Tag: Ejigbo

  • Ejigbo gives GCE forms to 150 students

    Ejigbo gives GCE forms to 150 students

    • By Nelly Otoko and Glory Oguerisi

    The Ejigbo Local Council Development Area (LCDA) has distributed free General Certificate Examination (GCE) forms to over 150 students across the six political wards.

    Its Chairman, Monsuru Bello acknowledged the challenges faced by everyone, including the government, in these difficult times, urging students to make the most of the opportunity and study diligently.

    TBello, who was represented by the Vice Chairman and Supervisor for Health, Ayodele Ayodeji, emphasised the importance of preparing for the forthcoming GCE exams. He encouraged students to stay focused and avoid distractions during the examination.

    He noted that the initiative was aimed at ensuring that students had the necessary materials to effectively prepare for their exams.

    Read Also: Ejigbo Council boss announces dissolution of CDC,CDA executives

    Council Manager Olusegun Ajaguna explained that the main aim of giving the forms freely was to ensure that the students are successful in the nearest future.

    He enjoin beneficiaries to attach great value to th eexamination.

    The Supervisor for Education, Ganiu Bello, advised the students to take their studies study hard, and eliminate irrelevancies.

  • Marketers allege disruption of fuel loading at Ejigbo

    Marketers yesterday expressed concern over the alleged disruption of loading at Ejigbo Satellite Depot by Pipelines Products Marketing Company (PPMC).

    They claimed that PPMC has not allowed loading in the last three weeks.

    Chairman of Ejigbo Satellite depot Alhaji Ayo Alanamu, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), that the action would cause fuel scarcity within the metropolis, if not addressed urgently.

    According to Alanamu, an official of Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) explained that routine maintenance was being carried out on system 2B pipeline network, which was yet to be completed.

    “The official said non-payment of salary to the pipelines surveillance security affected the pumping of products to the depot as the security demanded for payment before operation can commence.

    “We have not loaded a single product from the depot in the last three weeks and this has increased the ex-depot price in most private depots in Apapa,” he said.

    The Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) boss urged the NNPC to intervene to avert scarcity management before weekend.

    “Today, the situation has worsened as Mosinmi and Ibadan depots now have low stock. The two depots which usually load 200 trucks each on a daily basis now load between 10 to 12 trucks daily,” he said.

    He said marketers would not hesitate to sell petrol above the N145 per litre pump price, if private depots failed to sell at the official ex-depot price.

    Alanamu said it was a challenge for trucks coming from Kwara, Ilorin, Ekiti, and Kogi to load at Apapa due to the ongoing road repairs.

     

  • Clearing agent charged with N2.5m fraud

    A 40-year-old clearing agent, Ejike Onyinye, who allegedly defrauded a man of N2.5 million on the  pretext of investing the money in hides and skin business, was on Wednesday brought before a Yaba Chief Magistrates’ Court.

    Ejike, a resident of Ejigbo, Lagos, is standing trial on charges of intent to defraud and stealing.

    He, however, denied the charge.

    ASP Roman Unuigbe, who is prosecuting the case, told the court that the accused committed the offences between May 26 and May 31, 2017 at Ejigbo.

    Roman said the complainant, Mr Ibrahim Lukman, reported the incident at the Yaba Police Station.

    The accused had on May 26, 2017, told the complainant that he was a clearing agent who intended going into the importation of hides and skin and that he needed some money for the business.

    Read Also:  Court convicts Nwobike for perversion of justice

    “The complainant gave the accused N2.5 million not knowing that there was no plan for any business.

    “The accused took the money from the complainant and ran away,” he alleged.

    The offences contravened Sections 278 and 314 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.

    Newsmen reports that Section 285 stipulates a three-year jail term for stealing while Section 314  provides 15 years for fraud.

    In his ruling on the accused’s bail application, the Magistrate, Mr P.A. Ojo, granted the clearing agent bail in the sum of  N500,000 with two sureties in like sum.

    Ojo said the sureties must be gainfully employed with an evidence of three years tax payment to the Lagos State Government.

    NAN

  • Supply shortage at Ejigbo depot

    Supply shortage at Ejigbo depot

    There was shortage of supply at the Ejigbo depot in Lagos yesterday.

    Ejigbo is the depot that supplies products to stations in Lagos state.

    The Independent Petroleum Product Marketers Association of Nigeria(IPMAN) Chairman, Ejigbo Depot, Alhaji Alanamu Balogun, said supply to marketers is fast reducing at the depots and others owned by NNPC.

