Tag: Babatunde Fashola

  • Fashola unfolds 13-point agenda to revive power sector

    Fashola unfolds 13-point agenda to revive power sector

    The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola, on Monday unfolded a 13-point agenda to drive efforts towards enhancing power supply in the country.

    Fashola said in Abuja during his maiden meeting with power generation, distribution and transmission companies, and other stakeholders that the agenda was drawn up to ensure effective monitoring of the sector.

    The minister said the agenda involves continuous public engagement on tariff collection, debts, power generation, maintenance, ancillary services, dispatch orders and discipline.

    Other areas include gas requirement and constraints, transmission constraints, 33KV load off take, imbalances-locations of excess, overload safety, service quality, new captive and embedded generation, franchising and other issues relevant to the growth of the sector.

    According to Fashola, President Muhammadu Buhari has approved that all stakeholders in the sector should hold monthly meetings on issues concerning the industry.

    He said that the meeting would be rotated among the various GENCOs, DISCOs, TCN and other stakeholders across the country.

    Fashola said that all decisions reached in such meetings would be binding on all the stakeholders.

    In this respect, the minister stated that the various companies and stakeholders would each be represented by a management member with authority to take decision on behalf of their companies.

    He explained that in order to minimise the cost of hosting the meetings, the companies were advised to jointly pull up resources required to hold the meetings.

    The minister further said the meetings would also involve lawyers, engineers, planners and other stakeholders, adding that the ministry would issue a communiqué at the end of each meeting on steps taken to address challenges in the sector.

     

  • Wednesday’s ministerial screening highlights

    Wednesday’s ministerial screening highlights

    The screening of ministerial nominees into the Federal Executive Council enters day two on Wednesday.

    The Senate on Tuesday screened 10 ministerial nominees, including a former Governor of Ekiti State, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, Lt. Gen Abdulrahman Danbazzau, Chief Audu Ogbeh and the National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressive Congress (APC), Alhaji Lai Mohammed.

    On Wednesday Another set of nominees will meet the Senate and reel out their programmes for Nigerians.

    Those that will be screened on Wednesday are – former Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola (SAN), his Rivers State counterpart, Rotimi Amaechi, Dr. Chris Ngige, Dr. Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, Abubakar Malami (SAN), Senator Aisha Jummai Alhassan, Barr. Solomon Dalong, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, Senator Hadi Sirika and Barr. Adebayo Shittu .

    THE NOMINEES:

     

     Babatunde Fashola:

    – Lagos success a team effort.

    – Police decentralization is a must.

    –  Encourage diversification of economy through productivity.

    – I don’t sign cheques or fix prices.

    – Nobody has said I have corruptly enriched myself.

    – Concept of loyalty is a very strange one. If tested you may be asked to take a bullet for your son.

    – Nigerians invest more money outside the country.

    – Nigeria needs loans that will grow the economy.

    – Security is the toughest task any government can possibly take.

     

    Dr. Ibe Kachikwu

    – 50% of NNPC subsidy charges come from kerosine.

    – Refinery has a lifespan of 50-60 years depending on maintenance.

    – Nigerians to get free cylinders  next year.

    – PH Refinery operating presently at about 67% capacity.

    -No routine maintenance in refineries in 10 years.

    – No new PIB for now.

    – Contracts processes in NNPC not transparent.

    – Senators will get monthly report on NNPC and the petroleum industry as a whole.

    – All requests or grants for refineries will be reviewed.

    – NNPC is not owing salaries.

    – There is massive fraud in subsidy scheme.

    – I will support NNPC unbundling.

    – NNPC has one of the best retirement packages in Nigeria.

     

    Abubakar Malami

    – Our laws cannot develop without input from National Assembly.

    – Justice administration is incomplete without financial independence of the judiciary.

    – There is development in justice administration, but there is need for greater collaboration among the three arms of government.

    -No person should be detained in criminal matter beyond a period of three months before they are arraigned.

    -Justice administration in respect of criminal cases provides that cases must be determined within 180 days.

    – Prisoners should be made to acquire vocational skills while serving their terms.

     

     

    Dr. Chris Ngige

    – We introduced the first health committee in the Senate.

    – We promoted primary health care service.

    -Buhari is ready to serve Nigerians.

     

    Aisha Alhassan

    – My nomination is not a compensation for losing governorship election.

    -Corruption has little or nothing to do with money.

    -The bar and bench are key players in the corruption of the judiciary.

     

    Solomon Dalong

    – Criminal justice in Nigeria has a long history.

    – There is need to reduce prison congestion.

    -Lawyers must live up to expectations.

    – Cattle rustling has international connection and must be tackled head on.

    – We must have a clear perception about corruption.

