Tag: Governor Ambode

  • Ambode: Infrastructural renewal in Apapa coming

    The gridlock around Apapa which has defied solution for some time now has attracted Governor Ambode’s attention. To this end, he said the state government would take over the ABAT Truck Terminal at Orile-Iganmu and commence immediate repairs on it as part of efforts to permanently address the perennial traffic caused by breakdown of operations at the ports. WALE AJETUNMOBI reports.

    In keeping with the pledge of rendering account of stewardship and getting feedback from the people on a quarterly basis, Lagos State Governor, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode on Tuesday, April 17  hosted the 2nd Quarter Town Hall Meeting, the 11th in the series at the Apapa Amusement Park.

    In accordance with the tradition of the meeting, developmental strides were again brought to the fore with the focus, this time, on Apapa axis.

    The governor, at the inception of his administration, had assured the people of meeting regularly with them every three months to first lay activities of government to bare and then hear from them the areas they want government to focus on in order to enhance governance.

    Addressing the residents and stakeholders who gathered at the venue, Governor Ambode said: “This is the fourth time that we are coming to Lagos Central. We have been to City Hall and other parts of Lagos Central but this is the fourth out of the 11 town hall meetings we have had.

    “I have equally found out that the moving around through the town hall meetings has helped to enhance governance because, in each town hall meeting, there are issues that are raised that are actually not in the budget or what we plan to do for the people, but when people raise those issues and we end up doing them, it enhances governance.

    “The 21 roads and the two bridges we recently inaugurated in Alimosho is fallout of someone coming out at one of the town hall meetings to say we should do Ikola Bridge. So, when we got there, we only wanted to do five roads and the bridge but we found out that the five roads would not make any sense if we did not do the adjourning roads and so it extended to 16 and later 21 roads with additional bridge, Governor Ambode said.

    On the gridlock around Apapa which had defied solution for some time now, Governor Ambode said the state government would take over the ABAT Truck Terminal Orile-Iganmu and commence immediate repairs on the terminal as part of efforts to permanently address the perennial traffic majorly caused by breakdown of operations at the ports. He said he was concerned about the hardship residents in the axis were being subjected to as a result of the activities of trucks and tankers moving in and out of the ports and tank farms, hence the decision to hold the meeting in the area to find lasting solutions to the problem.

    “I cannot end this address without acknowledging that in Apapa, we have a major challenge; the menace of trucks on our roads and bridges causing endless traffic and loss of business time by Lagosians. This is why we have come here today.

    “Effective from today, our government will take over the ABAT Truck Terminal, Orile-Iganmu and commence immediate repairs to make the park ready for use. In the meantime, we will appeal to the Tanker Drivers’ Association to conduct themselves in an orderly manner and co-operate with our Task Force to ensure smooth flow of traffic and better access to the ports.

    Governor Ambode further said the ABAT Truck Terminal has a capacity to accommodate at least 3,000 trucks, adding that the government was already working with security agencies to see how some of the trucks parked on the Western Avenue Bridge would be moved into the park.

    “Already, we have cleared the shanties and the way we are trying to run it is such that we will be able to accommodate at least 3,000 trucks in the park.

    “I am worried about the Apapa gridlock and that is why I have decided that we should discuss with the people; and also talk to the experts in order to proffer solution,” he said.

    While responding to complaints from residents on the menace of motorcycle operators, the governor ordered the police and other security agencies to enforce the State Traffic Law, especially with regard to their restriction on major highways and roads so as to bring about sanity at the Apapa axis.

    He added that as part of his administration’s efforts to regenerate the axis, Fadaini Road currently in deplorable state would be fixed while Orile-Mile 2-Trade Fair-CMS Road would also be repaired to open up alternative roads for motorists plying the axis.

    The Governor said his administration would complete all ongoing projects before next year’s elections so that residents would continue to enjoy the dividends of democracy.

    “Yes, this is an election year but what we have told ourselves is that we would not stop delivering dividends of democracy to our people. That is why the 2018 Budget is anchored on consolidating on the things that we have started in the last three years so that we ensure that all ongoing projects are delivered and also implement new ones that are all designed to make life comfortable for our people and place the state on trajectory of sustainable growth and development,” Ambode said.

