Tag: Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola

  • Ooni of Ife appoints filmmaker Dotun Taylor as cultural ambassador

    Ooni of Ife appoints filmmaker Dotun Taylor as cultural ambassador

    The Ooni of Ife, His Imperial Majesty, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, has proclaimed popular voice over artiste cum filmmaker, Dotun Taylor, as a Yoruba Cultural Ambassador.

    Taylor, who is also the brain behind many contemporary music videos, would be joined in the new assignment by Morounranti Ashabi Alebiosu, a cultural enthusiast and former Senior Special Assistant to former Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola of Lagos State on Tourism and Inter-Governmental Relations.

    At a brief event to commemorate the unveiling of the ambassadors last Tuesday at the Enuwa Palace of the Ooni in Ile-Ife, Osun State, the Ooni said the duo has proven to be selfless individuals who have protected the Yoruba culture, tradition and heritage. He enjoined the honourees to handle the role with utmost care and protect the integrity that comes along with the office.

    The Ooni also used the occasion to unveil the Yoruba Cultural Festival project, a Roots and Heritage Renaissance Culture Initiative (RHRCI) concept in partnership with P.S-100 Limited, a social initiative agenda to re-awaken the minds of Yoruba people at home and in the Diaspora with Brazil, Haiti, Cuba etc participating.

    Primed to be an annual event to showcase the rich culture and tradition of the Yoruba, the festival holds at the sprawling Ife Grand Resort in the second quarter of the year.

  • Fashola warns reckless drivers

    LAGOS State Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola has warned motorists against reckless driving.

    He said avoidable deaths caused by reckless articulated vehicle drivers would no longer be tolerated.

    At a meeting with truck and articulated vehicle owners and operators, Fashola expressed displeasure at the increasing rate of accidents involving trucks, trailers and tankers, urging drivers to be more careful.

    He said the increasing rate of accidents was making the government’s duty of protecting citizens’ lives and property difficult, noting that people that should contribute to nation building were being wasted by some careless articulated vehicle drivers.

    The government, he said, set up some agencies to improve the standard of driving and to promote safety on the road. These include the Lagos State Drivers Institute, urging them to avail themselves of its services.

    Earlier, in his presentation, titled: Articulated vehicle related incidences and accidents on Lagos roads in the last six months, Commissioner for Transportation, Comrade Kayode Opeifa said the state, apart from being the commercial nerve of the country and the West African sub-region, also has one of the world’s busiest road traffic vehicular density, with 90 per cent of the nation’s articulated vehicle traffic.

    The meeting was attended by representatives of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industry (LCCI), Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas (NUPENG), Association of Maritime Truck Owners (AMATO), Union of Truck and Quarry Employers of Nigeria (UTQEN) and National Association of Road Transport Owners (NARTO), among others.

     

  • LFTZ: $9b Dangote refinery to create thousands of jobs

    LFTZ: $9b Dangote refinery to create thousands of jobs

    Hope has risen for many youths as the proposed $9 billion Dangote Refinery will generate thousands of jobs, not only in Lagos, but throughout the country. TOBA AGBOOLA reports.

     

    • 8,000 engineers to be train

     

    THE Lagos State Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN), at the Lekki Free Trade Zone (LFTZ), Lagos introduced the Dangote Group of Companies President and the arrowhead of the proposed $9 billion Dangote Refinery and Petrochemical Company in the zone, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, to the host communities. This signaled the take-off of the multi-billion naira investment there.

    Hope has risen for many youths as the new investment is expected to generate thousands of jobs, not only in Lagos, but throughout the country.

    Dangote Group of Companies is set to train over 8,000 engineers. The project, when completed, would provide direct and indirect jobs for over 85,000 Nigerians.

    The plan is to make the country self-reliant in petrochemical and petroleum products, as well as make it an industrial giant through the Lekki Free Trade Zone (LFTZ). Another is to stop the importation of petroleum products by 2016.

    At the meeting, Fashala declared: “Lekki Free Trade Zone is beginning to take shape. The master plan is being realised; investors are trouping in. Tank farms and major refineries are springing up to service the demands of the country and make room for export. The refineries create a major selling point and release of the opportunities that lie ahead in this zone; create opportunities for the local people and the potential for Lagos and the Nigerian economy.”

    According to Dangote, Nigeria spends about $30 billion annually on importation of petroleum products.

    He said the project planned by his group would make Nigeria a net exporter of petroleum products, including diesel and aviation fuel, as well as poly-propylene and fertiliser. He said the project on completion would create massive employment opportunities.

    “Now, Nigeria is going to be taken out of the list of countries that import petroleum products. We will produce 20 million metric tonnes which is equivalent to what Nigeria consumes currently.

    “Without good government policies, there is no way the private sector can invest in Nigeria, because we are not Father Christmas. The policies have to be right,” he said.

    Speaking on the Project, the General Secretary, National Union of Textile, Garment and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria (NUTGTWN), Issa Aremu, said with a projected daily production output of 400,000 barrels, the same capacity of the four Nigerian government-owned refineries in Port Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna, operating at less than 30 per cent of installed capacities, the bold initiative by the Dangote Group is a giant stride at re-industrialising Nigeria in particular and Africa in general.

    His words: “African organised Labour and working people are excited about the bold corporate decision of the Dangote Group, the African conglomerate, and for blazing the trail in re-industrialising Africa through an unprecedented investment of $9 billion in oil refinery and petrochemical complex in Nigeria.