    -Over-dependence on oil makes Nigerians lazy.

    – Nigeria prison system is punitive.

    -Corruption cannot be reduced to opinion, it should be defined by act of the National Assembly.

     

    Kemi Adeosun

    – Non-oil sector is growing.

    -We must implement strategies to improve IGR

    -Identify sources of revenue leakages and plug them

    -We must stimulate our economy

    -Set aggressive targets to plug revenue leakages

    -TSA reduces borrowing capacity.

    -TSA improves visibility of revenue.

    – We need FID to create employment.

    -Nigeria a huge consumer market.

    – In 2005, Ogun was ranked 35th out of 36 in worst states to do business.

    -We cannot continue to spend 78% of our budget on recurrent expenditure.

    -We need to look for other sources of funding.

     

  • Nigerians react to Fashola’s screening

    Nigerians react to Fashola’s screening


  • Mixed reactions trail ministerial list

    Mixed reactions trail ministerial list

  • Fashola, Dozie, others suggest framework for effective CSR

    Fashola, Dozie, others suggest framework for effective CSR

    Concerted efforts are required on the part of all stakeholders to make corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives more relevant, effective as well as efficient.

    These were the conclusion reached by a cross-section of experts at a public forum in Lagos with the theme: ‘The Role of CSR in Nigeria’s Sustainable Development.’

    The event was part of activities to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the MTN Foundation (MTNF).

    MTN Foundation is the Corporate Social Investment (CSI) arm of MTN Nigeria a company established in 2001.

    Former governor of Lagos state, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, who delivered the keynote address, observed that while the ideal and idea of CSR has gained acceptance globally, there is still a lot of misconception about what CSR really is.

    While commending the MTN Foundation on its commitment to impacting the lives of Nigerians some of whom hitherto were living without hope, Fashola called on other multinationals to intensify their CSR programmes in Nigeria.

    “While in office as the Governor of Lagos, I witnessed MTNF’s special interest and active involvement in tackling issues around health, education, security and economic empowerment. The Foundation equipped laboratories for vocational and technical training; it intervened in collaborating with the state to provide Haemodialysis machines in our general hospital in Igando, Alimosho. Our general hospital in Gbagada now has 24 dialysis machines. In the area of security, the Foundation has been very supportive,” Fashola said.

    Former Executive Vice Chairman, Nigeria Communication Commission, Dr. Ernest Ndukwe, in his remarks, said that the MTN’s decision to separate its CSI in MTNF is an affirmation of its genuine desire to touch the lives of Nigerians. MTN since 2005 has dedicated 1% of its profit after tax to the MTN Foundation’s activities.

    “Creating a separate entity like MTN Foundation to simply cater for CSI is unique. Engaging a Private-Public-Partnership model simply shows the interest of the Foundation in adding value to the society and such genuine considerations must be commended. While some corporate organisations are yet to understand the core of CSI, it is interesting to note that the MTN Foundation has been consistent in strategically implementing credible projects that are sustainable,” Ndukwe said.

    In setting up the MTN Foundation, Dr. Pascal Dozie, a Director with Foundation said “we agreed that we will engage people who had a molecule of virtues, who understood the principles of good governance and what it takes to be responsible.”

    In the past ten years, MTNF has spent over N13 billion on 344 projects across the 36 states of the federation including the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

  • Tinubu faults attack on Fashola

    Tinubu faults attack on Fashola

    Says I am very proud of my successor

    Former Lagos State Governor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has condemned attacks on his successor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola.
    Tinubu, in a statement by his media office on Wednesday, said Fashola would emerge victorious at the end.
    He said the immediate past governor contributed immensely to the development of Lagos adding that he remains proud of Fashola and would never be part of any process to bring him down.
    The statement reads: “The past elections were an epic confrontation between two opposing political camps. Those who believed in the progressive governance of the people gathered under the banner of the APC. Those who harkened to the conservative elitism that had cast this nation downward for so many years held to the PDP.
    “The elections clearly showed the preference of the average Nigerian. They chose the APC and rejected the PDP nationally and in Lagos state. Since the commanding victory of the APC in Lagos and all over Nigeria, the enemies of progressive governance have cleverly been at work, trying to regain through intrigue and subterfuge what they so openly and fairly lost in the elections.
    “Our political opponents now try to steal victory when their only entitlement is resounding defeat.
    ” Having fared woefully with the electorate, their game plan is to sow discord within the ranks of the party people had chosen to lead them. The PDP hopes to strike division in the APC, in that way weakening us and our ability to govern.
    “Apprised of their wiles, we in the progressive camp must be wiser still. We must not allow ourselves to be pawns in this cynical strategy. We cannot fall into their obvious snares for that would be embracing defeat when victory has already been won. It is our responsibility to govern as the people want. It would be to our detriment to fall victim to our opponent’s sly instigations by allowing ourselves to be utensils picking each other apart.
    “This brings me to recent developments in the Lagos political scene. Born of this motley stew is the recent gossip mongering that I have willfully instigated false and negative reports against former Governor Fashola to thwart him from being appointed to a major post in the Buhari administration. I want to declare clearly and categorically that these rancid attacks do not come from me nor do I endorse them. Neither my hand nor my heart is in these mean submissions. I deplore them. An attack against the performance of Governor Fashola is indirectly an attack against me and the edifice of achievements we have constructed in leading Lagos State out of a protracted time of stagnation and into an era of sustained progress and development.