    He also urged residents to collect their Permanent Voter’s Cards (PVCs), saying that the state must use the election to confirm its status as the most populous state in Nigeria and thereby help to correct the anomaly in distribution of resources.

    “I want to strongly appeal to all Lagosians, this coming election is a different one. We want to define once and for all where the population of Nigeria lies. So, it’s not just about APC or about any other party or people that are not interested, we want to use the PVC to send a message that the real population is in Lagos State.

    I want to appeal to all Lagosians and all party leaders that this mobilisation for the PVC has a longer reach than what you think,” Governor Ambode said.

    Assuring that his administration would ensure that Lagos remains safe, clean and prosperous, the Governor said the prosperity of Lagos would automatically translate to greater prosperity for Nigeria.

    “The prosperity of Lagos State is on a positive trajectory. We believe strongly in it, it is our vision and our mission and nobody is going to stop it. If we secure the prosperity of Lagos, we have secured the prosperity of Nigeria,” he said.

    At the meeting, Ambode addressed all issues raised by the people. They ranged from jobs to physically-challenged persons, health challenges, road construction, rehabilitation of schools and noise pollution, among others.

    Responding to a complaint by a resident on noise pollution and unruly behaviour of many hoteliers in Apapa, the governor ordered agencies of the state government to immediately arrest the situation and clean up the area.

    “We need to commend and appreciate Chief Mrs Onye for being a true and patriotic Lagosian. Against all odds, she came out here to let us know the ills in the society. I will even tell our security agencies to protect her because she has revealed something that is a major menace in Lagos which is about noise pollution and unruly behaviour among most of the hoteliers in this axis.

    “Not everybody will be bold enough to do what she has done. We will go straight to deal with the issue once and for all. This is the real essence of this town hall meeting; I would never have seen this in the file. So, let our security agencies, Safety Commission, Commissioner for Special Duties and others go into Apapa and clean it up. We don’t want any noise pollution; we want the people of Apapa to enjoy governance; we want to experience the sanity that others are enjoying. There are rules and regulations on how you can operate and those rules and regulations must be enforced,” the governor said.

    On calls by some stakeholders for the state government to take over the repair of Tincan Island Road, Governor Ambode said the state would study the progress of work done by the Federal Government, and would intervene accordingly.

    He said: “It is very clear to us that this is a Federal Government road; the little that we can do we have done but we don’t want to create any conflict. You will recall what we went through to take over the Airport Road. We have left the Tin Can side in Apapa to see how far the Federal Government can go.

    “The truth is that once a contract has been issued by the Federal Government on a particular project, whatever it is that the State Government does, we will not get any refund because they will tell you that the contractor is already doing it. But since the rehabilitation of the road is more about our people and people living in Lagos, whatever it is that we can do to ameliorate the pains of our people will be done,” he said.

  • “We’ll keep them off the streets so that we can sleep at Banana Island!” –  plaudits and posers for Governor Ambode

    “We’ll keep them off the streets so that we can sleep at Banana Island!” – plaudits and posers for Governor Ambode

    First, let’s deal with the praise, the plaudits, before ending this piece with the questions, the posers. Before I watched and heard him on television conduct an extraordinary “town meeting” with the business community in Lagos this last Monday, I hadn’t known much about Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State. As a matter of fact, the very little that I knew about him was not exactly flattering, to say the least: the razor-thin margin of only 150,000 votes – out of over 2 million votes cast – in his electoral victory over his PDP opponent in the gubernatorial race of 2015; and in 2016, the ugly spats between Ambode’s wife, the First Lady of Lagos State, and a state-employed chaplain of a church that had led to the rather highhanded sacking of that man of the cloth. Moreover, when the Governor had come to Harvard last year to give a talk, I had been absent from my “duty post” at the time and thus missed the talk. All of which serves as the background to the pleasant surprise of the following things that I now report about Ambode’s televised meeting with the leaders of the business community this past week.