    “Millions of private sector workers organised in national and global unions in Africa identify with the investment, the singular patriotism and pan-Africanism of the President and Chief Executive Officer, Dangote Group of Industries, Alhaji Aliko Dangote.

    “Labour is excited that Dangote Group is changing the narrative of the continent from that of resource curse to resource beneficiation, value addition and mass employment through industrialisation and internal articulation of African economy. Industrialisation is for Nigeria if it must be part of the leading economies of the world, get millions of youth to work out of violence and crime and above all, out of poverty.

    “We commend Dangote for working the talk that a shift is needed; that natural resources of Africa should be for the welfare of all Africans, not the profits of a few, mostly foreign capitalists. This refinery will definitely decrease Nigeria’s scandalous unacceptable dependence on oil imports.

    The National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers, (NUPENG) in a statement declared delight over the proposed refinery/petro-chemical and fertiliser complex, saying the venture is bound to partly address the unemployment problem and also end the current massive importation of petroleum products into country. The workers have equally called on other private investors including the multinational oil companies to do the same.

    The statement said: “We all know how up to 18 firms that were granted licences to establish refineries under the Obasanjo administration, till now, have failed, refused or neglected to make use of the licence by establishing refineries in the country.

    “Dangote refinery may just be able to make the difference. When it starts operating in 2016, it is expected to become a major foreign exchange earner in the export of refined petroleum products in the country with additional thousands of jobs. For the over 170 million Nigerian people, who have continued to suffer for what they have in abundance, there is a beam of hope. Nigerians must be seen to be better off from the rich natural resources of the nation. We cannot continue to watch a few players, with foreign capitalist interest at the expense of national interests, continue business as usual. To be sure, it is not the violent agitations in the Niger Delta that is being advocated here, but the need for genuine economic participation in the oil and gas sector. Dangote Refinery has set the pace.

    “We need to develop efficient local capacity in such a leading sector of our national economy. To this end, the government must make the right policies to attract the right investors. The Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) should also be passed into law to provide the enabling regulatory and legal framework towards ensuring competitiveness, transparency and the best international practices in the petroleum industry.

    “It is our hope that the Federal government will provide the enabling environment that will ensure the competitiveness of such private refineries in the country. Effective regulation of the oil and gas sector and provision of improved road infrastructure for efficient haulage and distribution across the country will enhance performance and delivery. And of course, the government must ensure that there is improved power supply in the country to enable the efficient operations of these refineries. We cannot afford to create more museum relics from plants working at 30 per cent capacity”.

    A top official of LFTZ who will not want his name in print, said the zone has been split into an oil and gas logistic park, light and heavy industrial and manufacturing section, media centre and urban residential section.

    The official added that for the zone to be developed quickly, as expected by the initiator, calls are being made for the development of a meaningful partnership, to build a modern international airport and sea –port, that will serve the zone, and become the aviation and maritime hub of the sub-region.

    It was also gathered that real estate companies would be given a role to play in the development of the zone. The LFTZ will showcase opportunities for private companies in the oil and gas manufacturing, food processing, hospitality and leisure sectors, banking and financial service sector would be expected to develop a 21st century financial centre at the zone.

  • We have restored hope  –Fashola

    We have restored hope –Fashola

    Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) of Lagos State spoke with Sam Omatseye, Mobolaji Sanusi and Femi Macaulay on a wide range of issues:

    IF you go round Lagos State in the past couple of months, we have been seeing commissioning, road work and all that, the sense one gets is that you are in a hurray – are you under some kind of legacy pressure?

    There is no legacy pressure on me. I see this as an opportunity for simply what it is: to serve. As I have told people, there is a job here and there is an office here. I have taken the job and in that sense the job is about looking after people; people who put so much trust and hope in your abilities. It is a job that will never finish. Just as you complete one policy or solve one problem, many more will open up. That is why the motto of our government, which I developed, is that the only reward we would get for any hardwork we do is more work. I see also missed opportunities over time and therefore, there is so much to catch up on. Because it is a human problem; people are still procreating and those who are here already are saying it’s tough, so we can’t lie at ease. At this time, it is not just about me anymore, I am trying to ensure that whoever takes over from me has even a better start than I did and can take off from where I left. There are so many things that engage my time: ten-year projects that we are tidying up, getting ready. If possible, we start them and hand them over; if it is not possible, the blue print is there, the financing is in place or almost concluded. That is as best as I can explain it, there would be no lying at ease until the last day.

    But there would be some projects or some ideas that you think obsess you more than others as you turn the corner to the last two years…

    You could never define the achievements of your tenure by projects. I think that if anything has driven me more, it is the idea that change is possible. That hope can be restored and once there is hope, it is a most potent weapon for development. I think that at this time, I am happy and I can say that we have restored hope. The people of Lagos believe again. I was telling my colleagues in the executive council meeting that I was watching a programme where there was some TV coverage of the road project from Mile 12 to Ikorodu and they spoke to one respondent and he said: “The road is good, but you know what? We don’t want roads again, we want rail.” And I said to myself, now that is it! People believe that it can happen, they could not ask for rail 14 years ago when there was no bitumen. So, that for me was a defining moment because once they can aspire to it, the work is half done. You can sit down with them and say this is what will take us there. These are the sacrifices.

    I have been fascinated by this Progressive Governors’ Forum, why would you call yourself a progressive governor and what is your idea of progressivism?