    “Lagos is a much better place than when we came into governance in 1999. Each year, it has gotten better. With the APC at the helm, each subsequent year will be better yet. Babatunde Fashola has been an integral part of this improvement. He does not deserve the pillory. His record has been applauded and will continue to be when all this rumor mongering has died its natural and quick death.
    “I am proud to say that I played an instrumental role in bringing Governor Fashola into politics in the first instance. He served as my trusted chief of staff, performing excellently in that role. Due to his leadership qualities and diligent work ethic, I endorsed him for governor notwithstanding the stiff and vocal opposition of many. I am not ashamed of backing him. I believe the progress the state made under his administration has more than vindicated my endorsement.
    “Fashola, the present Governor Akin Ambode including myself are the products of a progressive political institution and its programmatic expressions. I laid the governance foundation and started the first lap, running as well as I could. I handed the baton to Fashola, knowing he would do the same. He did; he ran as well as he could. Now, he has handed to Ambode who is off and running as well as he can. We have achieved much in Lagos; but, we recognise as much as anyone that we have much more to do.
    “We also know that progress is fragile and easily undone while destruction is easily transacted but hard to undo. I for one am not the type to tear down my own house or to bring my enemy’s rubbish into it.
    “We must remember something. We have always governed Lagos state as an open forum where democracy and free expression were respected. Those who are against us were never placed in fear of the heavy hand of government descending on them even as they played funny tricks. We also must remember than in any democracy, a number of people will always oppose you no matter the quality of your performance. If an office holder has an approval rating of 70 per cent, this means, in Lagos, roughly five million people dislike the person. Also remember the PDP is just recently out of office at the federal level and that it built a vast, unprecedented financial war chest to contest the elections. The residual of that war chest is still at work, buying media space to plant rumors in hopes of spreading discord through the APC. Thus, the enemy camp may be a minority but it is a large and well-funded one that knows its only chance lies in us attacking ourselves.
    “I for one will not bend to the artificial provocation of those seeking to tear at what we have painstakingly built over the years. In my mind, Governor Fashola and I are and shall always be political allies and fellow travelers on a vital journey; that alliance is unshakeable and our journey must not be interrupted. I would no more attack his character or his administration than I would attack myself.
    “I see this present moment as crucial to Nigeria’s future. The nation faces acute challenges of security, corruption and economic development. Our task is to create policies that bring prosperity, dignity and hope to all. Great change is in reach because we have progressive governments at the federal and state levels for the first time. With great change at hand, it would be a terrible abdication of our duty to allow agents provocateur to prompt us to suspect and toss dirt at each other at a time when we should be focused on building a better, more equitable nation and society.
    “I for one shall never allow myself to be a tool of a political enemy that has nothing good in mind for Nigeria. I for one will never engage in the intramural character attacks of which I am being accused. I stand for the unity of the APC and for the progressive purpose we serve. I will not be guilty of tearing down our progressive house, not a brick of it. That I vow to all.”

  • Babatunde Fashola as the APC’s broken idol (1)

    The All Progressives Congress (APC)’s mantra of ‘Change’ flaunts a supreme theme: that of the remarkable radical – or reformer if you like. Babatunde Fashola, former governor of Lagos State, impressively rose to become the poster-icon of the ‘Change’ movement. In APC-speak, he actualised the development master plan facilitated by his predecessor, Bola Tinubu, a two-time governor of Lagos State and leader of the APC. Fashola soon became the worst nightmare of Lagos’ brutish crowd. Parts of the coastal city that erstwhile listed like a vessel bearing the coastal city’s rejects cum worst elements, cleared out to the purge of Cyclone-Fashola. Oshodi for instance, pulsated in the throes of the brilliantly rigged catharsis – a paroxysm that rid the transit township of the city’s worst’s elements, to birth an enchanting vista of change. Lagos had a no-nonsense governor. There was bound to be change. There was.