    It is a well-known secret that most of the governors and high officeholders in Nigeria do not write the speeches they deliver in public. In addition, in general, once a speech is delivered, most of our rulers and politicians do not, indeed cannot, effectively field questions arising from speeches they deliver. This is one aspect of the foul underbelly of democratic governance in our country, this fact that our rulers are in general incapable of conducting meaningful public dialogue with the citizenry, especially in the English language. As this is a huge subject, we cannot deal with it in this piece. Coming back to Ambode, I do not know if his speech on Monday was written by speechwriters; what I do know is that from his passionate and eloquent delivery, one can conjecture that he must have had a hand in writing the speech – if in fact he did not himself write it in its entirety. The speech was masterful in its combination of technocratic prowess with social vision. Within five minutes into the speech, I recognized that I was watching and hearing something extraordinary and I immediately started taking mental notes. This essay is written entirely from those notes.

    The formal delivery of the speech was followed by “Question Time”. Again, Ambode acquitted himself brilliantly on this point. The proof of this came from the extraordinarily impressive manner in which the governor dealt with all the questions posed to him, questions that went to the heart of the problems, challenges and crises confronting Lagos as one of the buoyant but festering megacities of the world. Here, I place emphasis on the word all – that is to say, all the questions without exception.

    As the questions were posed, Ambode took notes, copiously. There were two sets of questions. The first set of questions were over a dozen in number; the second set had slightly fewer questions. In any case, as questioner after questioner after questioner had his or her say, Ambode did not stop taking notes. After the number reached 12 in the first set of questions and the questions did not stop but continued, the teacher in me became attentive and I asked of no one in particular, “why doesn’t the official directing the programme limit the questions to one or two at a time and how is the governor going to be able to respond meaningfully to all these questions”? Needlessly and wordlessly, I answered my own question: “of course, he is not going to answer all the questions – he is a politician”! But Ambode did answer every question – and painstakingly so!

    Please bear in mind, dear reader, that although all the questioners were from the business community as a very influential social group, the assembled audience of the governor’s performance at the “town meeting” came from an impressive diversity of interests and loyalties. Permit me to identify the ones that I remember. Representatives of the big transnational corporations were there, but they were completely silent; they could be recognized or identified only by their white skins and by their silent but hegemonic embodiment of the vast economic and ideological muscle that runs planet earth in the name and interests of benign capitalism. The Nigerian-owned big companies were there also in the persons of their MD’s or CEO’s; they addressed the Governor and were in turn addressed by Ambode with rather exaggerated politeness or even deference. Media and communications moguls were also present; and they posed questions pertaining to their own interests. The Nigerian-American Chamber of Commerce was also present, represented by my old friend and hallmate at Kuti Hall UI, Bintan Famutimu, who put in a spirited plug for closer ties and links between the Lagos State government and major cabinet members and representatives of the American government.

    And then, there were the women who spoke on behalf of SME’s, the small-scale enterprises. Please note, dear reader, that I say women. A there were only two of them, this made their under-representation at the forum rather coincident with the gender inequality that is so prevalent, so constitutive of economic and social power in our country and our continent. Significantly, both women spoke about industrial activities linked with the recycling of waste products and the training and retraining of our unemployed and putatively “unemployable” youths. In other words, of all the business people who posed questions to the governor, these women were the most upfront, indeed the most insistent on the social good that their industrial and business activities and products entail. For this reason, I admit that I watched the governor’s response to them with much greater attention than I did with his answers to the others. I can report that the governor did not condescend to them and that his response to these two women, these two representatives of SME’s, was of the same passion and eloquence with which he engaged all his interlocutors at the forum.

    An astonishing feat then, that Ambode responded fully and robustly to all these interlocutors equally. Having been a teacher and a speaker at public forums for large segments of my adult life, I know what this implies: only she or he who is filled with passion, focus and dedication can respond to more than a dozen interlocutors with diverse interests, constituencies and loyalties as if every issue matters and everybody counts. But every experienced teacher, every gifted public speaker knows that although all pupils and all issues and their representatives matter and count, they do so differentially. I saw this knowledge, this intuition play out astutely in Ambode’s responses to a good number of his interlocutors.

