Tag: Governor Babatunde Fashola

  • ‎Synagogue: Collapsed building not caused by aircraft- witness

    ‎Synagogue: Collapsed building not caused by aircraft- witness

    A Lagos High Court sitting in ikeja heard yesterday that there was no truth in the report that the collapsed guest house of the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN) was caused by radiation from a plane that flew over it.

    A former Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development‎ in Lagos state, Mr Olutoyin Ayinde, made this assertion yesterday during the continuation of his evidence in the matter.

    Ayinde told the court presided by Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo that contrary to  claims of the church, evidences at his diaposal suggested otherwise.

    The ‎ former Commissioner who was being led in evidence by the Director, Directorate of Public Prosecution (DPP),Mrs. Idowu Alakija stated that he visited the site of the collapsed building with former Governor Babatunde Fashola alongside two General Managers of the agencies under his ministry.

    He said that during their visit to the site of the building collapse, the General Overseer of the church gave them a CCTV  recording of an aircraft hovering over the building shortly before it’s collapse.

    He added: “My office wrote to the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority  (NCAA) seeking advice on the CCTV recording we received.

    “ We got the flight corridor and coordinates as well as a report from the NCAA which showed that the distance between the aircraft and the top of the building is between  137 and 288 meters.

    “We found that the aircraft were not flying directly over the building, Ayinde said.”

    The former Commissioner explained that the least distance from the top of the building to the nearest aircraft was 137 meters which he said is the equivalent of four  buildings, like NITEL building,  placed on top of each other.

    He also explained that evidence was collected from the site during his visit with Fashola.

    “We took pictures of the site as well as did a video recording of the visit of the delegation to the site, he said.”

    At this stage, the DPP, Mrs. Alakija, sought to tender the documents mentioned by Ayinde as evidence to the court.

    “My Lord, we seek to tender the application for building approval for the Synagogue Church auditorium, letter from the NCAA, flight path coordinates, the survey of the collapsed building as well as pictures as evidence, the prosecutor said.”

    The defence led by Mr Lateef Fagbemi (SAN) who is also representing the trustees of the church objected to the tendering of the documents.

    Fagbemi said they oppose the admission of the documents because they were just being served as additional proof of evidence by the prosecution.

    ”We need to have previous knowledge of what is in those documents to enable us confer with our clients”, he said.

    Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo, told the  counsel to come up with dates for adjournment to enable them examine the documents.

    The lawyers, however, could not agree on a date for adjournment and the judge had to impose a date on them.

    After waiting for some time, the trial judge ruled on the counsels and fix fresh dated for hearing.

    “I waited patiently for counsel to come up with a date but they couldn’t, I have no choice but to impose these dates on counsel.

    “This case is adjourned to June 27, 28 and 29 for continuation of trial, Akapo said.”

    ‎The trustees of the church, two engineers,Messrs Oladele Ogundeji and Akinbela Fatiregun and their companies, Hardrock Construction and Engineering Company and Jandy Trust Limited are facing trial for the September 12, 2014 collapsed guest house.

    The state government has filed 111 charges bordering on criminal negligence, manslaughter and failure to obtain building permit were brought against the defendants.

  • Lagos clarifies eviction of tarzan, metro ferry operators from jetties

    Lagos clarifies eviction of tarzan, metro ferry operators from jetties

     

    The Lagos State Government on Friday said its decision to serve eviction notices to Tarzan Marine Enterprises and Metro Ferry, both operators of commercial jetties in the State, was in line with overriding public interest and quest to ensure strict adherence to safety measures and international best practices.

    In a statement signed by the Managing Director of the Lagos State Waterways Authority (LASWA), Ms Abisola Kamson, the State Government said that Messrs Tarzan was served an eviction notice on its operation in Ijede and Badore jetties as they could not validate their claims of a purported 25 years concession which the operator alleged to have entered with the government in 2006.

    According to Kamson, the previous administration of Governor Babatunde Fashola had investigated the claim by setting up a Task Force in 2010 to validate the claim that they had made two payments totaling N2.1million to the defunct Lagos State Ferry Services for a 25 years concession, but the claims could not be validated.

    She said: “Based on that, Tarzan was asked to move out then, but through some back door arrangement, he came back to the terminals and all the while, he has been holding on to a receipt that has not been validated and which could be potentially forged because there was no trace of any payment. He could also not provide the purported 25 years concession when asked.”

    Speaking on the eviction served to Metro Ferry, Kamson said the operator was given approval on the Oworonsoki Terminal by the State Government to convey staff of Total from the terminus to their office on the Island, but went beyond the terms of approval.

