Tag: Babatunde Fashola

  • What South  Africa must do after Madiba, by Fashola

    What South Africa must do after Madiba, by Fashola

    LAGOS State Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN) has said the death of former South African President Nelson Mandela calls for deeper reflection of the anti-apartheid struggle and the role played by the African continent, especially Nigeria in the journey to liberate South Africa.

    Governor Fashola who made the remark yesterday while addressing journalists at the State House in Alausa said inspite of the role played, Nigeria is currently on the receiving end of policies by the present day South Africa.

    He said it is expedient for President Goodluck Jonathan to use his presence at the burial of Nelson Mandela to put the nation’s leadership role back in the international limelight.

    He said: “I remember we did not go for Commonwealth Games because of South Africa. I remember we took drastic measures against the foreign collaborators of apartheid regime and nationalized assets. Brigadier-General Joe Garba was our Foreign Affairs Minister and Professor Bolaji Akinyemi was the Director-General of Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA). There is no home that the anti-apartheid campaign was not then. Our university halls were named after Mozambique and all of these places. We founded all of these organisations in Angola and Zimbabwe among others.

    “Apart from scholarship to South Africans, I remember when the late President Yar’Adua and I met Thabo Mbeki in South Africa and he was telling me about their relationship that dated back to the days when he was a lecturer at the University of Zaria and former President Mbeki used to come for exchange programme then.

    “There is no home that the anti-apartheid campaign was not then. Our university halls were named after Mozambique and all of these places. We funded all of these organisations in Angola and Zimbabwe among others.

    “We are the ones being driven out of South Africa. The British can enter South Africa. We have to take a visa. These are deep questions because they hurt me. People like Fela nearly lost their voices, singing about freedom. I hope that as our president is going for Mandela’s burial, I hope that it would be to go and take the leadership roles that we deserve or we should ask ourselves if we have really lost it, what is the way back. As I said, history has been revised and our voices are not heard on the international stage. This is our glory because we contributed so much to this course, and perhaps we ask ourselves what the investment pay-off has been.

    “There are more questions to answer. When you look at the part of the world where ovation is now the loudest, it was the part of the world the pain was the most vicious. In a very cruel irony, history is being revised. The people, who collaborated with the government that enthroned apartheid at that time, are the people that are paying the biggest tribute now.

    Eulogising the late freedom fighter Fashola said the legacies he left behind has proved beyond doubt that Africans are not inferior.

    “Mandela has proved we are not. There is nothing wrong with our genes. There is nothing wrong with our blood. It is just our attitude and disposition we must re-examine. Beyond that, there is nothing we cannot do. I believe there must some inspiration from there if any is needed. Really, it is to put spring on our heels so that we can reach the sky.”

  • Miners petition Fashola over alleged extortion

    Land miners have petitioned Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola over alleged fraudulent activities by some top officials of the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources in Ibeju – Lekki/Epe.

    In the petition, the Ibeju Lekki/Epe Miners Association alleged that the officials led by a senior civil servant, who was transferred to the ministry early this year, had been usurping thegroup’s constitutional role and extorting money from its members.

    The petition reads: “The officials have not only usurped the constitutional role of the association into moderating the running of miners’ activities in our axis, but also collect N420,000 daily from our members without issuing official receipt.

    “The breakdown of the haulage revenue we generated for the State Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources showed that our association pays approximately N420, 000 daily, N2.5 million weekly and over N 10 million monthly, collected in cash regularly by an agent of a powerful woman in the ministry without receipt being issued, while we were also compelled to pay 20 per cent of the total daily proceeds and N40, 000 daily for security. Our consistent request for receipts for these monies proved abortive, but investigation revealed that only N 60,000 daily, N 360,000 weekly and N1.4 million monthly are remitted to the state Government’s Coffer. To our dismay, these officials went further to hijack the responsibility of our association by imposing rosters on our members and giving consent (licence) to unknown mining operators who are mostly tax evaders.”

    The association said its members were shocked to discover that the number of consent given out between July and November had “ridiculously” rose from 24 to 150, forcing four members to work in a day and just twice in six months.

    The association alleged intimidation by soldiers and policemen at their mining site, adding that they were also threatened with losing their consent from January next year by the officials.

    The association, which is for sand mining in the Ibeju Lekki/Epe, it had succeeded in ending illegal operations, regularising said sales and ensuring the payment of government dues by its members as when due.