    For instance, to the CEO of a company who posed a question about her and her company’s “tax fatigue”, Ambode was respectful while slyly justifying the crucial importance of taxes and even more taxes for a state like Lagos. To big entrepreneurs who wondered about the logic behind the bloated number and scope of workers on the public payroll in the state, Ambode was polite, even deferential in his endorsement of the logic of rationalization on which big companies are run; however, he insisted that governments cannot, indeed should not, be run exclusively or even primarily on the same logic; human and social interests, the governor argued, should override logics of rationalization and profit maximization that drive the activities of big corporations.

    I have stressed the fact that the interests, perspectives and constituencies represented by the governor’s interlocutors were quite diverse. I must now observe that it seemed to me as I took in the whole performance that Ambode felt that as diverse as these interests and forces were they not conflicting and whatever tensions and conflicts might exist between and among them could be reconciled to the advancement of the progress and development of Lagos state. The old Marxist term for this idea is “non-antagonistic contradictions” as opposed to and in contrast with antagonistic contradictions. Ambode did not use these terms, but I was deeply moved by two particular instances when he expressed a passionate advocacy for contradictions especially characteristic of the city of Lagos in the apparent belief that they are non-antagonistic contradictions. Permit me to briefly relate these two cases.

    People think that one of the worst present and future nightmares of life in Lagos pertains to the number of cars plying the roads, relative to how many cars the roads, the streets, can take. Not so, argued Ambode passionately; the worst problem of street life, the governor argued, is the number of people on the streets with absolutely no provision for them to be on the streets in safety and comfort. No pavements, no sidewalks, no margins at the edges of the asphalt for people to walk on in safety, relaxation and even leisure. You hear talk about cars and congestion all the time, Ambode declared, but who speaks for people without cars, people that happen to be the overwhelming majority of Lagosians? As a columnist who has in the past both humorously and seriously argued for a “Pedestrians’ Bill of Rights” in our cities, I was particularly moved by Ambode’s eloquent and impassioned restatement of this issue.

    Even more moved was I by the governor’s playfully ironic joke that serves as the title of this piece: “We’ll keep them off the streets so that we can sleep at Banana Island!” The “we” here apparently refers to Ambode and his audience, his interlocutors at the “town meeting”, the crème de la crème of Lagosian society, the economic, social and political elites of the city and the state of Lagos. What of the “them” that are to be kept off the streets? These are the talakawa, the denizens of the “Other Lagos” none of whom was present, indeed could be present at that encounter between the Governor and the business elites. Of the 25 million that constitutes the population of the city and the state, “they” happen to be the vast human and demographic majority whose internal majority is a whopping 65% that are under the age of 35. If we can find gainful employment for “them”, if we can keep “them” busy and engaged in productive activities that keep “them” off the streets, Ambode was in effect saying, then we, the elites, can sleep at night without being haunted by the specter of their invasion of our homes, our rest, our peace, our security, our conscience. I do not think I have heard or read of a more powerful expression of the social contract between the rich and the poor, the powerful and the powerless from any of our rulers and politicians in a long, long time, in fact since the days of Obafemi Awolowo and the People’s Redemption Party.

    In conclusion, I now go, briefly and succinctly, to my questions for Governor Ambode and indeed for all of us. I have only two posers. The first one pertains to the forces and interests involved in the realization of the social contract. Basically, I ask: who is present and who is absent, who is included and who excluded in the adjudication of struggles over the social contract? At the “town meeting” of the Governor with the business elites, the poor, the talakawa, together with their representatives, were absent. Would it have made a difference if they had been present and had also been vocal about their interests? Please note that as I stated at the start of this essay, Ambode’s electoral victory was about 150,000 votes out of over 2 million votes cast. The two million was itself only a fraction of the population of the state, which is 25 million. Will Governor Ambode correct this massive disenfranchisement of the majority of the people of his state? Will he bring the “Other Lagos” directly to the table and not only raise their presence as a specter that to disturb the peace and the good conscience of the rich?

    Second poser: In the 1990 and 1999 Constitutions, Second Chapter titled “Fundamental Objectives and Directives of State Policy” it is clearly stated that it is unfair, as all previous Nigerian Constitutions had assumed, that the goals of development and social justice cannot be pursued simultaneously and indivisibly, that “development” must take place first before economic redistribution can take place. Both Constitutions made it mandatory for the Nigerian state to pursue both goals together; however, this was made non-justiciable meaning that the Nigerian state and its functionaries cannot be legally forced to observe or actualize this provision, this clause in the Constitution. From his speech last Monday, especially in the segment wherein he fielded all those questions, I conjecture that Ambode is on the side of this constitutional clause. Will he step forward now and say so? More to the point, will he state what forces, what allies, what coalitions he, his administration and his political party intend to mobilize to realize this objective?

