Tag: Governor Babatunde Fashola

  • Lagos scales up infrastructural renewal in Lagos East

    Lagos scales up infrastructural renewal in Lagos East

    Residents of Ikorodu, Imota, Agbowa, Epe and other neigbouring communities in Lagos East Senatorial District, Lagos, have had course to smile. Massive infrastructural upgrade and renewal is now ongoing in the area, with some of them completed. Last week, Governor Babatunde Fashola moved government machinery to the area to inspect ongoing projects and hand over already completed ones.

    One of the projects is the Imota Asphalt Plan that will solve the problem of production of asphalts for road construction and rehabilitation in Lagos East. The plant is expected to service Ikorodu, Ibeju Lekki, Eredo, Epe, Agbowa-Ikosi, part of Eti Osa, Ijede, among others.

    One of the significant advantages derived from the citing of the plant in Imota area is the regeneration of their environment, which is to be demonstrated in terms of an increase in the number of roads maintained annually, employment generation and a boost in commercial activities.

    According to the Chairman, Lagos State Public Works Corporation, LSPWC, Mr. Gbenga Akintola, the sciting of the plant would increase the number of road maintained, saying that the host community as well as four other Local Government such as Epe, Ibeju-Lekki, Ikorodu and part of Eti-Osa would experience an increase in the number of roads maintained annually, estimating that the plant would cater for 420 roads in this axis.

    The new LSPWC Imota Asphalt plant is of a batch of mix type with a maximum production capacity of 180 tons per hour. The plant was manufactured in Italy by a company called, Marini, a company founded in 1899 and with over 60 years experience. The Imota plant is of the Marini Ultimap 2000 B5 range. It is considered the most universal range Ultimap plant type with best ratio hourly production, price and quality and charaterised by ample and easy access to whatever plant component in accordance with European regulations.

    Some of the major components of the Imota plant include cold feed bins, bitumen storage, dryer drum, asphalt storage silos, emission control system, recycled filler storage and reclaimed asphalt pavement section. A batch plant’s strength such as the Imota plant primarily reliesm in its ability to make saleable hot mix out of almost any reasonable stockpile of aggregate.

    The plant has high flexibility of production, making it possible to frequently change the formula and to produce small quantities.

    It also has maximum efficiency and performance for the production of special products and more versatile.

    General infrastructure in the yard where the plant is located are administrative block, gate house and security tower to oversee the whole site, staff quarters, goods store, generator house housing three generators of 635 KVA and 135 KVA, 16 concrete foundation, weighbridge, weighbridge office and bitumen tanks, diesel tanks and asphalt production.

    According to Akintola, the plant’s civil engineering works such as preparing the foundations on which all the plant components are sitting, were solely carried out by in-house engineers and technicians of the Corporation adding that they also played significant roles in the installation of the plant upon its arrival from Italy, expressing joy that the Imota environment has already begun to witness an upsurge of commercial activities in the form of trading and vending which, according to him, are improving by the day.

    Handing over the plant, Fashola assured that his administration would continue to find solutions to its developmental problems in the State instead of talking about them, appealing to Lagosians to cooperate with his administration in its developmental efforts by giving up land where required in the interest of the generality of the people, pointing out that government was making steady progress with its plan to develop all parts of the State.

    He expressed dismay that in some areas where it had sought to carry out projects for the general good, some people had taken government to court, thereby delaying such a project and the benefits that would have accrued to the people, adding that such projects would also solve the problems of unemployment.

    Citing the Imota Asphalt Plant as example, the governor said while under construction, scores of unemployed youths got jobs directly while other indirect jobs such as selling of food and other support jobs became available, saying that after the construction many residents had gotten engaged in supply of raw materials for the production at the plant.

    “The plant is already impacting on the community addressing youth unemployment in a positive and visible way. The most interesting thing about the Plant is that it is most modern and sophisticated as it reuses all asphalt scrapped from the roads. The community has a few years ago complained of non-government presence. Slowly, but surely, the economy of this place is picking up. I will not be in the discussion of youth employment but I will engage in finding solution to it,” he said.

    The governor also toured the Vocational and Technical College, Ikorodu where he inspected the MTN Youth Skill Development Centre and commissioned the Nigerite Projects Building, urging Lagosians to partner with the government so as to continue to sustain its development plans for the State. He expressed joy that his administration’s objective to lift the image and value of the Technical education in the State was being realized.