    “The approval clearly states that the ownership and maintenance of the jetty shall be retained by the Lagos State Government. It clearly states that it shall be made available for the general public and other licensed ferry operators. It clearly states that they must carry out all operations in conformity with extant health and safety regulations set by LASWA. The approval states all of that very clearly.

    “But in breach of the approval, first of all, they were collecting fees from other people to use the jetty without remitting anything to government. They were in fact asking the agency of the State Government, Lagos Ferry Services Corporation to pay and that is in clear violation of the agreement they had with government,” she said.

    On the operation of the Elegbeta and Ikorodu jetties, Kamson explained that the State Government allocated a parcel of lands to Metro Ferry to use as an operational base, which was to enable them pick and drop off passengers as well as establish a ticketing office.

    She however said that Metro Ferry went beyond the approval to develop the land for other purposes beyond using the property for their operational base.

    “They have gone ahead to have a car park, they have made it into a commercial jetty which they charge people; they collect all these monies and remits in line with that. All of a sudden, they are now saying they have a C of O which we were not aware of and they never informed us even in our meetings with them”.

    She said aside the breach of terms by Metro Ferry, they had jettisoned safety standards required for operating such commercial jetties, which according to her necessitated the eviction.

    “But our position as a State Government is that in line with overriding public interest, our vision is to have safe practices. We can no longer accept the unsafe practices being carried out by Metro Ferry in Ikorodu. First, they have wooden jetty with diesel and fuel stored in jerry cans. There are no provisions for disabled people and there are no proper loading and disembarking of passengers.

    Besides, Kamson while reiterating the commitment of the government to encourage private sector participation said that the administration of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode was developing a master plan for water transportation that would accommodate local and international investors and guide them to operate within a specified framework so as to ensure that the required standard is not compromised.

    “The state is committed to modern ferries being operated. The State is going to embark on channelization of all the ferry routes within the state to make it modern and conform with the new regulations we have developed.

    “New modern jetties and safe terminals are being developed by the state. We have private investors already and all these will be coming on board starting next month. We are all working together to develop the new guidelines to ensure that all these mishaps on the water will be minimized.  Safety is paramount and it will be standard that is comparable to international best practices,” Kamson said.

  • APC wins massively at Fashola’s ward, as Senator Tinubu delivers her ward

    Elections in Surulere in Lagos Central were peaceful but soldiers and riot policemen were stationed at strategic points. Voters arrived ahead of the ad-hoc staff of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in many polling units. It took several minutes to set up the voting materials but the card readers deployed to the area functioned optimally.

    At State Grammar School Polling Unit 002, where the Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola voted, crowd of voters turned out to cast their ballots. The governor arrived early for accreditation, queuing behinds hundreds of voters in scorching sun.

    At Polling Unit 014 on Elizabeth Fowler Street, the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila, got accredited at 10:30am. He was in company of his mother and wife. Describing the working of the card reader perfect, the minority leaders said he was confident of his party’s victory at the polls.

    Fashola, in company of his wife and son, returned to the polling unit at 1:35pm to vote without body guards and security detail.

     

    He joined the queue of voters on Itolo Street, where he was accredited. He stood at the tail end of a long queue of voters, chatting with his wife.

    At 3:40pm, Fashola cast his ballot, describing the exercise as peaceful. He said he was satisfied with the accreditation and voting process. He cautioned the people not to jump into conclusion on the success of the exercise, noting that INEC could only be judged after the whole process.

    The governor appealed to the electoral commission to make up for its logistic shortfall by extending the voting period to enable more people exercise their franchise. He said there could have been irregularities in the organisation of the elections, but he said no human process had been perfect, cautioning against deliberate sabotage.

    Elsewhere in Ikoyi, Lagos, the Senator representing Lagos Central Senatorial District, Mrs. Oluremi Tinubu and All Progressives Congress (APC) senatorial candidate yesterday proved her strength by defeating the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) embarrassingly in most of the polling units in Ward nine.

    A resounding “sai Buhari! “sai Mama” rented the air at her unit 034 polling unit as the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC) presiding officer counted the ballot.

    The APC trashed PDP in both the presidential and national assembly elections at polling unit 034 with very wide margins that made the electorates hit the streets in jubilation.

    For the presidential election, the APC’s Gen. Muhammadu Buhari carried the day with 106 votes while PDP’s President Goodluck Jonathan scored 25 votes. Senator Tinubu had 105 votes for the senatorial poll with her contender in PDP clinching 21 votes. The APC also gave the ruling party a run for its money in the House of Representatives category where it scored 103 against the PDP’s 16.