  • Fashola swears in new finance commissioner

    Fashola swears in new finance commissioner

    Gov. Babatunde Fashola of Lagos State, yesterday, restated the commitment of his administration to serve the people of the state.

    He made the pledge in Ikeja at the administration of the oath of office on Mr Ayo Gbeleyi, the new Finance Commissioner.

    The governor said that he and other members of his team would continue to pursue the developmental aspirations of the people of the state.

    Fashola, who congratulated the new commissioner for the elevation, however, added that Gbeleyi now had more responsibilities, not only to the state government, but also to Lagosians, in general.

    The governor pledged to give the new commissioner all the needed support to do his job.

    He called for the understanding of his family, saying the new responsibilities would demand more time out of home.

    Gbeleyi thanked the governor for the confidence reposed in him with his appointment and promised to break new grounds for the financial sustainability of the state.

    He promised to work with other members of the state cabinet, to bring more development to the people of the state.

    According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), the inauguration of Gbeleyi followed his clearance by the State House of Assembly which had received his nomination from the governor.

    The nomination followed the resignation of the former commissioner, Mr. Tokunbo Abiru, on July 24, to take up a board appointment at First Bank of Nigeria PLC.

    The new appointee was until his inauguration, the Special Adviser to Fashola on Public Private Partnerships (PPP).

    The inauguration was graced by members of the executive council, as well as family members and friends of the new appointee.

  • Lagos unveils research strategies for development plan

    Lagos unveils research strategies for development plan

    The Lagos State Government has rolled out research strategies designed to help realise its 2012-2025 development plan.

    The development, according to the government, is geared towards promoting infrastructural development, economic growth and social security in the state.

    Secretary of Lagos State Research & Development Council (LRDC), Ms. Moji Rhodes, in a statement released on Saturday, said the state governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, has emphasised the importance of research to the economic growth of Lagos megacity project during the inauguration of the Lagos Innovation Council in August 2011 and the Lagos Research & Development Council (LRDC) in September 2012.

    She said the council had invited research proposals from academics and experts in different fields of human endeavours to help chart course for meaningful development.

    Rhodes said such proposals must be in line with the 2012-2025 Lagos State Development Plans, which, she said, was predicated on economic growth, infrastructural development, social security and sustainable development.

    She explained that the window of opportunities was offered by the Fashola administration through the council to drive research and innovation under the INNOVATELAGOS initiative.

    She said, “The initiative has received an impetus as the way has now been cleared for tertiary institutions in the state to commence the submission of research proposals which, if approved, could benefit from a research grant of about N5 million.

    “The themes considered for the research include infrastructural development and management, social sciences, arts and humanities, science, technology & innovation cross-cutting such areas as-manufacturing, small and medium enterprises (SMEs) including the informal sector and finance,” the secretary said.

    Rhodes explained some of the conditions to attract research grants, noting that proposals that would attract the grants should address and identify problems in the state under the 2012-2025 Lagos State Development Plan, while the applicants must be employed by or enrolled at a tertiary institution in the state.

     

  • Lagos East should produce next governor, says Ikuforiji

    Lagos East should produce next governor, says Ikuforiji

    Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Adeyemi Ikuforijihas said that the Lagos East Senatorial District should produce the governor in 2015.

    He said, having produced the three Speakers, who brought honour to the state and party six times, the district is qualified to produce the next governor.

    Ikuforiji observed that there are competent men and women in the district, who can succeed Governor Babatunde Fashola, urging the people to intensify their agitation for power shift.

    The Speaker also reflected on his trial by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), saying that he will triumph over the predicament. He said: “EFCC or not, it is vanity. They will reap vanity. You know me; I will always speak my mind. Because of that, I incur the wrath of some people. God always deliver me and he will continue to deliver me”.

    The Speaker, who is believed to be eyeing the governorship, spoke at the meeting of the Lagos East All Progressives Congress (APC) stakeholders held at the Somolu Local Government Secretariat last weekend. He however, clarified that he had no specific candidate in mind, stressing that he only echoed the patriotic views of the stakeholders.

    Ikuforiji said: “In this coming dispensation, Lagos East Senatorial District must produce the next APC governor. All our leaders should approve the proposal. I had a dream. The dream is that our leader will support the East District for the slot”.

    The Speaker’s remark has generated much interest and controversy among the APC chieftains. Ikuforiji, the Epe-born politician, has canvassed for power shift from the Central to the East District at a time he is representing Ikeja, West District, in the House of Assembly.