    The life of human beings must progress and the progress is measured by the amount of social goods and the happiness that social good brings. In that sense, if you look at the trade mark of all of us today who are members of the Progressive Governors’ Forum, from where we started, whatever developments existed, we have added to it. That on its own qualifies us. What we have added is what is behind us. We are redefining our journeys as we get to what was our initial goal. It is a never-ending cycle of development. For me, that is the underlining theme and the mantra of Eko o nibaje -Lagos you must continue to prosper – and the prosperity of Lagos has rubbed off not only on our party but on our nation. Some of the things we have done have become benchmarks and starting points for other states. They have taken what we have done and improved upon it in some cases or applied it as it suited their needs. But it is not just the Nigerian state, it’s even African nations who are coming here to understudy, to share with us their own experiences as well and say we see something here.

    Does that mean that given the fact that you have done a lot in terms of development that has been hailed by those who ordinarily would not be called progressives, that the whole idea of progressives has become difficult by definition?

    Unfortunately, perhaps this throws up the question of an ideology. There are very few things that are new in our world so when you say hailed, is probably because we built it first because all of us are responding to the same stimulus – the stimulus of service by our people. How quickly you find the answer is a matter of commitment and passion. There was a traffic management problem in this state before and my predecessor said “you know what, let’s start LASTMA.” Starting LASTMA was only the beginning, the project continues till today because the men have to be retrained to deal with new challenges, their conditions of service have to be reviewed to inspire, their engagements with the citizens have to be redefined to make them citizen-friendly and even when I leave, the traffic management problem will not stop. But beyond LASTMA, we have added a traffic radio; we are looking at multimodal transports, so those ideas are not new. There has been a traffic radio across the world before, it probably didn’t appeal to someone, it appealed to us and we picked it and there is more to come.

    Whether consciously or unconsciously, in over six years of governance of Lagos State, you have become the governor of example and legacies have been ingrained. I am much more concerned with the issue of housing in Lagos State. I want to know the situational checks being put in place to make sure that long after you must have left power, mortgage system will not distort the entire housing policy that you have fought with so much vehemence and commitment?

    I don’t anticipate that it will be a programme without difficulties because mortgages for me mean a new way of life, so it is not the houses that are the problem; it is the attitudinal change that must come with mortgages. Why I think that mortgages will be the solution is, first, they have worked in other societies to increase human productivity, to inspire people to work, to build their economies and also to give citizens the dignity of shelter and the dignity to resist temptation. There is no society where the stimulus and the scourge of corruption do not exist but if citizens are so vulnerable, their threshold to resist is low. I am convinced without a doubt that with mortgages, you can strike a decisive blow at corruption because human needs start from food, shelter and clothing. Even if people don’t all get houses, the idea that it can be my turn is a great impetus and I am going to pursue it. That said, I don’t know any other society where the middle class and the poor buy houses as if they are going to buy yam. They do so by being given an opportunity to work and during their productive lifecycle, they pay off. Now what does that mean? Your job becomes tied to your roof, if you lose your job, you will lose your roof and therefore you cannot joke with that job. So you cannot then come to Lagos citizens in 5/10 years’ time and say you didn’t get services in four days because he knows that the pay cheque first goes to pay for mortgage. Let me give you an example: I have had cause to travel abroad to meet some friends and relations; if you are lucky, they will come and receive you at the airport and drop you at home and go straight to work. Here, when we go to receive them, we shut down for the whole day, that’s not productivity. Hundreds of thousands of people are working there supplying sands, woods, nails, feeding the workers, companies who do contracts are keeping their employees at work and a whole economy is moving. On one construction site alone where we are building, just on one hectare, we had 1008 people working there. The real impact will come post-construction. Those homes have to be furnished; curtains, carpets, household appliances. For me it is a winner for the economy. Would there be challenges? There are already challenges. We have decided because we see cynicism of our people. The easiest thing to do was to sell those houses and say I have done housing but I don’t choose the easy way. It is easy to build houses but it is more difficult to provide homes. Many governors have done this in the past, who buy the houses? It is not the people they were intended for. The people they were intended for end up being tenants because they can’t come up with the money. This time around we are building with tax payers’ money; we are not borrowing to build, so you must show me that you pay tax before you are eligible. You must show me that you are a resident before you are eligible, so go and register under the LASRA. I am building for residents and tax payers. It is only fair! We are saying this time, as much as possible, government doesn’t want to be involved in the process, so we are going online. We have set up the website (we haven’t released the URL until we are ready to launch) so that when you click the ‘enter’, one of the things you see is a mortgage calculator.

    It won’t crash?

    Even if it does, it is part of the challenges that we would have to deal with. A mortgage calculator that enables you to see where the houses are, calculate the choice of the house that you want, match it to your salary and you will know immediately whether you are eligible or not. We have set thresholds and it gives you an automatic number on your form when you now download the form. The most likely interaction you will be having with us is when you come to submit your forms and you meet our mortgage counsellors who will take you through how to take a mortgage because if you default we will repossess. We mean business! We have set up housing rules, arbitration rules for mortgages, so it is not going to go to court. Twenty one days we are out. We would give you a reasonable time for people who fall on bad times and sometimes it may be that if you take a 3-bedroom house and your income bracket drops, you don’t lose your entire house, we can move you to a 2-bedroom house or we can move you to one- bedroom house. It is only the one-bedroom house people, if they default, we can’t help because we don’t have a half bedroom house. But recovery has been critical to the provision of homes because government alone can’t build all the homes. Private sector must see reasons to build and if the system doesn’t recover, it’s a disincentive to investment. If you default, it means that you are denying other tax payers who are waiting because the recovery curve that we see – we are giving you a 10-year mortgage and we see now that with what we have put inside, in another six years, I would have been gone. The threshold is that the system would have recovered enough to stand on its own without any more government intervention. It’s taken me four years to do this and it is still not finished, that’s why we haven’t started allocation but we are very close; those are the reasons behind it. We can’t continue to complain about corruption if we don’t tackle the root causes. That’s why I have said on occasions that what we see as corruption is the manifestation of a deeper problem of needs and wants and desperation.