  • Lagos to  inaugurate  renal centre

    Lagos to inaugurate renal centre

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola is to inaugurate a renal and cardiac centre tomorrow.

    Commissioner for Health Jide Idris said the 67-bed facility within the Gbagada General Hospital is part of the government’s efforts to address cardiac and renal diseases.

    He said: “The scope of service will include heart diagnostic services, admission for all cardiac conditions, cardiac catheterisation for insertion of stents, non invasive cardiology, open heart surgery, heart transplant and rehabilitation services.

    “We will also have kidney care, diagnostic services such as ultrasound; laboratory services; investigation for complications of hypertension, diabetes and renal conditions; haemo-dialysis for acute and chronic kidney diseases and renal surgery, such as kidney transplant among others.”

    The concessionaire of the centre, Dr. Ladi Awosika, said: “After six months of operation, we will be doing open-heart surgeries three to four times in a week; 60 dialysis and about four renal transplants in a week.

    “This concession is unique. It is the concessionaire that is paying the government and not the other way round.”

  • Fashola urges drivers to be road-friendly

    Fashola urges drivers to be road-friendly

    As the horn-free day begins across Lagos State tomorrow, motorists have expressed mixed feelings over drivers readiness to comply.

    The initiative being promoted by the Ministry of Transportation they said, may be obeyed in breaches as a result of drivers’ level of awareness and maturity. Many of the commercial drivers are known for abusing the regulations guiding the use of the horn.

    But Governor Babatunde Fashola has called for road-friendly attitude among road users.

    Flagging off the initiative at the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industries’ hall, last Thursday, during the first Lagos Drivers’ Appreciation Day, Fashola said the No Horn Day was not a one-day event, but the beginning of a long journey to berth a new driving culture.

    At the ceremony where he recognised 25 drivers for setting good examples worthy of emulation, the governor charged drivers and other road users to contribute to the well-being of all, by keeping the noise level low.

    He said it was time Lagos joined the league of developed nations where motorists honk the horn when it is absolutely necessary.

    He said Lagos is taking a shot at promoting the culture ahead of other states because of his desire to promote the wellbeing of all Lagosians.

    “This is not a one-day thing. October 15 would be the beginning of a journey, the first major step in a long distance that would be undertaken by you and I. Whether we reduce or contribute to more noise around us is a choice we all must make beginning from October 15. The horn-free day is the clarion call for a noiseless society and this begins with you and me,” Fashola said.

    Government’s huge investment on the provision of road infrastructure such as road markings, traffic signal lights and road signs, the governor said, are meant to promote safety and make road users more comfortable.

    Speaking in a paper titled: Noise pollution is too serious to be ignored, Dr Kubie Enitan Layeni-Adeyemo said noise pollution have been found to lead to aggression, protest and stress, while it could also interfere with speech and hearingh impairment and poor performance at work or school. Other outcomes could also be fatigue, sleep disorder and ultimately hypertension.

    Mrs Layeni-Adeyemo who is Director of Occupational Health in the Ministry of Health therefore urged all to contribute to the reduction of noise pollution, adding that the campaign is one in which all must be involved.

    In his welcome address, the Commissioner for Transportation Mr Kayode Opeifa, said the day is meant to promote the avoidance of horn use by motorists, as well as sirens.

    One of the decorated drivers Mr Audu Momodu, 55, praised the state government for the honour bestowed on him.

    Momodu, a former accountant who now operates a cab service at Maryland, said he feels proud to be singled out.

    “I feel satisfied that I was recognised for a certificate of appreciation by the government, I shall go from here to preach what I’ve heard today to our people,” Momodu said.

  • ‘Jonathan has no excuse over Chibok girls’

    ‘Jonathan has no excuse over Chibok girls’

    Princess Adenrele Adeniran-Ogunsanya is the Secretary-General of the Lagos State Women’s Forum and former Secretary to Lagos State Government during Governor Babatunde Fashola’s first term. Her father, the colourful Chief Adeniran Ogunsanya, was a frontline politician in the First Republic as a chieftain of the National Council of Nigeria and Cameroun (NCNC). In this interview with The Nation, she spoke on the politics of Lagos State, Chibok girls, her experience as a female politician and other contemporary issues in an interview with Assistant Editor, Dare Odufowokan.

     

    You are one of those who have been very outspoken on the issue of the kidnapped Chibok girls.  Days after their kidnap, the federal government says it is doing everything possible to get them released. What’s your take on this?