    He said the cooperation had reduced the number of vessels it is bringing to Lagos from five to one, due to importation problems.

    He said marketers were getting between 50 to 60 trucks of fuel per day, as against 100 trucks per day, which they were receiving before the scarcity.

    Balogun said: “Today, marketers are lucky as they allotted 75trucks of fuel across board. They are Major Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN), Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) and NNPC retail outlets. Out of 75 trucks, IPMAN were giving 32 trucks of fuel since they have the largest distribution network, while MOMAN and NNPC retail outlets are to share 42 trucks of fuel.’’

    He said IPMAN are required to load 20 out of 32 trucks today and spread the remaining 12 trucks to other days, since it is not certain that NNPC would supply more fuel to the depot.

    ‘’ The depot is required to get clearance from Atlas Cove, Lagos and NNPC headquarter in Abuja on whether there would be more fuel or not. If the clearance from Atlas Cove or NNPC is negative, this implies that the allottees must manage the fuel giving to them well. In this case, IPMAN, as a matter of fact must not load the fuel allocated to them in a day. To say the truth, NNPC does not have enough fuel to supply depots or marketers.’’ He added.

  • Yuletide: NUPENG assures of regular petrol supply

    Yuletide: NUPENG assures of regular petrol supply

    The Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers ( NUPENG ) on Wednesday assured motorists of regular supply of petroleum products to filling stations during the Yuletide and beyond.

    Mr. Tayo Aboyeji, the new Chairman of South-West Chapel of NUPENG, gave the assurance in an interview in Lagos.

    According to Aboyeji, tanker drivers will work throughout the Christmas and New Year festivals to ensure that filling stations in the South West get sufficient products.

    “I met the top management of Pipelines and Product Marketing Company ( PPMC ), a subsidiary of NNPC, on the assurance of products due to current fuel scarcity in some parts of the country.

    Read also: NUPENG offers support for NNPC to end fuel scarcity

    “If there is no petrol at depots, there is nothing we can take to filling stations.

    “They assured us that sufficient supply will be available in both PPMC depots in  in Lagos and Mosinmi in Ogun during the period.

    “They also promised to ensure that some private depots being used by the company for distribution will be fully loaded with petroleum products.

    “With this assurance from the NNPC, our tanker drivers will work round the clock to ensure that most filling stations in the South West have more than enough product.

    “We will ensure that Muslim members of the Petroleum Tanker Drivers ( PTD ) work around the clock to ensure that petrol is available during the Christmas and New Year holidays,” he said.

    The chairman appealed to Federal Government to ensure speedy completion of Apapa-Wharp Road which was being handled by Dangote Group.

    He said that reconstruction works were taking toll on petroleum tankers going to different tank farms in Apapa, adding that tankers were on queues for days before getting to depots.

    ‘Our tankers spend close to two weeks on queues due to reconstruction of the road before accessing tank farms in Apapa; this is part of what is resulting in scarcity of petrol in the country.

    “We are all aware that 80 per cent of petroleum products being used by Nigerians are coming from these private tank farms in Apapa, so the repair work should be done on time,” he said.

    NAN

  • ‘Pupils should prioritise digital technology’

    Gone are the days when all that pupils did was copy everything their teacher said or scrawled on the blackboard and reproduce it on exam day. Digital technology is the new frontier and the way to go.

    That was the message the proprietor of Power and Glory College, Ejigbo, Lagos State, Mr. Ezekiel Onulude, delivered to pupils of the school as part of activities marking the World Literacy Day.

    He said pupils should focus more on using information and computer technology to create rather than merely typing out schoolwork.

    Onulude said this will help them to be aware of the challenges ahead of them and compete in the modern world.

    Onulude, a retired accountant, stressed that digital technology is fundamentally changing the way people live, including access to information, knowledge, management, networking, and social services, among others.

    The principal, Mr. Chidi Aloys, urged pupils to plan and focus on how digitisation can be part of their learning.

    He said for one to be literate in a digital world, one must be able to operate and understand the terms, languages of computers.

    The resource persons Miss Judith Johnson and Miss Sonia Enumah, Senior Prefect and deputy Senior Prefect all stressed the importance of digital technology in the education sector.

     

  • School graduates first set

    History was made in Gabsolarose Schools, one of the prominent private schools in Ejigbo, Lagos State, when it graduated its first set of pupils penultimate week.