    Have you considered the serious issue of unemployment that is much more relevant to mortgage system. Comparatively, you know the high level of unemployment in Nigeria and save for the civil service, there is a high turnover in the employment market. People get employed today, by tomorrow they are out of job. If such a person gets a mortgage, what are the plans of your government knowing full well that by 2015 your successor, if he does not believe in the policy then that will be the end?

    We are not infinite in our knowledge but we consult a lot. There are almost 30 people who worked with me on this project. I think only about 10 of them are in government. We meet at least once in a month – we have been meeting like that for about four years. We are going also to small businesses; we are the promoters of small businesses, self-employed people. So, apart from people who have salaries, people will qualify by showing us an income stream and that again helps us to formalise the economy because we must see your profit and loss, no matter how small your business. So, the woman even in the Oyingbo market, once she gets support to put together her numbers, we would be able to determine that you are eligible for the house or, wait, you can’t afford it because you are going to default. Is there any society that has provided homes for all of its people? I don’t know of any! We want to open a door and a ladder to prosperity. In any event, people are living in rented homes, they have paid rents for almost 15 years in some cases, they lose their jobs, they lose their homes, and they have no equity. Our system is going to take you to a place where you have a home, you will have equity once you begin to pay. In the unlikely event that you lose your job and we have to sell your house, you will go with equity what you have put in, except for the cost of administration that we would deduct. You know what would have happened? That house would have appreciated in value, so if we pay you off, you don’t lose anything. So a house built 10 years ago, put on the market 10 years later will have a capital acquisition, that is how the system becomes self-sustaining. Whether my successor will like it or not, it is not the responsibility of the servant of the people to always dictate the menu for them, it is a social contract. It is the people who say on the basis of what it offers them that ‘oh this is what we want’ and housing will be a topical agenda in every society that I know coming into elections. As I have said, this is no longer about me. If it is, we would sell all the houses and go. It is about the next thing.

    Housing is a major challenge, evidently; could you identify other fundamental megacity challenges specific to Lagos and the possible solutions?

    Every problem here is a mega problem. I tell some of my colleagues that given the size of my population, if they have headaches, I have migraine. You see all you need to do really is what I do from time to time whether when I am flying in from Abuja or whether I am taking off and landing from a plane. The first thing I do is to look across Lagos and see how wide it is and it keeps my feet on the ground so there is no time to lie at ease. The problems can be solved, if they can’t all be solved, they can be managed. If flying does anything for me, it is a reality check for me. It is when I see how expansive, built and so dense that Lagos is. It just reminds me that this job will never finish.

    What are the fundamental challenges?

    The fundamental challenge is to make human beings happy, that’s all.

    In specific terms?

    You can’t isolate one for the other. Let’s go to unhappiness: for a family, unhappiness may simply be defined by the fact that a man lost a baby during childbirth. So if I put in a primary health care system that makes sure that children arrive safely, then that means that there is happiness in that home. For another family, happiness may be defined by the fact that their children can’t pay school fees in private schools, so if I put up a public school and say come for free, I have provided happiness in that home. For some, some of those problems are solved, it is only how they can drive their Lexus without feeling bumps and I do the road. They will be happy with me and with our government and our party. For some, it may be that their children have sat down at home after graduating from school so if we put in our agric programme and turn them into farmers or admit them into LASTMA or BRT operators or use our microfinance scheme to provide taxis for them and they are making like 200, 000 naira, that’s happiness, as far as they are concerned. If our street-lighting policy now enables night clubs and restaurants to open and young people can go to work at night, put some money in their pockets and go home. Have you ever been robbed before? I have been.

    Outside office?

    Yes, outside office! The notion now that there is a police force that is supported by this government that is able to patrol, that some streets are now lit up, even though not all are lit up, is a measure of happiness. It is an unending definition. What works for one, doesn’t work for the other. For some people, happiness is defined by the fact that they can now process their building permit quicker. In January to June this year, we issued 706 building permits. In the run up to Governor Tinubu’s election in 2003, one of my colleagues said ‘look, I don’t like your boss but I am going to vote for him. By building the courts, he has given me a platform to earn a living. The cases are moving faster so I can build my clients.’ That is happiness for him.

    Going back to housing, we had a discussion probably in your first year in office. You talked about an integrated approach to housing and it was quite ambitious. It looked like the real thing you wanted to do at that time, the way you spoke in that conversation about how you have a house, you have a market, you have jobs, it is just like building a community around the house. Looking back, it looked like a long time ago, did you expect that it would take you this long for you to come round to this or were there some distractions?