    Like I said few weeks back, this is a tough one for us as a nation. It has really exposed our weakness as a republic. How can these happen to us? It shows the value our leaders place on human lives. We are in a situation that we have never been before. It’s sad that 170 days after, our kidnapped schoolgirls are still not back. I’m feeling really disappointed and I’m sure that majority of Nigerians feel this same way I feel. The implication of this is that our nation is an aeroplane with no pilot and no attendant in sight and we don’t know where we are heading.

    There is no excuse for the government. We have no excuse as Nigerians. This shouldn’t happen to us I repeat. We are a brilliant and intelligent race. Our current state is a bad omen. Definitely, it is beyond imagination that this is happening in Nigeria. The government has no excuse for its shortcomings.

    But why do you think it is so difficult to get the girls out of captivity?

    Obviously, there is something missing in the present day Nigeria; a development that has sent a clear message to lay people like me about the security of this country. If we can’t fight to return the missing Chibok girls, what would we do if there was an external attack on this nation? God forbid! How will the people of Nigeria be defended? Should we all accept that we are on our own and we have nobody to defend us? This is not the Nigeria we grew up in. The country I knew as mine will not abandon innocent kids in the hands of marauders.

    When you pick up the newspapers today, the stories that stare you in the face are the horrified accounts of how people are being butchered; how innocent women and children are being kidnapped; how villages and towns are being razed. The number of deaths Nigeria recorded since insurgency keeps growing and the government appears helpless. This is not good enough. So sad! I bet this would not happen during the era of the first generation of Nigerian leaders. The names like Nnamdi Azikiwe, Tafawa Balewa, Obafemi Awolowo and the likes, whose faces appear on the Nigerian currency, have earned great credit both home and abroad. That is why we still talk about them today.

    Are you saying the current leadership cannot measure up to what obtained in years gone past?

    We still have some good leaders around but with all due respect, one could feel the absence of those men of honour and integrity. There was something special about them. They exuded honour and integrity in all ramifications. Those who were opportuned to come in contact with them would attest to this. You felt something whenever they are around you.

    I remember when Tafawa Balewa spoke at the Commonwealth Conference in England; people commended Nigeria. People commended me as a Nigerian and I remember feeling very proud. They said to me, ‘I like the intonation of your Prime Minister.’ Truly, he had a golden voice and that made you feel proud. The way the then leaders carried themselves was quite unique and they were not after what they can acquire. They were motivated by the desire to serve the people. They had the interest of Nigeria at heart; a lot of them. Talk about Awolowo, talk about Azikiwe and you will be talking about great examples of leadership. These were not leaders that will abandon kids in the hands of scoundrels. I am a mother, I know how it feels. I can tell you I know what the mothers of those girls are feeling like now.

    According to you, as a child, you watched the electioneering campaign of the First Republic and even participated in some. What would you say are the difference between the electioneering of that era and what we have today?

    The electioneering campaigns of that era were something to be proud of as a young Nigerian. You cannot compare what we have now with what obtained in those days. The political campaigns we organise now lack class and decency. Then, it was about issues and colour.  Now, it’s not about issues, it’s the use of vulgar languages; throwing barbs and mud at one other. Murder and all other forms of violence are now part of electioneering in our country, all because they want to serve the people. The same people they kill and maim to get to power.

    Your group, the Lagos State Women Forum, as you said, was set up to encourage women to make their presence felt in politics beyond singing and dancing. How well have you fared with the initiative?

    We have done well. But more still remain to be done. We are not there yet. We are still being short-changed by you men. We made it known through protests that we are being short-changed, despite that we have a superior numerical strength over men in all political gatherings. Check out at meetings; at rallies, even at the polls. Aside these, we are active members of all the political parties. We get the men into offices. But we get the crumbs, just the crumbs afterwards. That is what we are kicking against. We want to help bridge the wide gap between women and our men folk in politics and other public endeavours. This is a deliberate attempt on our part to get our women actively involved in the mainstream of political activities, because politics, whether we like it or not, is an agency for change. Women are more into politics than men. So, we are seeking more recognition; more roles and more challenges in politics and governance. I believe we will get there soon.

    You once said Lagos has done well in promoting women in politics.

    Yes. Lagos State has not done too badly for women when it comes to appointment but more can still be done to address inequalities. We are more productive than the men. We are more passionate about achieving results for the party than the men. And by God’s grace, I see a woman winning governorship election in Lagos State very soon.

    So, you want a woman governor in 2015?

    Not necessarily in 2015, but if it is possible; why not? In Lagos, we have set a standard; what is important for now is that we want a young and vibrant person to become the governor of the state. And Fashola has set that pace. We want that to continue. Male or female; we want an equally effective governor to succeed Fashola.