    A chieftain of the APC from the West, who spoke on a condition of anonymity, said: “The legislator has found it difficult to champion power shift to the West, where he resides and currently benefits from. How would he want the people of Ikeja and the West to feel? Since he belongs to two districts, he should have allowed others to lead the agitation”.

    Since the Second Republic, power shift has not shaped governorship selection in Lagos. The three districts were only designed for senatorial elections. Although some politicians have canvassed a rotational principle, based on the five divisions-Lagos, Ikeja, Badagry, Epe, and Ikorodu, the political parties have never considered it. Lagos State has become one indivisible zone, based on the deep interactions among the indigenes and settlers.

    The first civilian governor, Alhaji Lateef Jakande, son of the Oluwo of Lagos, with an ancestral root in Omu-Aran, Kwara State, came from the Central District. For ethnic balancing, the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) leader, the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo put forward Alhaji Rafiu Jafojo, an Awori, with an ancestral root in Ile-Ife, Osun State, as the running mate. He came from the West. The Lagos Central-born governor lived in Ilupeju, Lagos West.

    In the Third Republic, Sir Michael Otedola of the defunct National Republican Convention (NRC) was elected governor. He hails from Epe, East Central. Those who wanted to serve as the governor at that time, including Chief Dapo Sarunmi, the late Prof. Femi Agbalajobi and Chief Yomi Edu, also came from Epe. But the two parties-the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and NRC-did not zone it to Epe or East District. In fact, when Sarunmi and Agabalajobi were banned from the race by the military, the Jakande group in the SDP drafted Prince Abiodun Ogunleye from Ikorodu to the race.

    In 1999, when the Afenifere/Alliance for Democracy (AD) leaders endorsed Senator Bola Tinubu for the governorship, they did not bother about whether he is from the West or Central District. Merit was the watchword. The Tinubu family is from the Central, but Senator Tinubu started politics in Ikeja-Agege axis. His successor, Babatunde Fashola (SAN), is from the Central, but his origin did not play any role in his emergence as the Action Congress (AC) flag bearer.

    Observers point out that Lagos is a cosmopolitan setting that has thrown up many actors, who are not indigenes of the state. One of the Speakers from the East, Senator Olorunnimbe Mamora, is from Ijebuland, Ogun State. A handful of state and federal legislators from the district are also not indigenes. There are interactions by marriage. In 2007, when the Ikorodu Division agitated for power shift, a Mushin, West District politician, Senator Ganiyu Solomon, showed up at the rally in Ikorodu, claiming that her paternal grandmother hailed from the division.

    Ikuforiji however, maintained that the agitation for zoning, rotation or power shift is legitimate, urging the people of the East not to relent in their efforts.

    He stressed: “Since 1999, Lagos East has produced the Speakers. The Lagos State House of Assembly has been the best in Nigeria. That means that Lagos East is full of materials. We have capable men and women in the East. The Legislature is the most difficult arm of government. It has been headed by people from the East. It is the turn of the East to produce the governor of Lagos State and it will be so”.

     

     

     

  • Fashola tasks professionals on building collapse

    Tribunal of Inquiry submit report

    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola (SAN) yesterday urged professionals in the construction sector to stem the tide of building collapse.

    Fashola spoke at the Lagos House, Ikeja when members of the tribunal that looked into incidents of collapsed buildings in the state led by its Chairman Abimbola Ajayi, submitted its report.

    The governor called on professional bodies to ensure that any of its members indicted in cases of collapsed building are sanctioned.

    Praising the committee, Fashola said his administration would implement its report, saying quacks will take over the jobs of professional if they abdicate their responsibilities.

    He said: “The White Paper will be released very soon to ensure that cases of collapsed building are mitigated. The construction sector of our economy is where there are specialised professionals. And I believe that many of the challenges facing the country are created by people and if professionals do more, we can solve the problems.

    “There are usually mild challenges and they can be solved by men and women especially people who have the right skill. From your report, it showed that after the white paper is issued, the state ministry of justice, police, professionals and all those involve in building activities will have role to play in ending collapsed building.

    “It is the responsibility of the government to ensure that no life is lost in circumstances that can be avoidable. For us, human life is very important and it is the most important gift that we have. And we will do everything within our capacity to protect and nurture it to its fullest capacity”.