     

     

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

     

     

     

     

  • Let the music play on, Tinubu tells Obey at 75

    Let the music play on, Tinubu tells Obey at 75

    All Progressive Congress (APC) chieftain and former Lagos State governor, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, has described Chief Ebenezer Obey-Fabiyi, nicknamed Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey, as an astute entertainer whose songs would remain evergreen.

    Tinubu, in a statement in Lagos to congratulate Obey on his 75th birthday on Monday,  wished him many more years on earth, urging him to “let the music play on”.

    ”I congratulate Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey on his 75th birthday. It’s a great accomplishment to so be blessed by God as he has been.

    ”Ebenezer Obey, whose professional career began in the mid-1950s when he moved to Lagos, has contributed a lot to the development of music in Nigeria and  Africa.

    ”As a musician with a deep Christian spiritual bend, Obey’s music is unique in the way and manner he turns Yoruba axioms bearing rich religious messages into dance-hall compositions.

    “His popular tracks like ‘What God Has Joined Together’, ‘Aimasiko’, ‘Eyin Pegan Pegan’, ‘Anjade Loni Eledumare’,  ‘Jesu Olore’, ‘Africa is My Home’, ‘Ambe o’, ‘I am a Winner’, etc, remain masterpieces any day.

    “When in early 1990s, he retired into Nigerian gospel music ministry, I knew it could only be short-lived, because when you have a passion for a profession, like Chief Obey’s zeal for music, whether secular or gospel, there is no room for retirement.

    ”I saw him in action in December last year at an event held at the Lagos State House, Alausa, Ikeja, tagged ‘Evening with Governor Ambode’ to end 2016 and usher in 2017; he was the cynosure of all eyes.

    ” He remained his true self, the true entertainer that we have always known, churning out one rich number after another.

    “At 75, I wish and pray that God grants Obey more years and the strength and energy to continue with his music. So to Chief Commander, I say let the music play on, ” Tinubu said.

  • SOS to Governor Ambode

    SIR: Few days ago, a motorcyclist knocked dead a vendor I had over these years admired for his neatness, gentleness and simplicity. Pa Austin, according to his children, had found it difficult to stay at home idle even at his age. He pleaded with his children to allow him undertake the vendor job as it helps him maintain his fitness. But on Monday October 2, life was snuffed off him by a reckless, commercial motorcyclist at Festac town while on duty.

    The recklessness and lawlessness of motorists and motorcyclists have assumed an alarming dimension. It has become scary how motorcyclists use the Lagos roads as though there are no traffic laws in the state. Few weeks ago another newspaper agent escaped by the whisker from another mindless motorcyclist; what more would I say of another vendor killed by a motorist driving against traffic few months ago along Mile2-Oshodi way?

    Driving against traffic has become a norm on Lagos roads. The security agents who ought to prevent this rather aid and abet it as one sometimes sees them being carried by these reckless and mindless traffic violators. In fact, any motorist that intends to drive against traffic simply looks for an officer to carry. What an irony? ‘Change starts with me’? Who really is the ‘me’?

     

    • Ohimai Daniel,

    Lagos.

  • Ambode’s achievements in one year commendable – Buhari

    Ambode’s achievements in one year commendable – Buhari

    President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Muhammadu Buhari on Monday commissioned series of projects in Lagos State, just as he commended the achievements of the Governor Akinwunmi Ambode administration in one year.

    Buhari who was represented at the events by the Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, said Lagos under Governor Ambode has continued to maintain its leading role in delivering good governance to the people.

    Speaking at the commissioning of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) Response Unit in Cappa area of Oshodi, his first point of call, Buhari described the facility as not only the first of its kind in Nigeria, but one that would go a long way to improve response time during emergency situations.