    There were setbacks in the plan as we went on. At the time I was talking to you, we were borrowing money at 10 percent. The exchange rate was 112 or 118, all of those dynamics have changed but what has not changed is my determination that I will not give up. It was something we planned with the banks. By the time we were going to implement the plan, they couldn’t do it again so I went back to the drawing board: “Gentlemen, how are we going to do this?” They said it wasn’t doable and I said, well that is in your own dictionary. If the banks can’t do it, we will. So, what did we start doing? We started redesigning, we settled for a 12-bedroom block – one 2- and 3-bedroom on each floor, we standardised. We settled for roof types, door type and colour. The biggest problem we are having is taking time to finish the houses and again we already have our team working. We are also developing a simultaneous programme where over time government will stop building and the private sector will now start building and government will buy and give it to the citizens on a mortgage.

    That’s an important point you have made about your approach to the challenge of developing a mortgage housing project, these impediments you faced; does that give you an insight into why in this democracy and this unpredictable economy, governors and even federal ministers have not been able to carry on with a lot of projects around the country?

    Well, I honestly don’t know. I can’t speak for them but I do know that the business of government after developmental stage requires a lot of micro managements. We are not yet at the point where you can free up things and expect them to run. We may have to push but ultimately that will be the ideal and we are reaching that threshold and that is why I keep referring to Sanusi’s questions that what we are trying to do to build now is an action government rather than action governor – getting people involved, giving them responsibilities. Like our next 2004 days, I’m not going out on that day, we are breaking up the team: “You run this government with me, go and explain to people what we are doing, am not talking this time around.” And they’ve done it before and they’ve done it well. But I don’t think that yet we have addressed our developmental challenges with the seriousness and the introspection and the determination that is still requisite. We are distracted by peripheral things. I really don’t work in that government but I see that some unimportant things fly to very high altitudes. Those are things that potentially have distracting consequences and time is lost in the process.

     

    At a point in your administration, the Mile 12 market was shut down by the ministry of the environment and there was no inflow of tomatoes and the likes. Prices of essential household stuffs that usually come from the north went up. I have learnt so much about your Agric ministry’s exploits, what exactly have you done in terms of agriculture and in terms of making Lagos State sustainable and self-sufficient in food production?

    I think the point to understand first is that stoppage of food vendors in bringing vegetables to Lagos had nothing to do with Mile 12 market. They were complaining about multiple tolls from state boundaries from the north to the south, that was the cause of the problem. But for us, it was a wake-up call that we were dependent and that is where we started. Can we grow vegetables? How much land do we have? We can’t compete with that part of the country in terms of food production and they can’t compete with us in other areas as well. Our land for example has more commercial value as real estate than as farming land. In terms of land size, we are just 3775 square kilometres, which is one quarter of Ogun State. We are the smallest state in the federation in terms of land size but that does not mean that we don’t have some areas of comparable advantage because of our soil. Vegetables, poultry, fishing, cassava, rice are areas, but because we don’t have the land, so it is to start to do something rather than just tingling your tongue. When you talk about failures and impossibility, I don’t accept them, let’s just start doing something. From zero, today by January in a few days’ time when we switch on our latest hatchery, we would be producing 150, 000 eggs per day, multiply that by 365 days. We are now producing 10, 000 live chickens every fortnight from zero, virtually. We were cultivating 20 hectares of land before; we are now cultivating over a 1000 hectares of rice. We have improved yield from one ton per hectare to two tons per hectare. Can we feed ourselves in the entirety? No! As we are doing this, we are working with other states also to eliminate those tolls which have not led to improved relationships. Somebody sent me a text recently that the successes we are making in Agric, is it not going to threaten Mile 12? So I had to be reassuring him because he is a stakeholder in Mile 12. What we are producing here is not going to solve all our needs but it gives us a situation where there is an emergency during the period of these things, we can look after ourselves; citizens are not without some help. We can’t just be helpless; I refuse to surrender to any situation, I must find a way. Perhaps, in that sense, to explain to you, not just only are we cultivating our lands, we bought farmlands outside Lagos. I have a farm now in Osun that I bought; the governor is still going to give me land. Ogun has given me land, I am planting rice there, Oyo is still processing its own. I think we have gotten Ekiti (I am not sure). What is that going to do? We would be planting there, using local people there. We are creating a transportation business, a packaging business because the food is going to come back here. I have asked my brothers too in Katsina and all of them; I am still waiting for their response. We have a farm land in Abuja we have acquired, we are going to develop, because the land I am told would be very good for bananas and snail-raising and all of that. If they can build liaison houses here, I can have farms in their state.

    You have taken some tough decisions in governance: you cleared Oshodi and most parts of Lagos. You were able to handle properly the problems of the NURTW, Okada and transportation, those to me were some of the most turbulent periods because it directly affected the downtrodden, what is the toughest decision you have ever taken as a governor? Initially at the start of your government, people would say you are a technocrat who was more interested in governance but now you have time for political engagements, what do we expect from you? Reframing the first question: how do you reconcile a tough decision with progress in a democracy?