    “The solution to end collapsed building required everyone to stand up. And I hope that the professional bodies in the sector will play their own part in the issue”.

    “If a building collapses, why should the builder keep his license without showing that he actually did everything that should have been done? Why shouldn’t everyone involve shouldn’t be questioned by the associations. The inability of the police to prosecute them isn’t enough. The associations should also do their own part”.

    Fashola said he apprehended a contractor three weeks ago at Ogudu axis, who wanted to start building on a weekend because he was not building what was approved on the land.

    “They had gotten certificate of occupancy which reads that the place would be used for residential purpose but somehow, they had defeated our system and obtained C of O to build a hotel of six-storey building. We are looking inward to know who issued the permit”.

    “But they are building at night when visibility will be poor. This is the only one I saw. What about the ones many of you were privileged to witness but you didn’t report”.

    Ajayi said the tribunal’s report was in eight volumes.

     

  • Nigerian Dream is not elusive – Fashola

    Nigerian Dream is not elusive – Fashola

    Lagos State Governor, Mr Babatunde Fashola (SAN) has assured that the Nigerian Dream is not elusive but alive and capable of transforming the citizens to become whatever they want to achieve in the country.

    Fashola spoke at the public presentation of a book, “Out of Africa: Fashola, Reinventing Servant leadership to Engender Nigeria’s Transformation” by Dr. John M.O. Ekundayo in Lagos on Friday.

    According to him, the Nigerian Dream had seemingly been ‘elusive’ because Nigerians  have not taken time to define and confront it as a national phenomenon.

    “The Nigerian dream is not elusive. It is because we have not confronted and felt about what it has become for us. We haven’t defined it. The American dream is more attractive to us. But the Nigerian dream happens here every day. It is the Nigerian dream that makes me stand here”, the Governor said.

    He said the Nigerian Dream manifests across the nation everyday in people of modest and humble beginning rising to become leaders in their own rights, adding that the opportunities Nigeria offers to her people was sufficient for all discerning, honest and hardworking citizens to become whatever they want to become.

    “My mother is a nurse and my father was a journalist but the Nigerian dream has happened in my life time and the life time of all that are seated here. It is happening here every day and the earlier we embrace it, the earlier we multiply it, the earlier we sink it down and define it and say this is what it is; that if you work hard, if you learn, if you are honest, you can be all that you can in the land of your ancestors, that is the Nigerian dream”, the Governor said.

    According to the Governor, “You can cling to the other dreams which are not ours, but I cling to the Nigerian dream. It has given me everything; it only calls for me to give back”. He said the only thing it takes to realize the Nigerian dream is to work hard on ones God-given talent and be consistent and dedicated.

    Governor Fashola, who noted there has been an outrage among Nigerians over the death by accident of an academic on the Nigerian road as a result of an alleged reckless driving by the convoy of a state Governor, said the frequency of such avoidable carnages informed the decision by his administration to enact some of the amended traffic laws noting that the government’s intent at the time was unclear.

    “Every state in the Federation is spending money to build good hospitals, they are building health centres. Our life expectancy is improving because things are getting better different from what it was several years ago. The place we are having tragic loss of lives now are on Nigerian roads”, the Governor said adding that the primary duty of every responsible government is to protect life and property.

    Pointing out that the issue was not as much about the bad roads as about the attitude of people to road use, Governor Fashola said when the Road Traffic Law was enacted, Lagos was reporting an average of 640 motorcycle accidents on Lagos roads every month and about an average of six people dying as a result of the accident every day.

    “Today, that number has reduced to a little over 110 a month. The deaths have reduced from 15 to one and in the last three months we have not had any deaths from motorcycle accidents. That for me is the responsibility of Government. Though it was a tough decision that was given political colouration, I was clear in my mind that this was the way to go”, the Governor said.

    On the use of sirens by some government officials and agencies, Governor Fashola said the outrage being felt by Nigerians over the death of the University don and the manner of his death was of concern to him also but added, “the questions we should ask ourselves is, ‘do we manufacture sirens here?”

    “We import sirens and fund other economies in Asia. We spend money to buy a horn with which to terrorize ourselves. Those who manufactured these things say they should be used as a call in times of emergency, are we living in perpetual emergency?”, he asked.

    To those outraged at the manner of the accident of the late don, Fashola said “I share your outrage, I share your concern about human life. It resonates very deeply with me. But I think it is not all about isolating one figure. It is about all of us taking a holistic view of the whole thing and asking ourselves whether or not we like what we see”.