    He said, “With this special rescue unit, it is evident that we have moved a notch higher. There is no question at all that this facility is a world class facility.” The LASEMA Response Unit boasts of an initial acquisition of 51 equipment including three Forklifts, one Crane, 13 trucks, 10 Paramedic Motorbikes, two Fire Trucks, Ambulances, among others.

    President Buhari, who later commissioned the Ago Palace Way, Okota, described the initiative of the State Government to build the road as a fantastic idea, saying the road was an important economic road that would promote trade and investment and enhance movement along that corridor.

    The Ago Palace Way is a link road that connects about four local governments and providing a viable alternative route for motorists trying to access Festac, Mile 2 and Apapa areas of the State with ease thereby reducing travel time.

    At the Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos, where he handed over security equipment purchased by the State Government to the tune of N1.85billion, the President said that it was a testament to the premium the administration of Governor Ambode has placed on safety of lives and property of its citizenry.

    Among the equipment commissioned include 140 brand new Ford Ranger Pick-Ups and 335 Power Bikes fitted with communication gadgets, Helmets, Bullet Proof vests and other kits.

    The President said, “I have also seen already so much attention being paid to security and just earlier on we were at the LASEMA rescue operation unit which we just commissioned. Also here, we are about to commission several security equipment donation to the police and security agencies. In fact virtually all the security agencies including immigrations and Customs including NDLEA are to benefit from this latest gift of the Lagos State Government.

    He said the State Government was blazing the trail with several commendable projects, including the two roads being constructed in each of the 20 local governments and 37 local council development areas of the State.

    “I must also say that I am impressed with the fact that the whole effort at security is an integrated one and so we have the Light up Lagos being an important component of that whole effort. I want to say that the Governor of this State deserves our commendation and all of the praise and support that he is getting”

    He assured that the Federal Government would continue to support the State Government to actualise several projects, noting that the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, Lagos-Kano and Lagos-Calabar are projects embedded in the 2016 Budget which would benefit the State immensely.

    In his remarks, Governor Ambode said that the LASEMA Response Unit, aside the initial goal to significantly bring down response time by responders, the State Government is working tirelessly to roll out dispatch centres across key areas within the State with the goal of further reducing response times.

    Governor Ambode, who also spoke at the commissioning of the security equipment, said it was in further demonstration of his administration’s resolve to strengthen the capacity of the security agencies.

    He said the vehicles and equipment would be distributed among the 107 Police Stations and 13 Police Area Commands in Lagos State, and all the security agencies would also be beneficiaries of the equipment.
    The Governor said, “These items are critical facilities required to address security and emergency challenges peculiar to modern city States like ours. It is our expectation that all these efforts, in addition to the “Light up Lagos” initiative and the Smart-City project, will guarantee a safer and more secure environment for business and leisure.”

    Governor Ambode also said that aside up scaling the security infrastructure, his administration was also giving attention to the welfare of the security personnel through payment of allowances and provision of insurance facilities to compensate for any unfortunate incident while on active duty.

    “In addition, officers and men who demonstrate bravery, gallantry and high level commitment to duty are being acknowledged and appropriately rewarded,” he said.

    Responding on behalf of all the security agencies, Inspector General of Police, Mr. Solomon Arase thanked Governor Ambode for the security equipment, and assured that they would be put to optimal use.

    Arase, who recalled that the security equipment was the second donation within six months by Governor Ambode, said the donation has led to the reduction of crime in the State.

    He said, “When you (Governor Ambode) gave us the first set of equipment, I did promise you that to whom much is given, much is expected and the officers and men of the Command have worked tirelessly and assiduously to ensure that the crime rate in Lagos is within tolerable limit that will attract foreign direct investment and other investment in the State.

    “I can’t thank you enough but I can also promise you today that we are not going to rest on our oars. We will continue to work and ensure that the peace and stability of Lagos State is guaranteed.”

  • ‘Governor Ambode; please don’t let my husband die’

    ‘Governor Ambode; please don’t let my husband die’

    Forty-seven-year-old AbdulKareem Rafiu is critically ill and needs public-spirited individuals to save his life. He was diagnosed with kidney failure last year.

    His wife Sofiyat, in tears, said the family had exhausted all its resources on medical bills incurred due to the husband’s illness.

    Rafiu needs about N8 million for surgery in India.