    The event was attended by a large numbers of parents and friends from far and near who came to felicitate with the graduands and the school.

    Speaking at the ceremony, proprietress of the school, Mrs Roseline Omotola Shobande, counseled the graduands to be worthy ambassadors of the school and goal getters.

    Shobande said it was not enough to set goals, saying the graduands must imbibe the spirit of decision making, faith, commitment, perseverance and prayers as watchwords  to accomplish their goals.

    “The path to achieving goal is fraught with boredom, excuse and difficulty. You’ll have a lot of opportunities to talk yourself out of the goal. But if you can keep going back to the reason and your desire for the goal, those will help you stay on track”, she said.

    In his address, chairman of the occasion, Pastor Anthony Shokoya who also chairs the school’s Parents-Teachers Association, PTA, said, the school is committed to helping every child achieve their fullest potentials academically, creatively, socially, physically and spiritually.

    Shokoya described the proprietress as a woman of substance with a strong sense of discipline, humility, honesty and transparency in running the school.

    “This is my fourth year as chairman of PTA of the school. I am highly impressed with the manner the proprietress is handling the school.

    “We will continue to do our best to help the school become great because the proprietress is transparent to the parents, therefore we will all join hands with her to move the school to a greater height”, Shokoya promised.

    Also, a special guest of honour, Dr Anuoluwapo Popoola, said that the standard of education in Nigeria was not as bad as many think, especially when it comes to private education.

    She said Nigeria’s population was too large for government institutions to manage alone without private sector support.

    “Although there are bad eggs among private schools in Nigeria, I have seen a couple of private schools who are matching up with developed world standard of education. And at the same time, the population is too large; government schools alone cannot accommodate all. So of course, there is a need for private schools to provide education for those that government school cannot take”, Popoola said.

  • ‘My plan for Ejigbo, by aspirant’

    A chairmanship aspirant in the forthcoming local government election in Lagos State, Mr Peter Omotayo Ajayi, has said he will make his local government a better place. He said he is running for the chairmanship position because he cares about his community and the state at large. He wants to go back, reach back, and give back to his community. To him, serving others is the greatest reward of all.

    For long, Ejigbo LCDA has everything backwards and upside down. In a true democracy, the people are in charge, not the elected officials. Elected leaders are public servants and should do the will of the public. That is what he plans to practice now in Ejigbo LCDA.

    He is running for the Chairmanship position of Ejigbo Local Council Development Area (LCDA) in the forthcoming Lagos State local government election on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Ajayi is running for public office because he is upset with the way local issues are being handled and wants to actualise his vision for Ejigbo LCDA.

    As a strong advocate for social change, he is fully immersed on human rights issues. Between 1999 and 2011, he served in different capacities with different organisations: administrative officer/group coordinator/chair, caretaker committee of Amnesty International Nigerian Section, Co-Convener Movement for Genuine Democracy in Nigeria, Executive Director, Centre for Human Rights Education and Reporting. Politically, Ajayi has served Ejigbo LCDA as Supervisor for Market and Revenue Generation, Chairman, Committee on Revenue for Ejigbo LCDA and Revenue Consultant to Ejigbo LCDA. During his appointment as Supervisor for Market and Revenue Generation, he worked assiduously and increased the revenue of the Council with 360 per cent, a record that was unprecedented.

    Ajayi is the founder and Executive Director of Salvage for Development Initiative (SDI), a think-tank arm of the APC. The SDI, through research and policy analysis, proffers solutions to socio-economic and political problems confronting governments in Nigeria. He is also the publisher of The View Magazine (online and print), which focuses on politics, corruption and general issues.

    While he was with human rights organisations, he participated at different committees such as human rights education, campaign and outreach, refugee/relief work, fundraising for investment and development. He chaired press and publication as well as the media and publicity organs of the committees.

    After the return of civil rule in 1999, he joined politics. In the Media Office of the National Leader of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, under the then headship of Mr. Sunday Dare, Ajayi was a Social Media Assistant, with the responsibility of managing and monitoring every online news report about the image and personality of his principal.

  • Why I want to be Ejigbo chairman, by aspirant

    THE Chairman of the Committee on Revenue Generation in Ejigbo Local Council Development Area (LCDA) of Lagos State, Mr. Peter Ajayi, has declared his intention to vie for the chairmanship ticket of the party in the forthcoming local government election.