  • Fashola  orders probe of LBIC over subscribers’ claims

    Fashola orders probe of LBIC over subscribers’ claims

    All hope is not lost for subscribers who were allegedly fleeced after paying for houses managed by the Lagos Building Investment Company (LBIC). Governor Babatunde Fashola has ordered a probe of the company’s activities.

    Following the subscribers’ complaints. The Nation on March 12 carried a story of subscribers allegedly swindledby some workers and agents of LBIC.

    Fashola’s probe order to the Attorney-General and Commissioner of Justice Ade Ipaye was said to have followed the subscriber complaints that the House of Assembly is slow in investigating the matter.

    The House raised a three-member committee to investigate the alleged scam following The Nation’s report.

    The committee, headed by Mrs. Adefunmilayo Tejuoso, has as members, Oluwakayode Ogundimu and Remi Olowo.

    The committee has completed its assignment but its report was not considered by the House before it went on vacation. The House is expected to resume this month.

    The Nation gathered that during the panel’s sitting,  LBIC’s Managing Director Babatunde Jinadu and the Company Secretary, Kunle Akindele, came under fire from the aggrieved subscribers who backed up their claims with documentary evidence.

    Johnson Atoyebi, Adeniyi Olanrewaju, Alhaji Ajani Adedibu and Alhaji Jimoh Akewusure are among the subscribers, allegedly encouraged by LBIC officials and agents to invest millions of naira into some housing project, but the firm reportedly failed to keep its part of the bargain.

    They had claimed that some agents of LBIC told them that the company was selling some apartments within the Iponri Low-Cost Housing Estate, Iponri, Lagos and encouraged them to make payment.

    Investigations revealed that instances abound where allocations were deliberately delayed even when payment has been fully made. When allocations are eventually made, necessary documents are withheld. In some other cases, subscribers’ funds were deliberately tied down without any explanation, and where part-payment is made, no official receipts were issued.

    Atoyebi paid N3 million for a three-bedroom flat at the Iponri Estate in 2010. He claimed to have been made to pay over N2m extra, but was eventually allocated a two-bedroom apartment three years later and the necessary documents withheld from him.

    Olanrewaju said he paid N2.5m in 2011 for an aprtment. He claimed to have been made to pay additional N1.5m into a private account owned by an LBIC official. Till date, no house has been allocated to him.

    Adedibu was a sitting tenant. He said he was encouraged by LBIC’s officials to make part-payment for the purchase of the apartment he occupies, with the understanding that the balance of N1.5million would be paid in instalments.

    Adedibu said he paid the N1million in July 2011, but was not issued any receipt and was later ejected from the apartment with a refund.

    Akewusure claimed to have expended millions of naira to renovate his apartment, with the understanding that the apartment would be sold to him at a reduced cost. Akewusure said he was taken aback when officials of the LBIC threatened him with eviction after he had renovated the house and without promise of a refund.

    The Nation learnt that Fashola’s intervention was particularly influenced by a petition dated May 21, this year and a reminder dated June 14, written by Atoyebi’s lawyer Wahab Shittu.

    It was further learnt that immediately the Governor became aware of the petition, he sent it to the Attorney-General for investigation.

    Although Jinadu was to retire before now, The Nation learnt that the Governor insisted that he sees to the end of various allegations of sharp practices raised by many subscribers against his management before he leaves the company.

    The Attorney-General, it was learnt, has assigned the Directorate of Advisory Services and Judiciary Liaison, an office within the state’s Justice Ministry, to investigate the case and advise the Ministry on the appropriate step to take.

    An Assistant Chief Counsel with the Directorate of Advisory Services and Judiciary Liaison, Mrs I. I. Isinjola, confirmed Fashola’s directive in a letter to Atoyebi’s lawyer, dated June 19, this year.

    The letter reads: “I am directed to acknowledge the receipt of your letter addressed to the Executive Governor of Lagos State, a copy of which was forwarded to the office of the Honourable Attorney General.

    “I am further directed to inform you that the letter is receiving the necessary attention.”

    But when The Nation visited the Lagos Justice Ministry, it was learnt that the official handling the case was having difficulties getting the LBIC to respond to allegations contained in Atoyebi’s petition.

    Officials of the company, it was learnt, have consistently avoided any contact with the official from the Justice Ministry and have allegedly refused to respond to written queries.

