Tag: Governor Akinwumi Ambode

  • Building Collapse: Ambode seals-off Lekki Gardens

    Building Collapse: Ambode seals-off Lekki Gardens

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State on Tuesday ordered the seal-off of the Lekki Gardens following the collapse of a five story building within the site on March 8.

    Ambode announced the decision during a news conference at the Lagos House, Alausa shortly after an inspection tour of the site at Ikusenla Road, Ikate-Elegushi in Lekki area of the state.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that 34 people died in the building collapse.

    Ambode said an integrity test would be done on all other buildings constructed by the developer in the state, whether occupied or not, to ascertain their structural stability.

    “The developer will pay the cost of the tests.

    “Any building found to be defective will be demolished; for those that pass the integrity test, the developer will pay a penalty for any over-development on the site,” he said.

    Ambode said that the State Government also intended to carry out an audit of all structures to ascertain those with planning approval or
    without, and evaluate the physical development against the approved building plans.

    He said that the government would do everything within its powers to check the excesses of developers who flout its regulations.

    Ambode assured that efficiency and confidence would be restored in the building control and supervision process.

    He said that to this end, a five-man committee had been established to examine the urban and regional planning law of the state.

    Ambode said that the committee was expected to examine the operations of the Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA) and make recommendations for changes that would ensure effective service delivery, among others.

    According to him, the committee will submit its report in four weeks.

    He said that the state was open to business for those who would comply with the state laws and regulations in order to prosper.

    “Our main concern is to continue to improve on the ease of doing business and uphold the rule of law at all times.

    “Those who choose non-compliance and defiance will henceforth face the full weight of the law without fear or favour,” Ambode said.

    Earlier, the Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Mr Wasiu Anifowoshe advised residents in the estate to vacate the buildings to allow the government carry out integrity test on them.

     

  • Mile 12 crisis: Lagos Assembly seeks scholarship for victim

    Mile 12 crisis: Lagos Assembly seeks scholarship for victim

    Lagos State House of Assembly has appealed to Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to award scholarship to Mr. Bolaji Kalejaiye, who was hit by a stray bullet during the recent crisis in Mile 12 Market, Lagos.

    In a report presented to the House by the Chairman of the House Committee on Health, Hon. Olusegun Olulade, it was revealed that the Speaker of the House, Hon. Mudashiru Obasa led some lawmakers from the Assembly on Saturday 12 March to visit Bolaji in the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), where he underwent a surgery after the incident.

    The House subsequently resolved that a letter should be written to Governor Ambode to sponsor the education of the young man, who was said to have scored 250 in the last Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), and who wishes to study medicine at the University of Ibadan.

    However, the House resolved that a letter should be written to the State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Fatai Owoseni to condemn the action of his men at the Mile 12 police post, who reportedly rejected the boy when he ran to them after he was hit by the bullet.

    Also, the Clerk of the House was directed to write a letter of commendation to the private hospital, which admitted the boy, removed the bullet wound in his body without collecting any money before transferring him to LASUTH for further treatment.

    According to Obasa, the story of Bolaji Kalejaiye is an interesting one, adding that he decided to visit the boy with other lawmakers, when he read his story in a national newspaper on Saturday 12th March.

    “I called Hon. Olulade and others on the phone immediately and they all joined me in going to LASUTH to visit the boy. I want to commend Bolaji’s courage, determination and bravery. I was impressed to have read that after he was hit by a stray bullet, the boy packed his intestine with his cloth and ran to a police post, where he was rejected.

    “He later fell down and was assisted to the hospital by the residents of the area. We need to commend the private hospital for treating the boy without asking for police report or money. We commend the doctors for their efforts in removing the bullet from the boy before he was taken to LASUTH,” he said.

    The Speaker then added that the state Police Commissioner should investigate the action of his boys at the police post in Mile 12, and that the House should continue to pray for Bolaji as he would undergo a second surgery in the hospital in the next one week.

    In his contribution, the Deputy Majority Leader of the House, Hon. Olumuyiwa Jimoh said that the action of the police in the matter should be condemned, but that people should not rush to police stations, when they sustain injuries.

    Also, Hon. Rotimi Olowo advised that the police should use rubber bullets when next there is crisis and that they should criminalise any act of vandalism.

    In his submission, Hon. Victor Akande said that the state Commissioner of Police and the Inspector General of Police should be called upon to teach their men modern policing.

    Hon. Adedamola Kasunmu said that the police should know that their first duty is to combat crime and protect the lives of the people.

    Also contributing, Hon. Gbolahan Yishawu stated that the boy was shot by the police that ought to protect him and also rejected by the same police.

    “Sending the boy out is like sending him to his death; we should also consider the issue of scholarship. Issues of first aid should also be taught in our schools. Our movie industries should also produce films on first aid treatment,” he said.