    And personally, I am in support of the agitation of my people from Ikorodu to produce the next governor of the state. Ikorodu had been short-changed in terms of political office sharing and allocation in Lagos State. Ikorodu division should produce the next governor of the state in line with the tenets of equality and justice.

    We have supported others in the past to take their turns. Now, it is the turn of Ikorodu. And that is why we are soliciting the support of all other divisions in the state because as the saying goes, “one good turn, surely, deserves another.” That is as far as I see the Lagos 2015 governorship race.

    But perhaps, Nigeria needs a female president now to move farther, because, I think in most cases, women do their jobs well and they try to excel. And, when you find a woman in a position you know she is 20 times better than the man. Certainly, a woman can be the president of this great country and do the job well.

    Tell us about your late father, the colourful Chief Adeniran Ogunsanya.

    When I talk about my father, I largely want to talk about honour and integrity in politics. That is what I remember him for the most. He taught me to be honourable in public service at all times. At the end of the Second Republic, while other politicians went into hiding, he submitted himself for probe. Despite the trump-up charges of embezzlement levelled against him, he was not only exonerated, the military government handed back to him over half a million naira wrongly taken from him.

    My father was one of Zik’s closest associates. And they would put me on the campaign vehicle to sing and say the slogans of the NCNC. And once or twice, they would put me on the platform to sing at campaigns. My father kept me near himself. Whenever he wanted to have a meeting with his colleagues, he would call me to take a chair, get closer and listen. I used to get angry because I wanted to play or watch the TV. Of what use, I often asked myself then, was this information?

    I think all these were intentional by my father to groom me for politics. I think he recognised my flair for politics and had been sending me to represent him at political gatherings since I was 19, but I started full blown politics in 1977.

    Talking about you as a politician, you left the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for the then Action Congress now All Progressive Congress (APC). Any regrets?

    I have no regrets about joining my party. I have said it over and over again. It took time for me to change. I tried my best to stay in PDP. I had been part of the formation of that party, the PDP, through the likes of Chief Bode George and many others. But it was obvious I could no longer remain there. I was not wanted there and that was in PDP Lagos, not by the general body. Our views are not the same.

    In any case, this is the state that I belong to, I have no other state. I can claim I’m a Nigerian. I can claim any other state and even by association, claim the Eastern part of Nigeria. You know the relationship they have with my father and the great affection my father had for the Igbos. I also have great affection for that particular area but this is where I have my roots.

    And how would you describe life after office as SSG?

    Serving as the Secretary to the State Government in Lagos was a very dynamic experience for me.   I have been on board at the federal level and I have been an executive member of various committees but I have never really worked in government as a daily job.  I learnt a lot and I have become very versatile as a result. The job did not disturb my relationship with my friends and I always had people around me.   I didn’t get carried away with the position either.

    However, life after office is normal for me.   Not much has changed, except for the fact that I do not attend functions or parties. In any case, I have never been a party person. I would not call myself a socialite.  I only attend parties that I feel are very important.

  • Tejuosho market raises bar in shopping

    Tejuosho market raises bar in shopping

    Seven years after it was gutted by fire, the Phase One of the Tejuosho Market, Yaba, Lagos has  been reopened by Governor Babatunde Fashola.

    The market  has metamorphosed into a mega shopping complex.

    The complex, a sprawling four-storey, comprises 4,000 lock up shops, 1, 251 K-clamps units, banking spaces, 14 food court spaces, eight lifts, two escalators connecting the four floors, 600 parking lots, steady electricity and water supply,  equipped fire station, two rams to assist the physically challenged   and a crèche.

    Addressing traders and guests, Fashola said the edifice was a fulfillment of the promise of the government to Lagosians to create a better and enabling environment for trading.

    He said: “This is to fulfil a promise made to traders and entrepreneurs, to market men and women, such as our dear mama who daily drives our state and national economy that they will get a bigger, a better and more modern market. What we hand over today is only phase one of the redevelopment of Tejuosho market. By the time we open and handover Phase 2, which is also completed, their combine capacity will make them the biggest retail outlet in the whole of Africa.”

    He explained that the need to put in place a bigger and better market  made the administration to increase the shops. “We see that those small outlets were important to traders, the enumeration we did at that time showed that there were 533 of those, K-clamps created within the old parking area but we have purpose design in this new market and we have provided 1, 251 instead of 533 that was in the old market,” he said.