    “We have written them twice. We have also visited the company on different occasions. But they have refused to speak to us.  Initially, we were even allowed to see some of the officials when we visited. But when last we were there, we were not allowed to go beyond the reception area.

    “We have sent the third letter to them. If they fail to respond this time, we will have no option than to write our advice based on the information we have. Their refusal to respond to our queries simply means that they have no response,” an official of the Ministry said.

    Earlier in June, an official of the company tried thrice to organise a media chat with the management of the company to allow them state their case, but it could not hold. The reason for this could not be explained. This made the man who tried to arrange the meeting to say in desperation that: “I think I have done my best. Whatever happens after this is their problem. They asked me to use my contacts to get the medium that broke the story to give them the chance to defend themselves, and I did just that. The man came on three different occasions, but nobody attended to him. They have forgotten that a story of this nature is always followed up,” the official said.

  • Lagos splashes naira on winners

    Lagos splashes naira on winners

    The Lagos State Government has awarded cash prizes to the three winners of the first photo competition of the Lagos carnival, which took place in April.

    Speaking at the award giving ceremony in Onikan, Lagos, Commissioner for Tourism and Inter-governmental Relations Mr. Disun Holloway, said the initiative was borne out of government’s desire to empower the youths, create employment and encourage creativity in the state.

    According to him, Governor Babatunde Fashola conceived the idea of the competition when he noted with delight, the number of people taking photographs during the last Lagos carnival in April this year.

    The Commissioner also disclosed that the ministry received numerous entries, stressing that it was very difficult to pick the best three due to the quality of works at the competition

    He added that the assessment of the entries was very transparent as the ministry was not involved in the selection process of the winners stressing that the three judges worked independently of each other

    Revealing that the Lagos State Government is the sole sponsor of this year’s event, Holloway called on the organised private sector to be involved in subsequent editions so as to encourage creativity and to fulfil part of their corporate social responsibility to the state and its’ citizens.

    Anineh Okude of Cool F.M. one of the judges, corroborated the Commissioner’s account on transparency, stressing that the judges found it difficult to arrive at the best three entries due to the quality of competition.

    First prize winner Adeyemi Babatunde Adeoye, gave kudos to the present administration for coming up with the initiative, adding that it will go a long way in empowering the youths, while also promoting photography in the state.

    Adeoye received N500,000, for his effort while the first runner up Sunday Alamba and second runner up Okulue Alex Azukaego went home with N300,000 and N200,000.

    Earlier in the year, the government had given out cash prizes and awards to the best carnival groups, the queen and the king and winners of the Beauty Pageant of the year Black Heritage Week.

  • MOCPED to present 23 courses for accreditation

    The Provost Michael Otedola College of Primary Education (MOCPED), Noforija Epe, Lagos, Prof Olu Akeusola, has expressed confidence that with the transformation agenda under his management, the college is set for the planned accreditation of its 23 courses by its regulatory body-the National Commission for Colleges of Education (NCCE).

    In the first week of September, MOCPED will host NCCE accreditation team for four days, (between first to fourth) in what promises to be a rigorous accreditation exercise; however, Prof Akeusola expressed confident of full accreditation of all the courses to be presented.

    Some of the courses are: Arabic Language, French Language, English Language, Political Scvince, Agriculture, Curriculum, Arts and Education.

    Akeusola said he pinned his hope on the Lagos State government praising it for the funding of the institution.

    According to him, the institution’s management has done everything possible to improve on the infrastructure and human capital base of the institution in the last two years.

    The Professor of Comparative Linguistics, praised Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos for the love and the passion he has for education and human capital development.

    Said Akeusola: “The Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola has been wonderful in releasing funds promptly for the development of the college, especially in the last two years when I assumed office as the Provost. At the management level, we are making sure that money released is deployed towards human and material development of this institution. Today, we can proudly say the college is comparable to any college of education anywhere in the country. Though MOCPED is a specialised college for the training of primary school teachers we are competitive in our operations ”

    He said since he assumed office, the college had entered into many linkages with both local and international organisations, a development Akeusola said attracted lots of goodwill towards further development of the institution.

    He said in the last two years, the management increased the number of teaching and non-teaching staff, sent many lecturers to seminars, some whom he said are currently pursuing their PhD programmes at various institutions within and outside Nigeria.

    “We want the best for the college and we will stop at nothing in attaining this,” Akeusola added.