    I think the bench mark must be what is the purpose of the decision? As I have said, our decision making here has been subjected to only one test – will it bring greater good to the greatest possible number? Will it bring happiness? Not everybody will be pleased with us, at least not in the short run. As you said, that I cleared Oshodi, I didn’t clear Oshodi. Oshodi was the euphemism for a logjam, it was for crime, filth, it was also the sore of our nation. That was what anybody who came to Nigeria saw first. It was the first cut, it was the deepest and it wasn’t the best. If my primary responsibility is to protect lives and property and to give happiness; people who were travelling at 11 used to leave home by 6pm, is that happiness? That was only one side. Many lives have been lost in Oshodi to robbery, many young women because daughters had been raped and the lower end and the highest end of the society – everybody was affected by Oshodi. The people in GRA in Ikeja were telling me that they were going to leave. The stench, the vermin rats, rodents were moving into their homes. Go and look at the property values in GRA before we intervened in Oshodi and look at the properties values today. They were going to sell their properties and move to Lekki and add to the congestion. We were looking for how to decongest the place, we came up with some designs going to cost about 16 billion, but the design was to put the market out and we said, this can’t be the solution, so we cancelled it. One day I said, you know what? This is management, I know Oshodi very well. My grandmother owned property there, I used to work there. I said we can clear this place and then we started studying the place. We sent teams out to give us the movement pattern: what was causing the problem, to study the refuse deposit; we looked at the crime dates at the police station there. It took six months, it was a multidisciplinary engagement. I think from about 16 billion when we looked at the maintenance, vehicles, cleaning, hiring, tractors, it came to less than a billion and we provided the answer. Was there pain? Yes! We found out the traders used to come in on Sunday night or Monday morning and they slept there for a whole week and they would leave. Some came from as far as Cotonou. What is the purpose of all of these? We studied the problem; we understood it and we knew that our work was not going to end just by clearing it. Till today, there is a mobile patrol team of vehicles there, every one kilometre. So from Mosalashi to the airport junction is about 10 kilometres. I made sure I pass there from time to time to see who is on his beat. We discipline a lot of people who have left their beats. Over the years we have to replace those vehicles. Now we have CCTV cameras there, we are watching movements. Those people who are displaced, their market is now finished, I am going to hand over the markets. You may argue it took so long – well chicken and egg! But I think that if there was a pole today, a road that was difficult to pass for almost 30 years started to flow. The impact is that we released pressure on Ikorodu Road. Ikorodu Road would have collapsed by now. When Lagos-Ibadan Expressway failed, they started coming in there. That was what accelerated the deterioration. Now the place is lit up, you can walk there at night, the road is not abusing us again but it is not finished. I still want to light up from Oshodi right to Oworonshoki to link up to third mainland. The federal government says it is their road, that they have awarded it; I hope they do it. For me, it doesn’t matter who does it, give it to the people, that’s all.

  • ‘The last soldier standing’

    ‘The last soldier standing’

    Chief Olumuyiwa Sosanya, the founding president of the Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN), celebrated his 70th birthday at The Grandeur Event Centre, Oregun, Lagos. TAJUDEEN ADEBANJO writes.

    EVER seen a 74-year-old man taking to the stage to sing.

    Do you mean 74? Yes, 74. Otunba Jide Sonubi, despite unsteady gait, caused a stir at an event when he ordered the master of ceremony (MC) to give him the microphone.

    Everybody inside the hall wondered what the septuagenarian was up to. He took the microphone and gave a good account of himself.

    It was at the 70th birthday of the founding President of the Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN), Chief Olumuyiwa Sosanya.

    The Grandeur Event Centre, Oregun, Lagos, venue of the celebration, was jam-packed with eminent personalities and family members of the celebrator.

    Otunba Sonubi delighted guests inside the tastefully decorated hall with oldies and a mixture of modern day R’n’B.

    Though he looked his age, his performance belied his age.

    His solo presentation was all the ceremony needed to bubble. Earlier, before he asked for the microphone, guests engaged in banters and waiters went from one table to table, serving, while the emcee recognised some personalities on their arrival.

    Some of the guests sang along with Otunba Sonubi. Others just stared at him throughout the over 10 minutes performance.

    At a point, he switched and started singing the praise of the celebrator to the amusement of all.

    After his performance, Otunba Sonubi spoke glowingly of the celebrator whom he described as “My Aburo” (younger brother).

    He told the gathering how Chief Sosanya paid his hospital bill at the Lagoon Hospital when he had an accident.

    “My legs were almost paralysed, but God used Mike Adenuga and Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola to restore these legs. So, I walk Fashola right, Adenuga left,” the hall burst into laughter.

    Not done, Otunba Sonubi praised former Ogun State Governor Aremo Olusegun Osoba for paying his physiotherapy bill.

    “May you all not be put to shame,” an elated Otunba Sonubi prayed.

    He did not forget the role of All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain Otunba Busura Alebiosu whom he described as the “father of rascality.”

    “Baba Alebiosu taught us rascality when we were young. He usually led us to Fela Anikulapo-Kuti’s shrine to dance and enjoy our lives. That’s why I always say that the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) does not have what it takes to take over Lagos. If they want to be rascal, that is the father of rascality there,” he said.

    It took the intervention of Aremo Osoba before Otunba Sonubi could drop the microphone for the event to continue.

    The principal guests were later called to cut the cake with the ‘birthday boy.’ It was supervised by Aremo Osoba.

    The celebrator’s immediate family members and grand children were the first to pose for a photograph with the cake before other groups including the Remo Club 1937, Fountain of Faith members, All Saints Church, Yaba, friends of the late Funsho Williams, Lagos Country Club and others took turns in the cutting of the cake.

    Osoba thanked God for the life of the celebrator.

    According to him, Chief Sosanya has celebrated his first 70 years on earth, the second 70 years starts the following day.