    Armed robberies, the Ebola scare, impunity of Lagos motorists, educational hiccups, dwindling revenue and infrastructural collapse were some of the maladies Fashola faced and tackled with admirable zeal. Large segments of the citizenry were of course, appreciative and enthusiastic of his radical and transformational style of governance, despite its shortcomings. Fashola thus enjoyed the resounding applause of a turbulence-weary citizenry that earnestly acknowledged his significant contributions to the progress of the coastal city.

    Citing Fashola’s achievements among others, the APC campaigned for its presidential candidate, Muhammadu Buhari and Lagos governorship candidate, Akinwumi Ambode, before an increasingly critical Lagos electorate. While the APC campaigned, Fashola was a sight to behold; memorable punch lines and poetic depiction of facts and pro-APC slogans leapt from his mouth to persuade and titillate the consciousness of a wary and increasingly critical electorate. The responses were habitually awesome, particularly when platitudes meshed with facts to substantiate the party’s promising imagery of change.

    The polls took place and the APC’s candidates emerged victorious with the party claiming gubernatorial victories in 22 of Nigeria’s 36 states. The party was ecstatic; the future seemed promising for the new power bloc. But like Ola Rotimi would say, “Joy has a slender body that breaks too soon.” So does change. If anything, the APC’s much hyped change suffers the affliction of prodigal vigour, in Lagos State to be precise.

    Fashola, the APC’s prodigious prince of change soon evolved to become primping peacock in the estimation of certain interests within the party. Scandalous snippets of a ‘progressive’ rebellion drifted from the party’s circuits, spilling beyond its ideological walls and sullying its promise of change. In the ensuing drama, Fashola is serially pitched against Tinubu, the man widely acknowledged as his benefactor and mastermind of his ascension to power and political acclaim. But like his staunch loyalists would say, Fashola rode to acclaim on the wings of his excellent performance as Chief of Staff in Tinubu’s cabinet and two-time governor of Lagos State.

    “Therefore, asking him to man the driver’s seat was arguably on merit…Those who settled for him knew they merely gambled for obvious selfish extrapolations,” reads a recent diatribe against the political machinery that produced Fashola. The article, titled, “Fashola’s indestructible record,” makes an interesting read on web and social media.

    This comes in the wake of the former governor’s rebuttal by a press release, of what he considers “manipulated and unsubstantiated allegations of wrongdoing.” According to his statement, “They range from allegations of extramarital paternity of children, to mundane and phantom conspiracy in the National Assembly, a debt profile for Lagos State and lately a website upgrade contract of N78 million, which is being distorted.”

    All is clearly not well with the APC’s golden boy. But he keeps an appearance of calm anyway, like a bejeweled idol, exulting, self-intoxicated in the electric moment before lightning strikes. Lightning struck the former governor recently as the APC’s top hierarchy and all its prominent governors stayed away from his recent book launch thus leaving him severely shaken and bereft of spunk.

    The APC’s golden boy has lost his fabled swagger and equilibrium, what is left is a feeble  attempt at valour, a necessary performance of will. But how did things degenerate to this point?

    Are the rumours about him unfounded or is his recent rebuttal of the allegations a frantic quest for empathy and recapitulation of facts? Various unprintable stories pervade the social media and junk online publications. If his rumoured spat with Tinubu is indeed true, are the several versions of the truth worth acknowledgment? Has Fashola fallen to hubris or a chthonian overflow of the elements that entwine the fate of every promising politician?

    There is no gainsaying he performed remarkably in certain areas of governance; Fashola no doubt deserves the applause he earned. However, contrary to the sentimental drivel of his army of self-confessed loyalists, Fashola hardly qualifies for a Messianic status. He is a leader still in process. But the former Lagos governor, sadly, is entangled in the designs of self-seeking characters around him. The latter spiritedly ply him with earned and unearned plaudits as a practiced lecher plies a starry-eyed maiden with exaggerated flattery. Like the proverbial maiden, they draw him into a maenadic dance of death. Not mortal death per se but the demise of his legend even before the exhaustion of its prologue.

    Fashola is very much alive but the golden boy of APC dies by the sedition of his own fable; the intelligible momentarily loses to the irrational, manifested as a fiery ego, an army of intellectual thugs and habitual fops gratuitously fostered by an innate lust for acclaim. The APC’s golden boy, trapped by his tar-baby loyalists and burdensome ego thus mutates into a crusted corpse in the party’s garden of change.

    The impending crisis may be averted once affected parties agree to sheathe their swords and rein in their attack dogs. It was hypocritical of camp Fashola to claim that he was appointed Chief of Staff to imbue the administration he served with credibility. If Fashola was truly a man of integrity, he’d steer clear any political environment that could sully his name and dignity.