    Corroborating the Provost, chairman, College of Education Academic Staff Union (COEASU) MOCPED chapter Comrade Kupolati Christopher described Akeusola’a management style as ‘very creative and all inclusive.’

    The Dean, School of Languages, Dr Yusuf Taofeek, also spoke in the same vain.

    ”At the School of languages, we have installed about 50 computers for our language laboratory. We have backup solar energy to power those computers whenever there is power failure. Now, the college which is now fully computersised, also has e-library.”

    “I think the provost is able to achieve all these within two years because of his network has with the people in Government as well as his international connections also.”

  • Lagos trade fair to promote SMEs

    The Lagos State Government has concluded plans to host the year 2013 Domestic trade fair tagged Eko Expo, aimed at promoting Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and locally made products in the country.

    Special Adviser to Governor Babatunde Fashola on Commerce and Industry, Mr. Oluseye Oladejo, who disclosed this in Ikeja, said foreign exhibitors from Indonesia and China were among the various organisations that have indicated interest to participate in the fair billed to hold at Lekki Free Trade Zone.

    Oladejo explained that the government is organising the coming expo in collaboration with the Lekki Free Zone Development Company, as a result of the successes recorded with last year’s fair, where a total of 175 investors participated. He said the fair would further promote investment opportunities available at the zone, as well as provide platform for operators in small and medium scale industries to showcase what they do.

    According to him, “the choice of Lekki Free Zone as the venue for this year’s fair is to familiarise the business community with the peculiar incentives offered by the zone and the need to invest therein.”

    He listed such incentives to include, complete tax holiday from all federal, State and Local governments, taxes, rates, customs duties and levies; one-stop approval for all permits, operating license and incorporation papers.

  • Lagos mulls Eko Expo to promote  locally made products

    Lagos mulls Eko Expo to promote locally made products

    Lagos State Government has concluded plans to host the year 2013 domestic trade fair tagged Eko Expo, geared towards promoting locally made products in the country.

    Special Adviser to Governor Babatunde Fashola on Commerce and Industry, Mr. Oluseye Oladejo who disclosed this yesterday in Alausa said foreign exhibitors from Indonesia and China were among the various organisations that have indicated interest to participate in the fair which will hold at Lekki Free Trade Zone.

    Oladejo explained that the government is organising the coming expo in collaboration with the Lekki Free Zone Development Company, as a result of the successes recorded with last year Fair, where a total of 175 investors participated.

    He said the fair will further promote investment opportunities available at the zone, as well as provide platform for operators in small and medium scale industries to showcase what they do.

    According to him, “The choice of Lekki Free Zone as the venue for this year fair is to familiarise the business community with the peculiar incentives offered by the zone and the need to invest therein.”

    He listed such incentives to include, complete tax holiday from all federal, State and Local governments, taxes, rates, customs duties and levies; one-stop approval for all permits, operating license and incorporation papers.

    Others include duty free, tax-free import of raw materials and components destined for re-export; duty- free capital goods, consumer goods, machinery, equipments and furniture among others.

    The Special Adviser said the ministry will make provision of a free shuttle buses that will be stationed at Oriental Hotel along Lekki-Epe road to convey interested people to and fro the fairground all through the seven days that the fair will last.

    “This is meant to assist visitors to get to the fair venue with ease, in addition to accommodations available at the zone for exhibitors to make their stay during this period comfortable.

  • A stitch in time…

    A stitch in time…

    Many of the buildings in the Lagos State Low Cost Housing Scheme popularly known as Jakande Estate at Adeniji Adele on Lagos Island are weak. During a visit last week, Governor Babatunde Fashola said the estate would be rebuilt. Welcoming the idea, some of the residents canvassed for “proper relocation” by the government before the renovation, reports SEYI ODEWALE.

    It was a surprise visit, but it was welcomed by residents of Lagos State Low Cost Housing Scheme popularly known as Jakande Estate at Adeniji Adele on Lagos Island. The buildings are threatened by flood and many are already showing signs of distress. So, when Governor Babatunde Fashola visited the estate last week, the residents were happy to receive him. The governor, they reasoned, had come to address their plight. Many of the houses are leaking, with sewage running through some of the compounds.

    A shocked Fashola said he would not stand by and watch until the buildings collapsed before doing something. He said he would relocate the residents and even give them money to rent houses, pending the rehabilitation of the estate.