    Fashola said the design for the Red line light rail project, which will run parallel to the rail at Yaba, from Iddo to Ogun State, had been completed, while the Blue line, which is under construction from Okoko-maiko to Marina and work on the red line would soon start to make Tejuosho an accessible destination where people can arrive the park by rail, do their shopping, and also leave by rail.

    He noted that the government would continue to enhance the radical renewal of infrastructure as it is a long-term plan driven by a vision  of the public service.

    Thanking the leadership of FirstBank for providing the support for the construction and for agreeing to the government’s request to provide mortgages for small owners to pay for their shops gradually and over time, the governor urged traders to maintain the facility, noting that no illegal extension will be accommodated.

    The Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Mr. Toyin Ayinde, noted that the edifice is a good example of how the public-private partnership model can be deployed in driving the much-needed infrastructure and promote rapid economic growth and prosperity.

    “It is to our pride that in spite of all challenges, this market is opening ahead of  others in the neighbourhood and that’s the discipline that comes with project implementation and finance that First Bank brought to the table,” Ayinde said.

    He praised the deal between the Lagos State government, Stomberg Nigeria and FirstBank, which culminated in “the shopping facility, which will completely redefine shopping in Lagos as a larger economic hub and its occupants will enjoy unprecedented level of shopping experience”.

    Similarly, the Property Manager, Stomberg Engineering Nigeria, Mr. Babafemi Onasile, praised the financial institution, without whose effort the market might have remained an illusion.

    He said: “All the efforts to make this a success wouldn’t have happened if not for the doggedness of FirstBank, led by Mr. Olabisi Onasanya and with several meetings with the executive governor and the executive council to find solutions to different that we got on the project.”

    The Iyalode of Tejuoso market, Mrs. Dosunmi Sekete, appealed to the governor to ensure that old occupants of the market returned to the small outlets provided for them operate their businesses.

    She said traders, who occupied stalls in the market before the fire incident, had not been given the opportunity to repossess their stalls, despite several government’s directives.

    Meanwhile, Fashola has commiserated with the families of those who lost their lives in the fire, as well as during the construction of the building.

    “Mr. Dolapo Atinmo, who was alter ego of that company, sadly passed on. Madam, we sympathise with you and we thank you for coming. We know that you cannot hold your husband in your arms again but we believe that you will hold the memory of what he committed to building in your heart and that God will continue to console you. Our government salutes his contribution and we salute his partnership,” the governor said.

  • Re: Fashola’s take away on Ekiti poll

    SIR: I have always been an admirer of Governor Babatunde Fashola far across political and geographical boundaries, not because he has actually satisfied my ‘wantings’ of the image of good leadership but because I can appreciate his efforts beyond the definitions of mediocrity. Maybe even more because he has over the years portrayed himself as a focused and committed person. But his opinion as regards his perceived nutrients or should I say valuables which he terms as ‘take away’ on Ekiti poll, I think he might have narrowed down his line of vision and viewed issues only from a one-dimensional perspective, hence a one-directional varnishing point!

    He complains that a good governor in Fayemi as referenced by some public commentators he qualifies as eminent did not win in his own ward forgetting the common axiom that even the real and true “prophet is not recognized in his own home,” how much more the mediocre ones?

    He talks also about logical human behaviour refusing to remember that the ruling and elite class in our country in which he belongs has stripped most of us bare of any logic nor logical juxtapositions of any kind by their greedy megalomaniac attributes, offering us only crumbs of the whole we entrust to the. Or, how can you match the poverty in Lagos with the high profile economic status that is known of the state?

    On different and now crystalizing (so to say) political ideologies, I wonder what Fashola is driving at her. Is he attributing the distribution of rice and money only to PDP simply because PDP won the elections? Or was he not informed that Fayemi also distributed same to the electorate? On his reference to infrastructure, I am amused because I have seen several PDP governors develop far more infrastructure in their states than Fayemi would have ever done. Has he been to Cross River State? I hold still that our political platforms are short on ideological directions and thrive only on the ideologies of the individuals that form the party.

    Governor Fashola should desist from insulting (or seemingly so) the electorate of Ekiti State; their choice is made and is clear! The incumbent Governor Fayemi himself halfway through the elections upheld the transparency with which the election was conducted and APC shouldn’t now, after the loss, attempt to discredit the process.

     

    • Arc. Eric Williams Itembanye Akpo, Lugbe Abuja.

  • Economy: Lagos Assembly assures Fashola of continuous support

    Economy: Lagos Assembly assures Fashola of continuous support

    Lagos State House of Assembly has pledged to continue to support Governor Babatunde Fashola in his quest to better the live of Lagosians by providing necessary infrastructure in the state.