    It is an open secret Fashola would never have emerged Chief of Staff and proceed to become governor had he not soared on the platform of the one (s) who his attack-dogs claimed “merely gambled for obvious selfish extrapolations” by choosing him – whatever that was intended to mean.

    Truth is, Fashola became governor because Tinubu took notice of him and enabled him.

    As governor, he did what he was paid to do. And he was handsomely rewarded for being governor too. Fashola did Lagos no favour, he was simply doing his job as governor. Lagos however, did him great favour by allowing him serve despite the fierce antagonism initially accorded his candidature by interests allegedly in disagreement with Tinubu’s belief in him. Nonetheless Lagos appreciates Fashola but if he erred in his duty as governor, the law will make him pay. If not, he will experience the karmic onslaughts of the universe.

    Those that pushed Fashola to rebel, goading him with sophistry and sycophantic allusions to his invincibility are urging him to his doom. In time, Fashola will learn that they simply see him and his estranged benefactor as meal tickets, projects to be exploited and profited from. It’s about time he extricated himself from the vicious grip of sycophant journalists, politicians and so on, deviously urging him to his end, in pursuit of their own meals. Tinubu is already yoked to such mad men and specialists in greed – but he seems to have mastered the art of navigating through the folds of their treacherous ways. Fashola should simply mend fences with Tinubu and retire to his law practice for a while. He would be stunned to see his self-confessed army of loyalists disperse to realign with fresh ‘projects’ or mugus to fleece.

     

    • To be continued…
  • N78.3m Website: BudgIT defends tweets

    N78.3m Website: BudgIT defends tweets

    Nigeria’s foremost civic technology organization, BudgIT, Tuesday denied any political interest in the controversy trailing the award of N78.3 million used to upgrade the website of former Lagos state governor, Babatunde Fashola.

    BudgIT, in a statement by its Team Lead/ Co Founder Oluseun Onigbinde, said that the organization only called for openness, accountability and transparency in the management of public funds.

    He said that the organization has come under threats over its tweets in the past few weeks over the amount awarded for the website.

    Onigbinde said that as a data-driven institution, it will continue to ask questions on projects carried out with tax payers’ money.

    The statement reads: “In the last week, a lot has been said about the work BudgIT does. Our motives have been questioned, our support from trusted partners queried, accusations made against our staff – and now we have received new information about threats. These threats directly reference our Tweets about information published on the Lagos State Public Procurement Agency website for the “Upgrade of www.tundefashola.com website post May 29, 2015 Handover.”

    “We are disheartened that in a democracy, threats are being made over the mere fact that a civic organisation highlighted public finance data to none other than the public.

    “We reiterate that the information was, and (at the timing of this statement), still is on the website, and therefore in the public domain, and therefore legally open to scrutiny by BudgIT. http://www.lagosppa.gov.ng/awarded-contracts/details-contracts-award-2014 .We have made no accusations, neither have we published any (secret) document or violated any government rules.

    “We are at a loss as to why these threats should be made, as our actions were motivated by nothing more than our role as an institution respected for data-driven advocacy for accountability, transparency and openness in the management of public funds in Nigeria.

    “We state once more that we have no political interest as we don’t take funds or seek untoward favours from government officials or politicians. Our relationship with government institutions has always been on intersecting civic engagement with institutional reform and this is mainly funded by international donor support.

    “We also want to state that we are not interested in any timing as regards the motives of this as we have only highlighted a public document published on May 13, 2015. We advise other Nigerians to interrogate the document and ask questions as responsible tax-paying citizens.”

  • At the mercy  of new wave  Lagos traffic robbers

    At the mercy of new wave Lagos traffic robbers

    It seems the bad old days are back on Lagos roads, as the city recently applauded for its relative safety from crimes, seems to be receding fast. Gboyega Alaka reports.

    Some fifteen odd years ago, Tunji Bello, the current Secretary to the Lagos State Government, had a most scary experience in the perennial Lagos traffic. He was on his way to work at the Thisday Newspaper office in Apapa, where he was a member of the editorial Board, when a certain young man, loitering in the traffic popped out a gun and ordered his driver to wind down in an obvious robbery attempt. But rather than comply, stories had it that his driver decided to play a movie hero, and instead stepped on the acceleration pedal and tried to maneuver his way through the thick traffic. Seeing that it was an effort in futility and one that might cost them their lives, Bello ordered his driver to stop and they promptly complied with the gunman’s request.

    The gunman made away with cash, a heavy suitcase of papers and valuables, but at least the now high-profile public officer had his life intact and is forging on.

