lagosians regardless of ethnic and religion background, Lagos State Government has concluded plans to beam live matches of the 32nd edition of the 2019 Africa cup of Nations (AFCON) at designated viewing centres across the city of Lagos through ‘LAGOS ISSA GOAL’ initiative.

    Put together by the Lagos State Government through Lagos State Sports Commission in partnership with Slimburg Ltd (the official partner/agent), Egypt 2019 Live in Lagos underscore the influence of sports in community engagement and nation-building.

    Governor Sanwo-Olu has continued to thank and appreciate Lagosians for their overwhelming support and unwavering steadfastness during the last general elections and has pledged to uplift the fortune and impact of sports “For a Greater Lagos”

    With twenty-four (24) Africa nations and best of African players on parade, 2019 AFCON Live in the city of Lagos promises to be a 29-day of unforgettable football experience, full of maximum fun, comradeship and entertainment.

    Read Also: 2019 AFCON: Eagles’ll do well – Nwafor

    The 2019 Total Africa Cup of Nations will hold in four Egyptian cities – Ismailia, Alexandria, Suez and Cairo from June 21 to July 19th.

    Being the biggest soccer fiesta in Africa, the initiative by State Government will give those who cannot afford Pay TV the opportunity to watch all 52 live matches at Epe Recreation Centre, Teslim Balogun Stadium, Mushin Youth Centre, Abesan Playing Ground, Campos Mini The stadium, Naval Barrack Ajegunle, Epe Recreation Centre, Badagry Ikorodu among others.

    Adequate security, safety and traffic management will be in place before and during the 52 live games across the city of Lagos.

  • Sanwo-Olu continues payment of accrued pension rights

    Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu has continued with the payment of accrued pension rights as he presented Retirement Benefit Bond Certificates valued at N821.56 million to retirees.

    Lagos State Pension Commission (LASPEC) Director-General Mrs Folasade Onanuga, who spoke at the 63rd Retirement Benefit Bond Presentation to retirees in Ikeja, Lagos, assured the retirees that the government’s interest in the well being of retirees was paramount.

    She reiterated that  Sanwo-Olu is an establishment person having served previously in many capacities in the state and was once the commissioner for Establishments and Pensions.

    Read Also: Lagosians urged to support Sanwo-Olu

    She spoke on the  benefit options available under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) dispensation and enjoined the beneficiaries to take very good care of their health, as well as desist from frivolous spending.

    One of the retirees, Mr. Abayomi from one of the local government areas of the state, thanked  the government on behalf of his fellow retirees for the continuity on payment of accrued rights.