  • Ambode welcomes admission of Lagos into Odua group

    Ambode welcomes admission of Lagos into Odua group

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State on Wednesday expressed joy and enthusiasm on the admission of the state as the sixth member of the Odu’a Group.

    Ambode, in a statement by the state’s Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr Steve Ayorinde, described it as a major landmark in the effort of the South-Western states of Nigeria toward regional integration.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the decision to admit the state to Odu’a Group was taken at the end of a meeting of the five governors of Oyo, Ondo, Ogun, Osun and Ekiti States in Ibadan on Tuesday.

    Ambode said he believed that the drive toward regionally integrating the region could not be effectively pursued if all the states in the region did not combine their resources and maximise their comparative advantages.

    According to him, this will help to build a strong regional infrastructural and social link amongst the states.

    “Lagos joining the Odu’a Group is a priority for this administration,” he said.

    According to him, the state, with its huge population and vibrant economic base, is uniquely placed to contribute to the development and growth of the Odu’a Investment Company Limited.

    He said that the state was poised to contribute to the investment arm of the group and the integration of the region.

    The governor expressed his gratitude to the group for the decision and looked forward to his government working with other states toward the betterment and development of the region and its people.

     

  • Two Airforce officers arrested for locking boy in car boot

    Two Airforce officers arrested for locking boy in car boot

    Two cadets’ officers, Peters O. Solomon and Abdullahi Fahad were Wednesday apprehended by the convoy of the Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode in Mile 12 area of the State while dehumanizing an artisan, Dahiru Lawal for allegedly breaking the windscreen of their Chrysler Stratus car with registration number KRD 267 DV.

    The cadets who claimed to be Airforce personnel attached to the Airforce Base in Ikeja, had forced Lawal into the boot of their car after dragging him on the ground for the said offence.

    Governor Ambode, who was returning from an inspection tour to Agbowa in Ikorodu, saw the situation and swiftly intervened to save Lawal who was gasping for breath.

    The Governor wondered how such inhuman treatment could be meted to a fellow citizen just for slightly breaking the windscreen of a car.

    When questioned by journalists, the cadets admitted putting Lawal in the boot of their car.

    According to them, Lawal tried to escape after breaking the windscreen and ran into the nearby market where they eventually chased and apprehended him.

    Peters said: “What happened is that the boy broke the windscreen in front of my car. When I stopped, I asked him to come, the boy ran away. We have to drag him back and put him in the boot.

    “I kind of threatened his boss that he is working with and when his boss came and looked at what he did to me, that was when I put him inside the boot for the remaining ones to go and call the boss. Not that I locked the boot, I only put him inside, but I did not lock it,” he said.

    Also Abdullahi said himself and Peter were along Mile 12 after visiting a friend when the Lawal damaged their windscreen and he was attempting to escape.

    “We now ran inside the market and dragged him (Lawal) down. I was even asking who he is working with because I want to see his Oga since I know he cannot repair my damaged windscreen. I want to see the man he is working with so that we can settle everything with him. I now told my colleague that we should hand him over to Airforce police at the Airforce Base,” Abdullahi said.

    While narrating his ordeal in the hands of the cadets, Lawal who hails from Kaduna State, said he mistakenly damaged the windscreen with the load he carried, and that he took to his heels because he was afraid of what they might do to him.

    He said: “I ran into the market and they pursued me and caught me inside the market. They started beating me and dragged me to their car.”

    “I ran because I was afraid of what the cadets might do to me, while my boss and people around begged on my behalf, but their pleas fell on deaf ears.”

    “The police also came to plead with them to open the booth but they insisted on taking me away and it was at that point that the convoy of the Governor arrived to rescue me from the booth of the car where they kept me,” Lawal narrated.

    He added that he lost his cell phone and the sum of N5, 000 which he was having on him at the point that he was being dragged on the floor.

    The Governor had since ordered that the suspects be handed over to the police for further investigation and possible prosecution.

     

  • Classic buses for classic commuters

    Classic buses for classic commuters

    LAGOS State Government has taken a major step towards easing commuters’ pains. Last Thursday; it launched 434 air-conditioned buses and inaugurated the expanded Mile 12-Ikorodu Road.

    Governor Akinwumi Ambode of Lagos State, Governor of the State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola and All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu performed the ceremony.

    The buses, tagged BRT Classic or BRT Upgrade, according to the Commissioner for Transportation, Dr Dayo Mobereola, are not owned by the Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA), or the government, but provided by a private firm on a Public-Private Partnership (PPP). The government provided the infrastructure while the private operators brought in the vehicles to run according to LAMATA’s guidelines.

    This, he said, is the hallmark of the new thinking and commitment of the government to providing safe, reliable, comfortable and affordable motorised options for discerning Lagosians who love comfort.