    In another horrifying case, Toyosi Johnson, then a reporter with a leading glossy lifestyle magazine was driving back home on the Lagos Third Mainland Bridge, when she was attacked a gun-toting robber. She had just learnt to drive, having only recently bought her Opel car and couldn’t have attempted any stunt, as the gruff-looking guy pretending to be selling in the long traffic, popped a short pistol at her. Scared stiff, she handed over her bag, her phones and virtually every valuable object around her. Not satisfied, her assailant ordered her to pull up her blouse, so he could see her plum laps and undies, to which Toyosi immediately complied. One could only imagine how far the robber would have gone if it wasn’t for broad daylight and the moving traffic. The above incident took place about ten years ago.

    At the old Oshodi end of Lagos, before the administration of former Governor Babatunde Fashola liberated the area and made a thoroughfare out of its old gridlock, stories abound of broad daylight and early evening robberies. In fact, it became foolhardy for any Lagosian with his senses intact to attempt driving through the Oshodi-Isale end of the Agege-Motor Road in the early evening, much less in the late evening, because often, they get chastised and blamed, rather than pitied for any misfortune that befell them. A passenger in a public bus once narrated a story of how he was robbed in traffic, right under the Oshodi flyover and how when he finally got to a police point further down the road and complained, hoping for some action or pacification, only to hear the officers on duty telling him “Oga, why you self go pass Oshodi for night?”

    Deadly dangerous

    If the victims in the above instances were lucky, a middle-aged woman, Clementina Saduwa, who was a manager at one of the Ericson Lagos offices, was not so lucky a few years back. Her assailants, who had laid siege at the gallop spot right at the Leventis end of the Eko Bridge around 8pm in February 2007, pounced on her and gruesomely shot her dead, in what many initially thought was a case of paid assassination. A member of the gang of five that attacked her car, wasted no time in shooting Saduwa dead, as she struggled to explain that she had no money on her, while her driver escaped narrowly. The story heard it that the robbers had laid in wait at the end of the bridge, knowing fully well that vehicles inevitably slowed down at that spot.

    Lagosians would however learn four months later, when the police cracked the gang, that it was indeed a case of traffic robbery and not assassination.

    Saduwa’s case was highly publicised because the media latched onto it, but there are several others that never made media headlines, but which were equally gruesome. Some have escaped with bullet wounds, while those who have been fortunate narrowly escaped the criminals’ bullets, but not without serious emotional trauma.

    That incident also caused the Lagos State government to smoothen out the bump on that end of the bridge and ensure smoother and faster drive through the hitherto dangerous spot for motorists.

    The safe era

    Aside cases of robberies in traffic, Lagos had always lived with its share of outright armed robberies and car-snatching at gunpoint on highways; but these dropped significantly at the onset of Governor Babatunde Fashola’s regime in the state and especially during the tenure of the erstwhile Inspector-General of Police, MD Abubakar, then Commissioner of Police in the state. Many would recall also that probably due to the state government’s doubled effort on security, made largely possible by the Lagos Security Trust Fund, the police were duly equipped and motivated, such that even visitors testified to the strategic positioning of the police at suspicious locations in the state, leading to a relative peace, hitherto alien to the commercial city.

    Night life gradually returned and businessmen could afford to stay out late at night, holding business meetings and dinners and confident that they would still get home in peace.

    Olaseni Ayinde, a Lagos Businessman who relocated from the UK to Lagos around 2010 recalls that he was surprised to see that his business partners confidently stayed out late into the night, whenever business so required, and not a single case of violence or robbery was recorded.

    The state also received positive reviews on safety. According to a report released by travelstartblog, an online tourist sight in February 2014, Lagos remained the safest city in Nigeria in recent memory, coming first on a list of top 10 Safest Nigerian cities. And that was despite its over 20 million population and dense business concentration.

    According to the site, “The state government spends huge sum on its security, providing well-equipped response and different security units around the city. Thousands of tourists and visitors visit the city every year and they appear to be at ease  anytime they are around. It has low crime rate, no religious crisis, wonderful parks, environmental supporters and friendly people.”

    The city fondly dubbed ‘city of aquatic splendour’ by its inhabitants and visitors, also made it on the site’s list of Top 15 Safest cities on the African continent, coming in on a comfortable tenth position.

    Bankole Johnson, who used to work on Lagos Island, put that achievement at the feet of a well-funded, well-motivated and organized police command. He recalled how a few years ago, armed policemen used to be stationed on the Iyana-oworo exit of the 3rd Mainland Bridge during the evening rush hours, right into the night. He said “That gave road users a sense of safety and immediately eliminated all cases of traffic robbery, which that part of the city had become notorious for. I do not know if that pattern still plays out as we speak, because I no longer work on the Island, but I can tell you that it is just what we need in Lagos, and it will be nice if the police can replicate that strategy in other crime hot-spots.”