    Ade Fakoya, who lives in the estate, agrees with the governor.“The way residents of this estate, especially Adeniji Adele, managed the place has left so much to be desired. The place, apart from being over-crowded, is not fit for humans. Is it the pile of dirt that usually blocks the canal beside the estate you want to talk about or the impunity with which the residents deface the place that you want to talk about? Everywhere in that estate, you will agree with me must be rebuilt,” he said

    Built about 30 years ago, the estate, which has four phases, was among those built by the administration of the first civilian Governor of Lagos State, Alhaji Lateef Kayode Jakande, to ease housing problems, especially of middle and low income earners. The idea paid off as many keyed into the project, which simultaneously took off in almost every part of the state. They included Lekki, Isolo, Amuwo-Odofin, Alapere, Iyana-Ipaja, Ikorodu and other areas.

    Recalling with nostagia when the estate was newly built, Fakoya said: “You needed to see what it looked like when it was newly built. It was very decent, clean and habitable. How and when decay set it, to me, is a matter of conjecture, because it did not come suddenly. The decay grew over the years.”

    But over the years, the estate, like its contemporaries in the state, has suffered a lot of abuse and neglect by its owners. Aside, there are other factors that, unfortunately, eroded the integrity of the buildings in the estate. These include the land on which they were built and the circumstances under which they were erected.

    “Every time we look at those buildings that are distressed, we must also look at the background of how those buildings got there. There was no land in that place. The impression of land was created by the construction of the Third Mainland Bridge, which necessitated sand filling of the area. And the era when Alhaji Jakande constructed those buildings was when the Federal Government and the state government were struggling over landed property. Before it was being used for wasteful exercises the state government came in, and we needed those houses then,” said Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Toyin Ayinde.

    The hurried manner with which the estate was built, Ayinde told The Nation, gave no room for soil test. This, however, undermined the government’s efforts as the building after some years began to sink until most of them showed some signs of distressed.

    “So, those houses came within that circumstance and the necessary soil tests were not done then because they were in a hurry to put up those buildings for people to move into them. Obviously, over the years, structures like that would be distressed,” Ayinde said.

    Fashola’s pronouncement has, however, sent jitters down the spine of many residents as they are not clear on how sincere the government will be and how it wants to go about it.

    “The news about the government coming to demolish our estate is not in any way new to us. We heard it about two years ago. But what we are not clear with is how government wants to go about it. We have been told that we will be relocated pending the time the estate will be rebuilt, but where are we going to be moved to?” asked Hon Gbenga Akinnubi the estate’s Phase I residents’ chairman.

    This fear, among others, he said, is causing a lot of discomfort among residents who would not want to be dislodged from the kind of life they are used to on Lagos Island. “Majority of our children were born in this estate, even some of the older generation cannot live their lives outside Lagos Island. So, if we are all relocated to another place, which we feel will definitely be outside Lagos Island, most of our people will find it difficult to adjust, knowing that the exercise will last until the buildings are reconstructed and completed. And this in the minds of our people will take months,” said Akinnubi.

    He continued: “We appreciate the government’s concern about the state of the buildings and we are in support of the move to regenerate them. It is just that our people need to be assured that they will not suffer unnecessarily for their houses. You may wish to know that we have since paid for these houses. We own them.”

    Akinnubi made a suggestion: “We would love it if the government could just develop a section of the Phase II of the estate, which has some space, to serve as a transit camp for us. What will just happen is that we will be moved in phases as soon as the buildings are completed. If they move residents of five buildings to the camp, their apartment would be phased and when completed, they would be settled in them and others would follow suit in that order.”

    But the Physical Planning Commissioner assured residents, saying they have nothing to fear. “Government intends to rebuild those buildings and endeavour that those living there come back. To do a sustainable building in that environment for now would take one no less than 35 metres depth below the present ground level; meaning that you would have pile foundation. Now if the existing buildings were erected on piles it is not very likely that we will have the present situation now,” he said.

    Akinnubi’s statement was corroborated by the chairman of the estate, comprising all the four Phases, Alhaji Wakili Anbali, who said the plan goes with their aspiration. “We have been crying for about nine years to the government to come to our aid in this estate. And when they eventually came, we had no choice than to welcome them. It is okay with us,” he said.