    Ajayi said the people of Ejigbo have been yearning for a positive change and that he has the ability, desire and leadership skills to consolidate on the visions of the APC in Ejigbo LCDA this time around. The aspirant believes he is ripe for the position, because he had yielded to the advice and decision of the party leadership to step down several times in the past.

    He said their persistent calls for a brilliant and creative chairman as an agent of positive change that would improve their welfare and well-being serve as great incentive and motivation for him to contest as chairman of the council. “Therefore, I cannot, in good conscience, resist or reject the call to give my service and sacrifice to my people,” he added.

    Ajayi, who is also the publisher of The View Magazine and the Executive Director of the Salvage for Development Initiatives (SDI), a non-governmental organisation, described himself as a passionate and committed member of the APC who has volunteered and worked to assist other APC members win elections in the area on a number of occasions.

    He said: “Having lived all my productive adult life in Ejigbo, I have a sincere appreciation for this thriving community. I care about Ejigbo and see its potentials. I want to be involved in the decisions that will shape our city’s future. I want to execute a vision of leadership, accountability, transparency, and creating partnerships with other progressives in Ejigbo community.

    “I have held different positions in Ejigbo LCDA such as Supervisor, Market and Revenue Generation, Consultant on Revenue Generation, and a two-term Chairman of Committee on Revenue Generation. Serving in these capacities has been interesting and it is an experience for which I will be forever grateful and very proud of.”