    Speaking on the genesis of the book, Governor Fashola said it came about from the author, who was then studying in Singapore, sending him an e-mail with a request to be allowed to understudy the Lagos State Government as his thesis on Political Governance in Africa.

    “Just because we have nothing to hide, I said ‘why not, come and look at Lagos State. It is not my personal property’. So, he came and by the time he finished his thesis, I saw he had produced this book”.

    He expressed gratitude to the author, Dr. John M.O. Ekundayo for taking time to do the work adding that , “this book really is about Lagos and its Government and its institutions and its people. But in their generosity, they have allowed me to be their leader. And so if you see my name, Fashola, it is really “Lagos Out of Africa”.

    The Governor also expressed joy that the book brought out the candid opinion of some people in some parts of the State who still felt neglected promising that in the remaining months before the end of his tenure the Government would endeavour to reach such areas with development.

    Speaking  at the ceremony, human rights activist, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN) commended Governor Fashola for being a leader who takes criticisms in good faith saying unlike some of his colleagues he had never by virtue of his criticisms been tagged as an adversary.

    Falana added that it is exemplary that if Governor Babatunde Fashola does not use siren to terrorize residents of the state out of the roads, there is no basis for any state Governor to use siren to intimidate members of the public.

    He described the book, “Out of Africa: Fashola, Reinventing Servant Leadership to Engender Nigeria’s Transformation” as a solid book which is not pictorial and which everyone should endeavour to read and digest.

    Falana charged the leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC) led by Chief Bisi Akande which discovered Governor Fashola to realize that though the Fashola phenomenon is still on as he wrote in the foreword of the book,  but beyond Lagos, the country is in dire need of dependable leadership.

    The Interim National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chief Bisi Akande said there is a lot of despondency in the Nigerian nation today because of lack of leadership.

    He noted  that when a leader demonstrates an uncommon passion for service, he is bound to be recognized and prayed that God continues to imbue Governor Fashola with the wisdom to continue to deliver the dividends of democracy to the good people of Lagos.

    Also speaking, the Chief Presenter of the book, Chief Kessington Adebutu, who was represented by Asiwaju Yemi Ajayi, said the vision of Governor Fashola in transforming Lagos was not new but noted that Fashola has tackled challenges in a new way.

    “The Governor was a marked departure from others as “a leader who never looks down on people but is very approachable to everyone”.

    In his message of goodwill, another co- launcher, Chief Pius Akinyelure described Governor Fashola as an extremely intelligent and gifted young man.

    “Nigeria needs more of his exemplary leadership style to make the nation better. He prayed that when the time is ripe, the ruling party would be able to produce a similar gifted leader who would be able to carry on the banner of selfless leadership which Fashola has offered Lagos State.

    He declared, “For some people, the aroma of public office is very attractive and could be very intimidating but for Governor Fashola, he is a leader who has demonstrated that he is not detached from his people”.

    The representative of the Ekiti State Governor and Commissioner for Integration , Mr. Funmi Afuye, described Governor Fashola as a man of honour who is worthy of all the accolades poured on him by virtue of the book written in his honour.

    In his vote of thanks, the author of the book, Dr. Ekundayo commended Governor Fashola and the State Government for the support provided to him during the course of the research work, saying the book is about leadership and followership and how the Lagos Governor has used leadership to reinvent governance in the State.

    Dignitaries present at the occasion included Secretary to the State Government, Dr. (Mrs.) Oluranti Adebule, Commissioner for Special Duties, Dr. Wale Ahmed, his Information and Strategy counterpart, Mr. Lateef Ibirogba, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, Chief Remi Makanjuola, Chief Pius Akinyelure, wife of the  author, Mrs. Mary Anikeola Ekundayo, as well as his relations, friends and  associates.

     

     

     

  • Fashola, Bill Gates, Dangote promise to eradicate polio from Nigeria

    Fashola, Bill Gates, Dangote promise to eradicate polio from Nigeria

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN); Microsoft founder and philanthropist, Mr. Bill Gates and Nigeria’s business mogul, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, yesterday promised to eradicate polio from the country.

    They spoke in Ikeja, the Lagos State capital, when Gates and Dangote visited Fashola in his office at Alausa, Ikeja.

    Gates said efforts were on top gear to ensure that Nigeria was removed from the list of countries with polio infections.