    The option, according to him, became imperative due to the gridlock over the last decade. He said not only would the government improve its presence in the sector, it would also ensure the reduction of vehicles on the roads, which would in no small measure ensure cleaner air and environmental preservation, because of reduced emission of carbon-monoxide and other green house gasses into the atmosphere.

    Mobereola said the new path was conceptualised in 2008, when the government began the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) Scheme. He, however, admitted that “along the line we got derailed and lost that essential part of the scheme that would have attracted it to the business class and professional groups. While we concentrated attention on providing service to the masses, artisans and traders who had no opportunity and may not be able to get their own cars, we neglected to serve a critical segment who might have their cars, or have the means to buy, but may have decided against it if government had provided an alternative that is comfortable, reliable and efficient”.

    He said the result was the huge deluge of private vehicles, hundreds of which are added daily by those who have the capacity to acquire private vehicles. Mobereola said the government was determined to make motorised transportation the hub of mass transit in the state, while the waterways and the light rail would be introduced to add to public transportation alternatives for residents of the state.

    The BRT, which was introduced on March 17, 2008, on the Ikorodu-CMS route, Mobereola said, has to date carried no fewer than 350 million passengers, and these ones on the daily basis, will carry almost 450,000 passengers.

    According to the commissioner, the new thinking is that a city with 22 million people, 60 percent of who must move from one point to the other needs efficient, reliable, accessible and safe transportation system.

    Assuring Lagosians of government’s commitment, he said the Ambode administration will in the coming months flood the state with modern and comfortable BRTs adding: “this is just an example of what we planned for Lagos State”.

    Transportation experts agreed no less with Mobereola, they argued that if traffic gridlocks could be felt in developed economies of the world with advanced and fully integrated modes of transportation, Lagos with wholesale reliance on the oldest mode of transportation should be expected to worsen in the next decade if government refuses to deepen its involvement and provide leadership in the sector.

    Speaking on the road,the commissioner praised the people for their understanding and forbearance all through the planning and execution of the newly expanded road that now has the BRT road at the median, adding that 10 stakeholders’ fora in all were held, all to ensure the buys-in of residents.

    “Managing the people while construction was going on simultaneously was a great challenge. We learnt from the mistakes of the past – mostly operational.

    “We had 10 stakeholders’ fora, three before the construction work started and seven during the project. We were engaging the people at every stage and they were guiding us. It was close project that involved the community because we needed their buy-in for us to succeed.

    He said the project will improve the traffic situation along that corridor. As more people enter the BRT buses, the road will be freer; we are also doing the engineering on the road, especially at the junctions to increase the capacity of the road and make the way big enough to accommodate more traffic.

    He said the N30 billion project which was financed by the French Development Agency (AFD), the World Bank and the state government, would enhance the mobility of the people and reduce travel time between CMS and Ikorodu by 60 percent, reducing a journey which presently takes an average of two and half hours to 45 minutes. He said the BRT will give priority to public transport, which is a mass carrier for a lot of people.

    Majority Leader of the Lagos State House of Assembly representing Ikorodu Constituency 1, Hon. Sanai Agunbiade said the project will add value to the area.He, therefore, challenged the people to maintain the project to encourage the government.

    The Ayangburen of Ikorodu, Oba Kabir Sotobi, praised the government for the success of the project and called for the execution of the Ipakodo jetty, which  he said would further boost the transportation initiative of the government.

    Representative of Mr Yemi Adeola, the Managing Director of Sterling Bank Plc, (the financier of the buses), Mr Lanre Adesanya thanked the state government for giving the bank the opportunity to partner in making life better for the people of the state. He said the project would benefit no fewer than 4000 families directly and provide jobs for thousands more who would work as ticketers, vendors, mechanics, even as he said the bank has reduced the prevalence of cash in the system.

  • Lagos, Ambode and  broken infrastructure

    Lagos, Ambode and broken infrastructure

    Governor Akinwumi Ambode’s five-month old government has in recent weeks come under tremendous pressure. Critics and columnists  hold him responsible for what they describe as the grounding of Lagos. Roads are broken, the critics point out, robbers and cultists are running rampage day and night, traffic has become so snarled that nothing seems to be moving, and in general nothing seems to be working. They hold the governor responsible for the problems, in particular, for not sustaining the momentum of his predecessors and for advocating, among other panaceas, a civilised and modern method of traffic law enforcement. For commercial bus drivers who brutishly and defiantly flout traffic rules, the critics sneered that no civilised method could constrain them.

    The observations are fairly incontrovertible, and the circumstances they describe can’t be denied. There are problems with many roads, and traffic is truly snarled in many areas . In addition, robbers are running riot, whether in Ikorodu or Festac Town, or yet other areas, some of them unreported. The problem, however, is appreciating the factors responsible for the seeming breakdown. Nearly all the analyses and editorials suggest Governor Ambode is either not doing enough to arrest the drift or he is applying the wrong remedies, some of them too civilised for the brutes they are meant to control.