    It was therefore no surprise that Lagos continued to attract investments from foreign interests despite the unsavoury  reputation of insecurity been fostered on Nigeria as a whole by the Boko Haram insurgency in the Northern part of the country, kidnappers in the Niger-Delta Region and numerous ethnic clashes in the North-Central and other parts of the country.

    Even Nigerians from other troubled parts of the country trouped into the city in droves, in search of prosperity and peace of mind.

    Turn of event

    Unfortunately this situation seems to be changing for the negative, much to the chagrin of the state’s citizenry and its government that has invested so much towards its low crime rate and safety.

    More recently, reports of gun-point robberies and phones and other valuables-snatching incidents in traffic have been on the rise in the city, bringing back, as it were, a preferably forgotten past. Hardly does a day go by these days without one case of robbery occurring in one heavy traffic spots of the state or more, or all. Some of the emerging crime hot-spots according to our investigations include Oshodi-oke, Oshodi-isale, Mile-2 Oke, Mile-2-Isale, the Badagry Expressway currently under construction, right through maza-maza, through to the Agboju-Amuwo end, the Ketu-Mile 12 traffic, the Olopomeji entrance to the 3rd Mainland Bridge, and the Apongbon end of the Eko Bridge.

    The Apogbon end of the Eko Bridge seems to have become the hottest spot for crime in the city, with horrifying stories emerging on a daily basis. Just last Wednesday, a Lagos motorist narrated on a popular blogsite the unfortunate story of how his car was brazenly attacked and its occupants that included himself and his sister were robbed just about 9pm.

    Wrote the victim: “This evening, around 9pm, myself and my sister were robbed on Apongbon Bridge in traffic. The robbers didn’t even give us a chance to wind down the mirrors. They just broke the glass with all of us in it and dragged out our bags.

    “It’s unfortunate that in a country like this, with all the news every day from a common spot that there is robbery ever day, nothing has been done about it. Hopefully, one day, something would be done to protect our lives n property.”

    During the past week, a popular television channel did a special news package on the rising incidents of brazen robberies on the Badagry Expressway, complete with interviews. The motorists and commuters raised their voices against what they say has become a daily occurrence, with nearly everyone falling victim at one time or the other. They therefore called on the Lagos State government to speed up the ongoing reconstruction, while also appealing to the police and other security officers to live up to their responsibility and protect Nigerians on the road.

    A young man, Uche, who spoke to this reporter, said the situation has become such that everyone going down the other end of Lagos between Mazamaza, Agboju and Iyana-Iba would prefer to cross over before dusk. “We always want to close early from our shop before it gets dark, because these boys become more deadly at night, and there are hardly any police or soldier around to fend them off.”

    He called on the government to pay more attention to the safety of the people on that axis by deploring police and even soldiers to the road, saying ‘It is not only Boko haram that needs government’s attention. Even dangerous criminals like the ones we’re talking about need to be attended to.”

    At Mile 2 Oke, a newspaper vendor told this reporter how the area, right down to Alaba Express have become a regular spot for traffic robberies. He said this normally takes place at the early hours of the morning, when Lagosians are struggling to beat the nasty traffic on that axis of the road to get to work, or in the late evenings, when it has become dark. He said he knows this because “Usually in the morning, we see people who had been robbed either in the night or ealier in the morning, coming to look around to see if they could recover their vital documents that might have been dumped by the roadside after the robbers would have helped themselves to the cash and other things like phones and jewelries, which they could turn to cash.”

    According to him, the tanker concentration on the road, which has seemingly locked down the place in traffic is affecting road users and making virtually everybody vulnerable to robbery. And to make matters worse, he laments the fact that the police are hardly around to arrest the situation, wondering what it would cost the police to station its personnel on such dangerous spots.

    His story was corroborated by a Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) staff, who said what the guys do is attack a car, force the victims to wind down, rob them of their valuables and cross to the other side of the express. “Usually,” he says “they are so fast that within two minutes, they’re gone.”

    He also says “They usually scare the victims stiff (probably with a gun or knife) such that we only hear of the robberies when the assailants have crossed to the other side and gone.”

    Curiously, a banana hawker on the other (Orile) side of the bridge however said he could not remember any case of robbery in recent time. Pointing to an empty police shed by a triangular spot, as one ascends the bridge, he said robberies no longer happen on that side of the bridge, since the police started posting officers to the spot.

    3rd Mainland, Safe as Aso Rock

    A visit to the Iyana-oworo end of the 3rd Mainland Bridge however revealed an impressive scenario that keeps one wondering why the same police cannot adopt the same strategy to police the other parts of the city. A LASTMA official stationed at the Iyana-Oworo Bus stop said there are no incidents of robberies on that end of the bridge. He actually said “It is near impossible for robberies to happen here, because as soon as it is early evening around 4-5pm, you see fully armed eagle-eyed Rapid Response Police team taking positions on the bridge. Usually, you see one at every 100-metre radius, as you approach the end of the bridge and I tell you, it will be suicidal for anyone to try anything funny under that situation.”