    According to him, $6 billion had been raised to eradicate the disease globally.

    He said: “In the area of health, there is much progress. But there is a lot to be done. It is wonderful to have this state being in the lead of very high immunisation rate in reducing the child death rate.

    “In our foundation and Dangote Foundation, we have been around the country to see how we can help you achieve health goals. Nigeria has a large number of children who do not get vaccinated.

    “Eradicating polio will be wonderful for the entire world. I am optimistic we are going to eradicate polio. In Asia, we have it in two countries – Pakistan and Afghanistan – which have not got zero.

    “In Africa, Nigeria, of course, primarily in the North, has not got to zero. Even in the South, we still have some cases of polio. We also have the same issue in Somalia and Syria.”

    Fashola hailed Gates and Dangote for their lead role at eradicating polio.

    He said: “What needs to be done is out there in terms of knowledge. It is not so much that those who have to act don’t know what to do. It is perhaps the approach we have pursued in trying to get what needs to be done.

    “Whether we have done so well as a team or we have stood out in solo, one of the initiatives I threw to the Governors’ Forum about four years ago was that governors should lead the initiative of vaccination. That way, hopefully, we would demonstrate how important it is for us.

    “I think we are in the march towards eradicating the virus. We have not put the voices of the survivors in the forefront of the campaign. And the voices of the policy makers have drowned those of the victims themselves.”

  • Lagos gives 18 buses to prisons, tertiary institutions

    Lagos gives 18 buses to prisons, tertiary institutions

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola yesterday presented 18 buses to the State Command of the Nigeria Prison Service (NPS) and seven tertiary institutions.

    NPS got four buses and the tertiary institutions two each.

    Presenting the vehicles to the beneficiaries at the Ikeja House in Alausa, Fashola said the state was concerned about the management of the criminal justice system.

    He said: “Given the public knowledge that we have of how the finances of our federation is run, I thought you would get more than enough of what you need from the 52 per cent that the Federal Government keeps. But strangely, it is out of the 26 per cent that the 36 states share that you still get from.

    “The situation is of serious concern. It is not limited to the police. It continues down the line to managing an efficient prison service and system.”

    Fashola said the government would fuel and maintain the NPS’s buses.

    He said: “These four buses are our widow’s mite, but that is only half of the story because if you cannot buy buses, I am not sure you can fuel and maintain them.”

    The governor said there was need for every Nigerian to pay attention to the feeding, education and re-orientation of prisoners.

    He said: “It may seem that federal fiscal lines are blurred but we remain focused on what should be done at the appropriate levels and what we must do. If the prison service cannot be funded and states have to do it, then they should surrender the federal share of the budget to states because, really, we seem to be doing everything by ourselves these days.

    “This is a sector after my heart and I am hoping that within the time left, we can make some in road into this sector of our lives, because I do not think we have paid enough attention to it.”

    He said the buses given to institutions were in appreciation of their support to the state during the hosting of the national sport festival.

    NPS Controller, Lagos Command, Mrs. Katherine Ononye thanked the governor for his support, urging him to build cells were prisoners can be kept at courts while waiting for trial.

  • Lagos economy rakes in N1billion from 2012 end-of-year countdown

    The Lagos State Government generated N1billion during the 2012 end-of-year countdown into year 2013.

    The Managing Director, Lagos State Signage and Advertisement Agency (LASAA), Mr. George Noah, who disclosed this while rolling out plans for this year’s countdown to 2014, said this was generated from the series of economic activities during the celebration.

    According to him, “about 1,000 people were employed including caterers, retailers, entertainers and security personnel. In addition, the Bar Beach stretch attracted over 200,000 people in 10days. What LASAA is doing on behalf of the state government is leveraging the proposition of Lagos as a premium destination for business and leisure.”

    He explained that the world-class event was conceived by the state Governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, in order to put Lagos on the global map in the league of cities such as New York, Dubai, London, Sydney, and other major destinations that commemorate the cross-over into the New Year.

    “Just like last year, this year’s Countdown Festival will hold at the Bar Beach stretch, Victoria Island and will commence on December 7, 2013 and culminate on the 1st of January 2014.

    Noah stressed that the Lagos countdown is about instituting an enduring crossover tradition, commerce, employment generation, leisure, entertainment and tourism.

    He said activities will commence from December 7, and climax on January 1, 2014 at the Bar Beach with spectacular display of fireworks.