    Take traffic snarls for example. Soon after Governor Ambode turned his attention to the traffic pains afflicting Lagos, he ordered the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) to humanise and civilise their enforcement methods. Rather than engage in high-speed chase along Lagos’ densely populated streets, or arrest and impound vehicles thereby clogging their premises, he directed them to modernise their methods. This order was interpreted to mean that no arrests whatsoever were to be countenanced by LASTMA, thus giving free rein to homicidal Danfo Bus drivers and other errant car owners, some of them military men.

    Governor Ambode may have accepted blame for the traffic madness afflicting the city state, for he is after all the governor. And he may have cleverly and desperately reversed himself. If indeed he has, he ought not to. And if he has not, he should stay the course. What is wrong is not the civilised method of law enforcement which he ordered, for that is the path to toe, but the imagination, capacity and efficiency of the government agencies saddled with the responsibility of keeping traffic flowing. The previous methods of traffic law enforcement were not only unsuitable, though they are countrywide and appeared to achieve results, they gave Nigerians a bad name globally. Governor Ambode was right in his appreciation of the problem, and he was even more sensible in the solutions he proffered. All that remained were for his team to persevere and courageously stay the course, fine-tune the panaceas, and work extra hours to enforce obedience along the modern, civilised lines he had identified.

    When critics and editorial writers suggest that the governor’s panaceas were too civilised and modern for the calibre of commercial bus drivers plying Lagos roads, they insult the black race and discountenance a rigorous analysis of the problem. Commercial bus drivers, who are mostly blamed for the traffic snarls, can be tamed intelligently without resorting to the brutal methods of the past. If Governor Ambode has reversed himself, let him at least recognise that in the near future, he will still have to revisit the modern methods he tried to unfold. He must recognise that the old methods of doing things, which the public seems to be enamoured of and are advocating, have limited utility. It is, after all, not working in policing;, Boko Haram war, and nearly in every other thing, including traffic chaos. Nigeria’s law enforcement methods are hopelessly antiquated.

    It is even more disturbing that Governor Ambode is blamed almost wholly for what appears like a resurgence of crime in Lagos. Admittedly, as governor, he has little choice but to accept blame, and he must find a way round what is building into a crisis of confidence in Lagos. But it is strange that analysts fail to accurately and fully appreciate the whole ramification of the crisis, especially the political economy of crime. Curbing crime is not just a question of policing or more patrol vehicles and superior firepower. Crime has its own violent logic. The national economy is virtually in the doldrums, with Lagos bearing a disproportionate share of the fallout. Migration into Lagos is at an all-time high, a high percentage of which is unemployed. Patrol cars and more guns will not curb the problem. For instance, Lagos ought more appropriately to be allocated funds for more than 57 local governments, equal to or even more than Kano and Jigawa combined, but it gets funds for just 24. Lagos is overwhelmed and bursting at the seams. Analysts should be putting pressure on the central government to succour Lagos very urgently.

    Cult wars and robberies predate the Ambode government, as newspaper reports throughout last year indicated very clearly. In addition, the federal government has become more, not less, irresponsible in both the quantity and quality of law enforcement. The police are badly trained, badly kitted, badly motivated and hopelessly underfunded and outnumbered. It is, therefore, necessary to encourage a holistic appreciation of the crime situation in Lagos and the measures needed to combat it. Governor Ambode of course needs to worry when Lagosians cannot sleep. He has an obligation to articulate the problem and work hard, notwithstanding the inclement economic environment, to stanch the flow of blood on Lagos streets. He will doubtless need to plot a way out of the commercial motorcycle menace suffocating Lagos. And he must look for ingenious methods of curbing traffic robberies and restoring order to the streets. But he must not panic, get desperate, or succumb to the short term and impracticable measures many people are advocating.

    Rather than condemnation, commentators must show more rigour in analysing the problems confronting Lagos State and its government. A reworked revenue allocation formula, state policing, and sound national economic policies conducing to even and countrywide spread of development would be a great advantage to take pressure off Lagos. For no matter how brilliantly Gov Ambode tackles the multiple menaces confronting Lagos, it will only make the state a magnet for every drifter and dispossessed from other parts of the country, thus reenacting and reinforcing the original problem confronting the state and rendering the solutions either short-lived or ineffective. There is a limit to what Lagos can do in the face of rising population; there is a limit to how many unemployed youths Lagos can put to work in the face of irresponsible national economic policies and poor governance in other states; and there is a limit to what Lagos can do when the federal government implacably controls the levers of security, takes a lion’s share of revenue, and is unable to control migration into the few prosperous and obviously now encumbered states like Lagos.