    The House further pledged to assist the governor in the area of budget in every way possible to avert any untoward effect arising from the current economic situation as a result of Federal Government failure to remit the proper fund to the state.

    Deputy Speaker, Hon. Kolawole Taiwo who presided at yesterday’s plenary gave the assurance on behalf of his colleagues after listening to four members of the state executive council who were invited to throw more light on the state of the economy as presented to the House by the Governor at plenary on recently.

    After listening to the governor on Monday, the House invited Commissioner for Economic Planning and Budget, Ben Akabueze, Commissioner Finance, Ayo Gbeleyi, commissioner, Special Adviser on Taxation and Revenue, Bola Shodipo and the Accountant General of the state.

    The exco members took turns to explain the effect of the current situation on the performance of the budget and welfare of Lagosians.

    According to Nwabueze although only 25 per cent of the state government is dependent on federal transfers “it still remains a significant portion of the budget if it is threatened as it is now” stressing that it affects budget performance. He said 75 per cent of the budget is from internally generated revenue.

    He however pointed out that not very many states are in the same situation with Lagos as most of them practically survive on federal allocation.

    Shodipo explained further that the situation “affects every aspect of our living in the state, we are trying to minimize the effect but how far we can go is still a matter of concern.”

  • Making LASTMA more public-friendly

    Making LASTMA more public-friendly

    Governor Babatunde Fashola was right on cue when he described Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) officials as ‘people Lagosians love to hate’. In 12 years, LASTMA has carved a niche for itself despite the excesses of some of its officials. But the government is doing everything to whip these bad eggs into line. ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE reports.

     

    Mrs Agnes Daniel could not believe her eyes. Since she was late for a meeting, she thought she could park across the road and ask her office guard to pick up her car. She had not crossed the road to her office at Ketu, Lagos, before some Lagos State Traffic Management Agency (LASTMA) officials arrived on the scene in their towing van. Her office guard met them about to tow the car. They rebuffed all entreaties that he had come to pick up the car.

    The woman paid N10, 000 to get the car released. “I stopped taking my car to the office since then,” Mrs. Daniel said. “It was,” she continued, “a bitter experience for me. That experience left me with the impression that LASTMA has become the cash cow for many of its workers.”

    Francis Adebambo, a 40-year-old marketer, is another Lagosian with a sad experience. He was apprehended about 7.am, two years ago, and his vehicle impounded on the Dopemu Bridge by LASTMA officials for negotiating the bridge through a one-way under the bridge.

    Adebambo denied the offence, but his denial incensed the LASTMA men.

    Adebambo said he was rudely shoved out of his car, as a LASTMA official took over the driving. Another LASTMA official, who was in mufti, sat at the passenger’s side. He was asked to report at LASTMA’s Egbeda office to retrieve his car. The matter, however, took another turn when he reported at the office and discovered that his two android phones and earpiece were missing. The two offficials denied seeing the phones.

    Angry, he abandoned the car there and opted for legal redress to recover his stolen property valued at N150, 000.

    At Ojota, all the side windows and rear glass of an Oshodi-bound commercial bus trying to avoid being apprehended for driving against traffic, were shattered by four LASTMA officials, who pursued the driver.

    At place in Oregun Lagos, a couple attending a wedding returned to discover that their car had been towed by LASTMA officials. The man said he had been directed to park at the spot by one of the LASTMA officials deployed in controlling traffic on the venue. Over the years, LASTMA has enlarged its scope, covering all the 57 local government areas in the state. Its activities are complemented by the LASTMA Special Traffic Mayors (STM), an elite cream of volunteers, recognised by law, to play a role in keeping traffic moving in the state.

    Some accidents and deaths have trailed the excesses of LASTMA officials. A motorcyclist lost his life at Ikotun, a Lagos surburb recently. He was trying to avoid being caught by a LASTMA official, when he crashed into a vehicle.

    At Iponri, a LASTMA official was crushed by a fleeing commercial bus driver, as he attempted to arrest a car owner for flouting traffic regulations. The arrested car owner regained her freedom at the Lagos High Court, as video evidence from eyewitnesses, exonerated her of culpability in the death of the LASTMA official.

    Established in 2002 by the Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu administration to tackle the traffic bottleneck in the state, LASTMA has become the most feared of all traffic agencies.

    If LASTMA had some powers during the Tinubu era, it was invested with more, with the amended Law 2008, by the Babatunde Fashola administration. At some point, LASTMA was speculated to be another revenue generating agency with a fixed target.