    He said if in truth traffic robberies is on the rise in the city, it has to be in other areas and said “probably the guys who used to operate here relocated.”

    A groundnut seller also corroborated his story. Although, he says he does not hawk on the bridge, he said he hasn’t heard of any case of robbery on that bridge in recent time.

    Another gentleman, an Ice cream vendor however said the only robberies that occur now are pick-pockets, who usually operate in the BRT buses.

    Another LASTMA officer, still at Iyana-oworo bus stop however said the only cases of robberies that occur in the area are on the other side of the highway, near the Olopomeji axis, as motorists ascend the 3rd Mainland Bridge in the early morning hours. He said this is usually perpetrated by hoodlums who take advantage of the fact that there are no policemen on the road in those early hours to rob motorists of their money and other valuables. He pointed accusing fingers at neighbourhoods like Oworo, Bariga and Gbagada as the hideouts of the hoodlums and implored the police to extend their operations to those hours.

    One respondent, John Babatunde, who said he had been a victim of traffic robbery once, said the first thing the government and police need to do is ban hawking and any kind of loitering in the middle of traffic on highways outrightly. He said that stemmed from his own experience. “I was driving along Pako bus stop on Okota Road, a few years back, when someone tapped my car on the drivers’ side. As I turned to take a look at what the matter was, another guy, whom I had noticed earlier but didn’t pay any serious attention to, quickly reached for my phone and made away with it.” He said this would never have happened if the government totally outlaws loitering and hawking in traffic and station policemen to enforce the law.

    He also spoke of a major robbery operation in which a top business executive was disposed of his posh Nissan luxury car just about 8.30pm, almost at the same spot around Pako Bus stop, Okota , as one prepares to link up with the Oke-Afa Road, leading to Ikotun. He however said this took place about five years ago. He said he also learnt that the police retrieved the car the same evening, as the robbers made to take it through Badagry across the border.

    Police PRO speaks

    Following the avalanche of stories of robberies, it became necessary to seek the opinion the Police. Are they aware of the sudden rise in traffic robberies in the state? What exactly are they doing; or is it a case of shortage of personnel or equipment? The Nation caught up with the Lagos Police Public Relations Officer, Kenneth Nwosu, who confessed that the police is aware and “concerned about a few incidents of a robberies along the traffic gridlock places including Apongbon.  Because of that, we have increased the security in those places, Apongbon in particular. If you drive pass those areas recently, you will notice increased number of policemen stationed on the road.”

    He said “The idea is to ensure that the area is properly dominated, so that those hoodlums will not have a field day. This strategy is not only restricted to Apongbon, but several other areas identified as crime hot-spots like Ikorodu, Mile-2 axis and co. You would have noticed our policemen on snap checks doing stop and search as they patrol in motorcycles and vehicles.”

    Prodded further on what exactly the police are doing, considering that cases continue to emerge, the Police spokesman said “We will not tell you the strategies we have adopted, but I can tell you that all those areas are under serious watch.”

    On his advice to Lagosians, he said “Moving forward, we want to assure Lagosians that we have enough policemen on ground, we have our strategies, and we have enough logistics on ground to ensure that they remain safe; but again, we want to advice that anybody who falls victim should please come forward. We need the constant reporting, because the idea is that when we get to know that robberies are happening in certain areas, we move in and map out strategies on how to tackle the area. But what we have noticed is that in such cases, when they attack them, people don’t come forward to make a report. Instead, they complain to you journalists.”

    He said although the police don’t have any problem with people reporting to journalists, but that doesn’t solve the problem. It is by reporting to us instantly that we can recover the things that have been stolen. Sometimes last year, there was an incident like that along Mile 2 axis; we received a call and went into action. Some two hours later, we caught the hoodlums and recovered a pistol from them. The same thing happened in Oshodi area and we moved in immediately. The hoodlums abandoned their loots and ran away; and when the victims came to the headquarters, their belongings were handed over to them. That is the importance of reporting; but when they go unreported, the police are not magicians to know what has happened. So as part of your own responsibilities as journalists, please educated them while writing, to always report to the police when these things happen and as soon as they happen. God willing we will keep dominating our areas for the safety of Lagos and Lagosians.”

    Regarding what the police is doing about hawkers and people constantly roaming in traffic, Mr Nwosu said “The law on environmental is on now; they are mopping all the street of hawkers. That one is ongoing; it is a comprehensive strategy to rid the state of all these menace.”