    He said a portion of land between phases II and III could be used to settle residents in phases pending the time the project is completed. “If they take some people there now, their former apartments would be done and after that they take them back for others to take their turns,” he said, adding: “We would not want to be taken to far places outside Lagos Island, like Agege, Iyana-Ipaja or some place like that,” he added.

    When the commissioner was asked if the scheme would take after that of Isale-Gangan, where the government rebuilt the place for its owners with a promise of giving them their buildings back when completed, Ayinde said: “Isale-Gangan is a different case, but a regeneration exercise. It is different in the sense that people, who have their different properties, then pulled their small land area together and were being supported by the government and each of them will get back their apartments,” he said.

    The scheme, he said, is not denying the owners of their properties, but to assist them in making the place habitable. “I don’t know if you have been to that area lately, you will see why we are most concerned. We don’t want cases of building collapse again in Lagos and virtually all the buildings there are weak and distressed. Not only that, the area is prone to flooding because of the blocked canal by the estate. So, all these will be done to make the place fit for living again,” he assured.

    But Adeniji-Adele, the commissioner was told, is not the only estate in that category that was distressed. “Of course, we know that there are others like that. It will be extended to them, but we must also not forget that every exercise like this requires funding. In matter of funding, we talk about prioritising. Don’t forget that housing is not the only need of Lagos. We also need to intervene in education, health, transportation, road infrastructure and expanding water provision.

    “So, there are a lot of things competing for the limited resource and never ever forget that Lagos State has the largest population of all the states in Nigeria and all of these have to be balanced. That is part of the challenge we have. But let me also say that we have private sector participants who are showing interests in collaborating with the government to develop such estates. They want to come in, do the relocation for those who are there, build the structures for them to occupy and probably develop others for commercial purposes,” he said.

    Asked if the exercise would require the owners to pay some additional cost to regain their apartments, the commissioner, who first said no, later added that by the time the project is completed value would have been added to the buildings at some costs.

    “No, no, no, no. I will take Adeniji, for example; we have a proposal by private sector participant who plans to relocate them at no cost to them, of course, if they don’t yield their tenancy up and leave those buildings. Let us not forget that every one of the flats in that estate belongs to some people; they bought them. And if, perhaps, they have cooperated in maintaining them, it would not have got to that level. We must also recognise our bad maintenance culture, not just in Adeniji Adele, but for us generally as a people. As somebody said: “You don’t have a piece of engineering structure on ground and refuse to maintain it. Nowhere is it done in the world. So, it’s about the ability for them to yield. Once they yield, the plan is for them to come back there without any payment. Although we must note that it’s an added value, definitely they (the buildings) would not come back at their original value,” Ayinde said.

    He, however, decried the misconception among some sections of the society that Governor Fashola’s administration was demolishing buildings arbitrarily in Lagos, noting that those who share the view are pessimists. “It is just like looking at a glass of water to say either it is half empty or half full. When you look at it and say half empty, you are seen as a pessimistic person, but when you say it is half full, it means that you are optimistic and hopeful that the glass will, eventually, get full. So, I think the message should change; it should be a message of hope. Have you been to the area lately? And what is your impression? If you have been there, you will know what we are talking about. We are bringing to them a message of hope and better living environment,” he said.

    When The Nation visited the estate, it discoverd that it needs urgent attention. Entering through Phase I by the Taxi Park, it met with images that assaulted its sensibilities. The state of most buildings, the untidy state of its inner roads and attachments, such as shops and kiosks could also make the place a haven for criminals, especially when night falls.

    Perennial flooding of the area can also make living there hellish. “Although we are not happy with the flooding, what can you do as an individual when people around you are defiant especially in dumping of refuse in the canal?”asked a resident who, wished for anonymity.

    Most residents on the Island, especially Adeniji Adele, he said, do not have an acceptable way of disposing their wastes. “That was why the canal got blocked,” he said, adding: “With the channelisation efforts of the government, living around here would be cool as flooding would have been tackled,” he added.

  • Experts hail Fashola on Lekki-Ikoyi bridge

    Experts hail Fashola on Lekki-Ikoyi bridge

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola has been praised for his foresight in constructing the Lekki-Ikoyi Bridge.

    Former president of the Nigeria Institution of structural Engineers (NIstructee) Kunle Adebajo and an estate surveyor/valuer, Okon Etuk, said the “cable propelled” bridge was well-designed.