    Otunba Sonubi prayed for the celebrator to become older than his late mother who died at 120.

    Proposing the toast, the celebrator’s son, Tunde Sosanya, a chartered accountant, thanked his father on behalf of other children “for the wonderful things you have done in our lives.”

    “You sacrificed a lot for us to be what we are today; you gave us the best of education. Thank you, Daddy, for being there always. We pray God will continue to bless you,” he said.

    King of Juju beats Sunny Ade subsequently entertained guests.

    The next day, accountancy gurus and captains of industry gathered to witness the public presentation of Chief Sosanya’s book titled: Revolution of Accountancy Profession in Nigeria at the Sheraton Hotels and Towers, Ikeja, Lagos.

    Many of the guests were witnesses to his struggle to ensure that the ANAN became chartered.

    Former military President Gen Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, who was to chair the occasion, was represented by former Lagos and Ogun states’ governor Brig- Gen Raji Rasaki. In a note, read on his behalf, Babangida said: “I am happy to honour a good brother and friend; a man of vision, mission and accomplishment who nurtured ANAN to its maturity. He is a dogged fighter who ensured ANAN was chartered even in the face of difficulty and made it an institute to be reckoned with. I salute the courage of him being another last soldier standing after the war.”

    Kaduna State Governor Alhaji Mukhtar Ramalan Yero, represented by his Commissioner for Finance, Sunday Katung, described the author as a true fighter and an epitome of doggedness and selflessness. “He is, indeed, incredibly credible,” he said.

    ANAN founding Vice-Chairman Alhaji Mogaji Mohazu said he had never met anyone like Sosanya; otherwise he would have abandoned the struggle when it all started.

    “Then, it was a big battle between ICAN and ANAN but he fought a very good fight,” he said.

    He thanked him for impacting on the country through his book years after serving.

    A member of The Nation Editorial Board, Mr Olakunle Abimbola, reviewed the 20, chapter, 387-page book.

    Olakunle noted that the book met many great expectations, saying the book would benefit ANAN rather than the author.

    In attendance were: Vice-Chairman of the APC, Delta State Mr Ernest Okotie-Oboh; a former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) director Mr Moses Adeniran; Vicar of All Saints Anglican Church Ven Louis Akinwande; former Comptroller of Nigerian Immigrations, Mr Bamidele Okunowo and former Director of Engineering Services at the Radio Nigeria Demola Elegbude, among others.

     

  • Fashola @ 50: Truly golden

    Fashola @ 50: Truly golden

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) was 50 on June 28. In this piece, his Personal Assistant (Print media), Mac Durugbo pays tribute to him

    At age 50, nothing could be more indicative of the personality and popularity of Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola (SAN), both within Lagos, Nigeria and globally than his recent Golden Jubilee celebration. First, in spite of his clear instructions to and pleading with the general public to allow him celebrate quietly with his family and friends, Lagos House, Marina, the official residence of the Governor, was a beehive of activities on Friday, June 28, 2013, invaded, as it were, by well-wishers from far and wide who trooped in to pay homage and celebrate the man who, in the last six years, has dazzled the world with exceptional leadership uncommon in this part of the globe.

    Secondly, also despite his express instructions that those intending to place congratulatory advertorials on the occasion should instead channel such resources to charity, the national daily newspapers of Friday, June 28, 2013, were bursting with such adverts and tributes celebrating the man and what he has come to mean to people from all shades of the society. Just like his campaigns for re-election, the outpouring of goodwill was simply overwhelming. And from the wordings of the various adverts and tributes, there is no doubt that they come from hearts that have been touched, hearts that are yearning to show gratitude, hearts that will forever cherish the memory of this great epitome of true leadership.

    It is not the intention of this writer to dwell on those touching and heart-rending words since they are already in the public domain. However, permit me to comment briefly on the tribute to the Governor by his immediate predecessor, mentor and National Leader of his party, the Action Congress of Nigeria, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. I choose to comment on this tribute because, coming from a man of the stature and status of the former Governor, who against all odds and opposition, insisted and practically foisted the hitherto little known personality on Lagosians at the risk, as it were, of his own integrity, it sums up the scorecard of the Governor and puts a stamp of authority on all that have been and are still being said of His Excellency Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN).

    It is titled “Gold Medal for the Actualizer At 50”. Gold, as we all know, is a very valuable, highly sought after precious metal which has been used for various things long before the beginning of recorded history. Today, the metal itself and anything associated with it remains highly prized. By awarding the Governor a Gold Medal, therefore, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu at once indicates his rating of his successor. But that is not all. In the body of the tribute itself, the former Governor opened his heart to the world concerning what he really thinks of his successor. I will crave your indulgence to comment briefly on that tribute. In doing that, I beg to quote two paragraphs from it.

    In paragraph 3, the Great Asiwaju says, “With keen intelligence, straightforwardness and more than a touch of class, you have made governance even more responsive to the people and their needs. You have a commitment as strong as steel and that commitment has kept you on the path of excellence that has served Lagos and Nigeria in profound and great ways. You are the true son of Nigeria and a hero of the entire nation. Not just in physique but also in the richness and soundness of ideas, you stand tall above some of your peers; and lead the way. Lagos has been made the better for what you have done and by the kind of leadership you have provided”. Loaded and explicit, isn’t it? But listen to the clincher in Paragraph 6. He says, “Tunde, I feel a special pride regarding you. People say there is no success without a successor. You have proved that in spectacular style! You have earned your place in history and in doing so have helped secure mine. I thank you. It is true our government, in which you were a dutiful Chief of Staff, laid the foundation. But some people, seized by vanity and ambition, would have jeopardized the hard work and the foundation laid”.