  • November to remember

    November to remember

    November has come and gone. For a lot of people it was a month of hope, hope that as the year runs to an end their dreams will become reality, their plans will materialise, their investments in the course of the year will bring returns and they will celebrate the end of the old year in joy while being ushered into the New Year.
    Old businesses look forward to expansion while new ones see it as an opportunity to build on the contacts they have gotten thus far even as they hope the coming year brings with it good tidings for their businesses. This expectation is true for established organisations, micro-businesses as well as for small and medium scale enterprises.
    Unfortunately, this is not the case in Jakande Estate, a low-cost housing estate in Oke-afa which sits between Isolo and Ejigbo. The situation since November 1, 2016, has been one of confusion, shock and despair. A common misfortune has befallen container and kiosk operators in the estate who make a living from the businesses they operate from these kiosks for survival. It’s a lose-lose situation both for the tenant kiosk operators and their landlords, the latter who in most cases are retirees who depend on the proceeds from kiosk rentals to survive.
    The gloomy situation is due to the demolition exercise which was carried out by the Lagos State government through the state Ministry of the Environment and the Lagos State Building Investment Company (LBIC). While the government adduces that notices were issued and kiosks marked for removal prior to the demolition exercise, kiosk operators and residents alike argue that they were not aware of such notices or that the notice given was too short.
    The exercise is a critical one as several hundreds of kiosks and containers have been marked for demolition while others have been razed to the ground. The streets were littered with broken roofing sheets, broken wood and crushed concrete blocks. Most kiosk and container owners were moving their belongings or tearing down the shops by themselves, even before the bulldozer got to them. Cart-pushers were also very busy as they were hauling and moving cart-loads of iron, wood or dirt from one street to the other.
    The air was dusty from the demolition and the atmosphere was filled with noises of tools being used to manually knock out doors, burglar proof and whatever else may be of worth from the shops before the bulldozers get to them.
    It was a brisk business for carpenters, plumbers, masons and other labourers who were employed to manually remove objects or break down the structures before the bulldozer got to them. It was also an opportunity for hoodlums to wade through the debris to steal what they could from demolished shops whose owners were unavailable to remove their belongings.
    Jakande Estate Isolo is a hitherto peaceful estate. People come from far and wide to trade and transact business in the estate. Residents are mostly retired or serving civil servants and their families with a handful of other people who are non-civil servants. A great number of residents operate kiosks for sustenance or as a way of getting extra income to augment their earnings.
    The estate houses more than ten internal access roads and most of them house up to 50 or more kiosks and containers. In fact, the Double star road holds no fewer than a hundred (100) shops which run businesses like provisions sales, tailoring and dressmaking, fabric sales, raw food items retail, generator repairs, cyber café operation, hairdressing and barbing salons, kerosene retail and many others.
    These businesses are replicated throughout the estate and have helped to force the prices of commodities in the estate retail market to remain competitive. They have also helped to bring the market closer to residents while providing employment for their operators. Just one shop could generate income for three or more people: the landlord, the tenant and the salesperson(s).
    When approached, a kerosene retailer who had to forcefully deconstruct her container and remove the tank for fear of it being destroyed lamented that she was not duly notified as her container had only been marked on Friday the 28th of October.
    She wondered why LBIC would take such a measure since she was given the approval to use the space for business and was required to pay N5000 yearly to LBIC and another N3500 yearly to the Local Government Council for her use of the space. She said she had documents to back up her claim.
    Another woman who operates a mini-boutique from a kiosk when asked what she planned to do as her shop was affected said, “I just paid #60,000 for my shop rent. I have used the remaining money to buy market for Christmas. Where am I going to see the money again to rent shop? I will just be coming to this place (her demolished shop). I will put umbrella and be managing”
    A retiree who owned a container shop substantiated the kerosene retailer’s claims and even produced documents to show that the LBIC gave approval for the setting up of the container for business and also showed receipts of taxes and levies paid to both the Local Government Council and to the LBIC. She lamented that she set up the place for her daughter who after graduating from school did not have a job for over ten years and wondered what the government expected them to do post-demolition.
    Another retiree who had a small shop which he let out to a caterer said that the immediate past governor had agreed that kiosks be built to help support retirees who were in great number in the estate. He said specifications were given to them and they were asked to build a temporal structure made partly of wood and partly of cement. But because they suffered break-ins and robberies, they decided to fortify the shops by making it fully concrete. He alleged that the current exercise was instigated by the immediate past executive chairman of the Landlords and Residents Association who had liaised with some LBIC officials to sell off land along the Ring Road/ Foursquare Avenue and wanted to cover his misdeeds.
    His claim was echoed by another retiree who happened to be friends with the current executive chairman. The executive chairman could not be reached for his comments on the issue as he was said to have led a delegation to appeal for the intervention of Alhaji Lateef Jakande, a former governor of Lagos State in whose tenure the estate was built.
    At the LBIC office in the estate, it was gathered that no staff was allowed to speak on the issue except for those in charge of the estate at their Ikeja Head Office.
    An official of the Ministry of the environment who did not give his name stated that it was not true that the government had approved the building of kiosks in the estate and that demolition notices had been issued several times over the years since 2007, the latest of which he said was given about a month to the demolition exercise.
    He said that whenever they went about to issue notices, they went with representatives of the media. He also said that the demolition order was an executive order and as such nothing could be done about it. He added that similar demolition had recently been carried out at the Iponri Housing Estate and so this was not meant to punish a particular set of people. He, however, refused to say when the notices were given and insisted he would only answer further questions from his office at the State Secretariat.
    Mr Balogun, a zonal secretary in the Double Star axis of the estate confirmed that indeed notices had been issued but the cost of printing and circulating these notices to about 500 blocks of flats, each of which housed a minimum of 6 flats, was huge. As such, they encouraged residents to attend the monthly general meetings in their zones where such information was usually disseminated. Unfortunately, those claiming ignorance were those who either did not attend the meetings or whose landlords had not relayed the information to them.
    He said the move was necessary because it was the only way to restore sanity to the estate as people had violated the privilege given to them by building permanent structures and by building bigger kiosks than the LBIC had approved.
    He said this had created disorderliness and made the estate look untidy. When asked why the structures were said to be illegal when the LBIC had approved, he said approval did not mean that it was legal. And that those who sought LBIC approval were told that they should only erect temporal structures as the government might require the structures to be removed later.
    Asked if the move was not wrongly timed, considering the current economic situation and the fact that hundreds of people would become unemployed, he said there would never be a right time for development to happen and that the only way for a society to remain sane and move forward is through such painful actions as these which are aimed at causing meaningful change to happen.
    Though the structures may be illegal, the questions which remain unanswered are why the government allowed the illegality to go on for so long and how these people who have been forcefully put out of business are going to survive the recession and the trauma of watching their investments being reduced to rubble.
    One also wonders why an alternative provision was not made before carrying out the demolition exercise and forcing people out of business. The estate retail market, some residents have said, should have been demolished and rebuilt in storey buildings to accommodate new occupants before demolishing the ones outside the market.
    Security is also another concern as security posts have been demolished and the shops which used to provide light with their power generating sets to the unlit streets up till 9pm or beyond are no more. One wonders if the provision of electricity to the estate and renovation of the bad roads in the estate should not have been of more importance than this ill-timed move.
    Ekpen writes from Lagos.