    He said a cable-stayed bridge relies on the cables that radiates from the main support pier or piers for further support beyond or in between. This, he said, usually results in less support piers being needed, creating a very distinctive look and elegance.

    He said: “If you look at the side of the bridge you will see the pattern of cables, which are an integral part of the bridge. Although these tend to define the visual appearance of the bridge, the bridge would not be able to withstand the traffic loading without these cables. That is why the bridge is cable stayed.”

    He said the bridge is spectacular and attractive to the eye and certainly will become a well-known landmark attraction on the Lagos horizon. It will also be a tourists attraction as it can be viewed from quite a few varied locations on the Lagos Island, he added.

    “From a design point of view, it looks quite efficiently designed. It is however likely to have come at a cost premium, higher than a more regular bridge design would have been for the span involved, he explained.

    On the design concept, he said: “In some cases, wind can be a major design factor and in extreme cases it can rock the bridge side to side, sometimes causing the cables to become lose but this is most unlikely to be the case in this new Lekki bridge, which has relatively modest slenderness proportions.”

    On the likely challenges of the cable-stayed bridge, he said that if there is anything that would be of concern, particularly in building such a bridge in Nigeria and in Lagos, near the coast, it is the cables, which are very important to the stability of the bridge. He said the cable require careful treatment to protect them from corrosion.

    He advised that the bridge be regularly inspected and maintained during its life span.

    Another concern he raised was that of the impact it will most likely have on traffic volumes on the otherwise fairly serene parts of Ikoyi, which will now be a conduit for the traffic coming from the Lekki axis and beyond.

    Etuk cautioned on what he calls the nuisance value of the expected increase on human and vehicular movement on property prices. He however, added that it can work either way.

    He argued that almost in all cases, infrastructure provision is an addded advanatge for property development and always helps in its marketing.

    He also cited the increase in prices of properties on the Lekki/Ajah axis due to the redevelopment of the road. Furthermore, Etuk said that for all advanatges of the bridge some people living around Alexandria in Ikoyi and its environs may be offended with the sudden build up of traffic in previously reserved aand upscale area.

  • Still on special status for Lagos

    Still on special status for Lagos

    The on-going constitutional review process across the country has once again offered the Lagos State Government the platform to reiterate its quest for a special status for the state. At a recent South-west public hearing on the review of the 1999 Constitution at the Lagos Airport Hotel, Ikeja, Senate President, David Mark, supported Governor Babatunde Fashola’s call for a special status for Lagos metropolis being a former capital city.

    Amongst the 36 items listed for deliberation, demand that Lagos be accorded a special status got a senatorial endorsement at the public session, which almost all the South-west federal and state lawmakers attended. The endorsement was contained in Mark’s opening remark, who contended that former capitals “are normally accorded special status the world over”. Mark’s public acknowledgement justified a course that the Lagos Governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola and several prominent Lagosians had aggressively pursued even before the first review of the constitution.

    Lagos is presently experiencing such phenomenal population explosion that it is being projected to be the 3rd largest megacity in the world by 2015. Many are of the view that despite the 10 million figure declared by the National Population Commission in the last census exercise, the city’s best possible population is 40 million. Whereas the annual population growth in the developing world is 3% and Nigeria’s is 2.7% that of Lagos stands at a stunning 8% and is likely to accelerate. The state’s landmass is rather small by Nigerian standard (Kano State which officially has about the same population is about four times in landmass). As if to aggravate the situation, a considerable part of the metropolis is covered by water, a situation that complicates its infrastructural needs.

    The Lagos transformation project requires an enormous financial requirement, far beyond the capacity of the state government. Governor Fashola recently revealed that a sum of N6.14 trillion naira is needed to build and upgrade infrastructural facilities in the state in the next 15 years! This, then, is the significance of the call for the state to be accorded a special status by the federal government.

    Lagos, with over 128,000 workers (representing various ethnic groups) in its employment, apart from the Federal Government, remains the greatest employer of labour in the country. Ironically, many of the states in the country with lesser population and infrastructural needs receive same monthly federal allocation as Lagos. The special position of Lagos as the commercial nerve centre of Nigeria, and indeed West Africa, has its peculiar infrastructural challenges. Its sheer human density driven by an increasing population due to endless survival and economic driven immigration, its ports and waterways, its border with Benin Republic, its high concentration of banks, industries, companies, and other commercial enterprises makes it a very complex state to govern. Being the pane through which the whole world views the country, granting a special status to Lagos remains the best possible way to drive Nigeria’s development as Lagos is the country’s most industrialized city with needs that align with its growth.