    Government’s stand on traffic rules, which, among others, stipulate a psychiatric test, as penalties, has created an opportunity for LASTMA officials to exploit traffic offenders’ ignorance and milk others who want to get off the hook by ‘settling’ to secure their release.

    Except where tickets are written, money paid to LASTMA is often diverted, with some LASTMA man have become emboldened to demand and negotiate with traffic offenders despite government’s insistence that no one should have any cash transaction with any public official.

    Despite these challenges, Fashola has been canvassing strict compliance with traffic rules and LASTMA’s ecpected to enforce same.

    For him, the task of keeping the over 20 million people in Lagos moving must not be left to chance.

    With two million vehicles using the 9,100 roads built on a land mass of 3, 577 square kilometres, the volume of traffic in Lagos is above the national average and over the traffic prevalent in more than 10 states of the country.

    This is why Fashola believes the agency must be appropriately empowered to cope with keeping the state moving.

    The governor knows there are bad eggs in in the agency, but he believes it must repositioned to overcome the excesses of motorists.

    At the launch of the Lagos State Enforcement Training Institute, Fashola challenged LASTMA officials to rededicate themselves to better service and improve their perception in the public space.

    He said: “You are the people that Lagosians love to hate. It is your responsibility to turn that into a love-love relationship. Lagos State Traffic Management Authority is a concept that has extended beyond the confines of Lagos. It is a good brand which we must improve upon. It is a brand which only dedicated men can improve on.”

    Fashola believed Lagosians’ anger against LASTMA is not a verdict to disband the traffic army that has become a toast of other states who have come to understudy it and are deploying it to control traffic in their domains. The solution, he said, is to increase its capacity and revamp its image.

    He said: “The people of Lagos already recognise that you are a necessary part of their lives. In my several conversations with the people, they all agree that you add value, what they are saying is simply a challenge to make it better because we had already done the hard work. Each time they complain, they are endorsing our capacity to do it and they have asked me to ask you to do it well.”

    It is not only the governor that believes in what LASTMA is doing. His Commissioner for Transportation, Comrade Kayode Opeifa, does too. Opeifa believes LASTMA is the best public policy the state has come up with and the best dividend of democracy.

    To critics of the agency, Opeifa said the option is to withdraw LASTMA from the roads for a day and see how chaotic the roads would be within hours.

    He expressed the readiness of the government to combat the bad eggs within the establishment and ensure that committed ones operate in a conducive environment.

    He said the state’s traffic Law 2012 would improve the agency’s efficiency.

    Last year, the government began a mandatory Career Evaluation Training Programme (CETP) for selected LASTMA officers. The officers and their Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI) colleagues were taken through more institutional training and standards to change their orientation.

    The need for the training was reinforced by the Senior Special Assistant on Transport Education Dr. Mariam Masha, the CETP coordinator, who said the training would enhance the officers’ efficiency and achieve the goals of law enforcement.

    Masha said the first set of 3,311 officers of LASTMA and KAI graduates of the CETP would be the pilot of the change that the government envisaged in LASTMA, which is suffering from a low perception by Lagosians.

    Masha as the head of transport education has pioneered innovative ideas ranging from strategic meetings with schools, and frontline clubs and prominent associations all aimed at changing peoples’ perception of the agency, which as at 2011 become a burden on the government.

    She said: “Our officers needed to know that for any society to thrive, allowing the citizens to live full, meaningful lives, law and order must prevail and that everyone must appreciate that laws are made by man for his protection and preservation and must therefore observe his civic duty and accept the basic principle of obeying the law and protecting the officers who enforce it.”

    To ensure this, Masha counselled that officers needed not intimidate others into behaving, when they themselves are misbehaving.

    “Let me remind you of the tools of your trade.

    They are the law which empowers you to work, your physical body as you carry no weapons and importantly, your ability to positively influence the members of the community you serve to do the right thing. They must trust and respect you. It is mutual, as you must do same,” Masha further emphasised.

    She reminded that it was in recognition of their significant role in keeping the state moving that the governor recently approved their conversion into the state civil service and the creation of the law enforcement cadre in the civil service for LASTMA and other sister agencies in the state, which entitles them to all the benefits every civil servants has including pension rights under the contributory pension scheme.

    The arrest of a dismissed LASTMA official caught carrying out an illegal operation recently, and another, caught on tape demanding for a bribe are indicators that the task of reforming the traffic army in the state remains enormous.

    While the government is not denying that there might still be such elements, it assures that it has adequate capacity to effect change and transform the agency.

    Much of what it claims to be doing are still to manifest, but lagosians are patiently waiting to see a transformed LASTMA on the streets in the metropolis.