    She told The Nation that life has become unbearable for the once-bubbling family after AbdulKareem was pronounced ‘critically ill’ by doctors at the Gbagada General Hospital, Lagos.

    She appealed to Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to save her husband’s life.

    She said: “It was one night in March last year, when he started coughing around 11pm, I had to give him cough syrup to ease the cough. But, it was not subsiding, rather it became worse, I had to draw the attention of my neighbours.

    “Incidentally, one of my neighbours was a doctor, who asked me of his medical history, but nothing much could be done until it was 5am, when we took him to the hospital. A series of tests were conducted on him and we were told he has chronic kidney problem.”

    The emotion-laden mother of four explained that her husband might have developed the kidney problem because he was hypertensive, which may have resulted because of some overbearing challenges.

    She added that her husband never complained of any illness in the past and was active doing his job, which made it a surprise to know that he had developed hypertension.

    She maintained that her husband never kept late night nor take alcohol.

    “Doctor said the two kidneys have been affected. He is a quiet person and does not talk too much. I did not know how he became hypertensive. We had to take him to a private hospital due to the strike at that time.  But, when the strike was called-off, we transferred him to Gbagada General Hospital.

    “He was placed on five sessions of savaged haemodialysis initially. The process was repeated and there is the urgent need of a kidney transplant estimated to be between seven and eight million naira for him to live.”

    She said they have secured a donor who will donate the kidney, but the family is expected to foot the bills for his trip as well.

    “A session of dialysis cost not less than N40,000 which we administer three times in weekly. We have almost sold off everything to sustain him.

    “The members of his extended family have done their best, but they cannot give what they don’t have. We wrote to the state government about our plight and other non- governmental organisations, up till now there is no to tangible response to assuage our predicament.”

    She said her husband worked as a clearing and forwarding agent, for a private firm at Apapa before he took ill, noting that the firm gave what it could.

    “We went to the Ministry of Health; two months after, they wrote me that they don’t have money to offer such assistance. They said they are financially down. Efforts to get the support of NGOs have not also yielded result.

    “We are pleading with the government and Nigerians to save my husband’s life. I am a classroom teacher in a private school with four children to take care of,’’ she said.

  • Photo : Ambode attends NEC meeting at Abuja

    Photo : Ambode attends NEC meeting at Abuja

     Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode (left) with his Kwara State counterpart, Alhaji AbdulFatah Ahmed (right) during the NEC meeting presided over by the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo at the State House, Abuja, on Thursday.
    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode (left) with his Kwara State counterpart, Alhaji AbdulFatah Ahmed (right) during the NEC meeting presided over by the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo at the State House, Abuja, on Thursday.

     

  • Photo: Ambode attends seminar for 2015 hajj pilgrims

    Photo: Ambode attends seminar for 2015 hajj pilgrims

    L-R: Hon Dr Abdul Hakeem Abdullateef, Lagos State Hamirl-Hajj; Mr Akinwunmi Ambode, Lagos State Governor; Dr Yaqub Bashorun, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture, Lagos State; Mrs Ebunola Oladimeji, Permanent secretary, Ministry of Home Affairs, Alhaji Bashir Braimah, Director, Home Affairs and Alhaji Muneer Bankole, Managing Director, Medview Airline during a one-day Seminar for the Lagos State 2015 intending Hajj Pilgrims held in Lagos on Monday.
    L-R: Hon Dr Abdul Hakeem Abdullateef, Lagos State Hamirl-Hajj; Mr Akinwunmi Ambode, Lagos State Governor; Dr Yaqub Bashorun, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture, Lagos State; Mrs Ebunola Oladimeji, Permanent secretary, Ministry of Home Affairs, Alhaji Bashir Braimah, Director, Home Affairs and Alhaji Muneer Bankole, Managing Director, Medview Airline during a one-day Seminar for the Lagos State 2015 intending Hajj Pilgrims held in Lagos on Monday.
    Cross section of Lagos 2015 intending Hajj Pilgrims during a one-day seminar organised by Lagos State Muslim Pilgrims Welfare Board on Monday
    Cross section of Lagos 2015 intending Hajj Pilgrims during a one-day seminar organised by Lagos State Muslim Pilgrims Welfare Board on Monday