    No nation grows by treating the needs of its golden geese with discomfiture since the future growth of the country’s economy is tied to the development of Lagos which hosts over 85 per cent of Nigeria’s industrial hub, over 65 per cent of its financial nucleus and over 75 per cent of its active workforce. With each day, the population and needs of Lagos continue to increase to reflect this important role. As the economic capital of Nigeria, Lagos has been the first port of call for eager millions of youths from all parts of the country who long for means of survival from the uncertainties of a struggling economy like ours.

    Presently, it is obvious that the monthly allocation it receives from the Federation Account as well as its internally generated revenue is not enough to meet the developmental needs of the state. Regrettably, the federal government’s inability to discharge its infrastructural responsibilities to Lagos, over the years, has further worsened the situation. The National Assembly Complex at Tafawa Balewa Square, the National Stadium, Surulere, the Federal Secretariat, Ikoyi and the Apapa- Oshodi Expressway, to mention just a few, laid credence to this.

    When the FCT was moved from Lagos to Abuja, there was a subsisting agreement that the city would not be abandoned. Indeed, the Late General Murtala Mohammed acknowledged the onerous nature of the responsibility of leaving Lagos alone to deal with the burden of infrastructure the FG were leaving behind then, bearing in mind that if Lagos hadn’t been the federal capital, it probably would not have been having these problems. In fact, five cities; Enugu, Port-Harcourt, Ibadan, Kaduna and Lagos were later designated as ‘Centres of Excellence’ by the Murtala Administration as part of a plan to make them cities of pride by the federal government.

    However, successive federal governments have refused to take a cue from countries which relocated their national capitals without abandoning infrastructural development of the former capitals. It is now time for Nigeria to imitate Germany, Brazil, Malaysia, Australia and Tanzania, which, after relocating their capitals, did not hold back developmental programmes targeted at the former capitals. From 1954 to 1994, the capital of Germany was Bonn. It was moved to Berlin, following the endorsement of the ‘agreement of movement’ which spelt out the responsibilities of German government for the maintenance of the old capital and which it has been meeting conscientiously. Also, Brazil moved its capital from Rio-de janeiro to Brasilia. Till date, all federal roads, buildings and other infrastructure in both cities are maintained simultaneously by the central government. Malaysia has also maintained two capitals. Its old capital, Kaura-Lampur, has been retained as the legislative capital, where the National Assembly operates. Its new capital, Putrajaya, which is the most computerized city in the world, is the administrative capital. In Australia, the old capital, Sidney, still enjoys special recognition. Although Campera is the new capital, most activities of government, international conferences, party conventions and meetings still hold in the former capital city. The former capital of Tanzania is Dar-es-Salam. When Dodoma became the new capital, the old capital did not suffer neglect. The federal government should take cue from these examples by according Lagos a deserving special status.

    Lagos State government, in the last twelve years, has invested a huge amount of money on infrastructural development, especially construction of drainages, durable roads, beautification and restoration of parks to forestall the negative impact of flooding, erosion and other environmental hazards. However, these efforts are not enough for obvious reasons. Today, Lagos does about 9,000 metric tons of refuse daily, more than what the whole of Ghana is generating. The branch networks that some banks have in Lagos outstrip what they have in the whole country. A recent study reveals that over twenty five thousand people from across the world move into Lagos for various reasons on a daily basis. The number of heavy duty trucks and other vehicles that ply Lagos roads on a daily basis is quite alarming. Same goes for the number of pupils in its public schools as well as those that daily visit its hospitals. Consequently, the state spends more on infrastructural upgrading and provision of other basic life necessities than any state in the country.

    The need to accord a special status for Lagos is a non-political project. There is hardly any Nigerian that doesn’t have a stake in Lagos. An investment in Lagos is, therefore, a necessary blueprint for the development of the country since Lagos remains the window through which the world sees Nigeria. Any investment in Lagos is an investment in the future of Corporate Nigeria. It is an investment that protects and supports Nigeria’s capacity to earn more resources, support more businesses, expand businesses and address several other developmental challenges bedeviling the country. It is a right course. It is the right thing to do!

     

    Ogunbiyi is of the Ministry of Information and Strategy, Alausa, Ikeja