    Though I am not out to review that tribute, a few points need to be made here. The first is the fact that in the history of democratic governance in Nigeria, the Lagos case is, perhaps, the only case where a former governor and his successor finished well on a happy note. In spite of the deliberate and desperate attempts since 2007, but especially in the periods leading to the primaries for the second term of the Governor, to put a wedge between these two friends, they have remained the shining example of what friendship should be. Not few Lagosians will recall the controversies leading to the primaries over whether or not the Governor would be endorsed or dumped by the Action Congress of Nigeria. When the rumors refused to go away, The Great Asiwaju rose to the occasion and told Lagosians at the headquarters of the Party, “If you have a child whom you put through school and among 36 students he scored between first and third positions, you must celebrate”. That served as his endorsement of the Governor.

    Secondly, Asiwaju’s tribute, taken as a whole, encapsulates the essence and spirit of Governor Fashola’s leadership. When he said, “With keen intelligence, straightforwardness and more than a touch of class, you have made governance even more responsive to the people and their needs”, the Great Asiwaju must have been thinking aloud about the open door policy of this administration and the participatory democracy that is the hallmark of its leadership style. Getting people to pay taxes willingly and serve even without being urged or assigned (or what the Governor would call “serving without an office”) is, indeed, giving governance “more than a touch of class”. An example will suffice here. The establishment of the Lagos State Security Trust Fund was more than a touch of class which can only be possible with keen intelligence and straightforwardness without which there would have been no donors and no funds.

  • Are Lagos councils living up to expectation?

    In the last 14 years, Lagos State, also known as the Centre of Excellence, has been the benchmark for development. The state is made up of 20 local government areas and 37 local council development authorities (LCDA). That brings the total number of local councils to 57. But how much value are the council areas adding to the development in the state?

    While some people think they are doing the little they can, many people are of the view that they are not adding any value. The common perception is that they are not doing enough to ensure that the citizens enjoy the dividend of democracy.

    Lagos lawyer Chief Fred Agbaje told The Nation that he had written three different letters to the Lagos State Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola over the bad roads in Agboyi/Ketu, LCDA where he resides. He said the governor, in a response to his last letter, promised to visit the area during the last Sanitation Day, but for some reasons, he did not turn up.

    Agbaje said the Adisa Balogun/Igboho Street is a major road that leads to Ogudu, the expressway to Oshodi and Third Mainland Bridge and it also connects the expressway that goes to Ketu and straight on to the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.

    Agbaje said: “This road is the shortest route for people going to Ikorodu from Lagos. If they wish to avoid the traffic gridlock at Ketu, all they need to do is just go through there and come out at Ajelogo axis. The same thing applies to those coming from Ikorodu to Lagos Island in the morning. But the condition of this road is just too bad. With only a little rain the other day, it was impassable. What would happen if there should be a heavy down pour for two or three days? I tell you, one would need a caterpillar to pass through it,” he said.

    “My appeal to the state governor is that he should do everything possible to fix the road before the rains come in full swing. This is important because it is obvious that the local council authorities in Agboyi/Ketu have failed to do anything and it is not willing to do anything to rehabilitate the road. The last time I wrote the governor, I threatened to take the pictures of the road and upload them to the internet for the whole world to see. I gathered that those who received the letter grumbled that ‘Chief Agbaje should not harass the governor alone, he should also harass the council chairman and the authorities there what they have been doing with the allocation they have been receiving’. I don’t know what they are doing there,” Agbaje said.

    When The Nation sought to speak with the Council’s Information Officer, he was said to be out of the office. The Assistant Information Officer, John Ikpade, claimed that he could not speak on any issue. He however, advised that a formal application be made to the council chairman.

    In the neighbouring Kosofe Local Government Area, a public affairs analyst said that the council authorities seem to be more interested in providing free bus rides for school children than rehabilitating the roads and streets in the area. He argued that the bus conveying the children often take very long hours to get to school, thereby making the children arrive late to school, primarily because of the poor roads.

    He said that, if the council authorities should rehabilitate the streets and roads, the parents would take care of how their children and wards would get to school on time. A resident of Alhaji Kazeem Street in Ojota, said the most important thing he would like to see is the rehabilitation of street roads in the local government. He complained that when lorries come into the street to unload goods, they often create difficult situations for the residents. A drive through Emmanuel High Street and Ayinde Street, which are off Ogudu Road, showed that they urgently need attention.

    But speaking to The Nation, the council’s Information Officer, Mr Kehinde Daniel, said the local government has performed well in the last two years. He said critics fail to appreciate the fact that the council areas have access to limited resources while there are a lot of things waiting to be attended to. He said, in the light of such a development, the council can only prioritise and take such identified project one at a time.

    He produced a list of the projects that have been completed by the council and urged people to come forward and be well briefed before concluding that the council was not working.

    “To critics, the council may not be doing anything. But that is not true. One thing I would like our people to know is that the amount available to us is quite small. In the face of this, there are so many things competing for attention. So, the inevitable thing to do is to make a wish list and prioritise the same, such that the most important ones are attended to first. It is, therefore, important for us to take one thing at a time. With time, all these things people are talking about will be touched. “They should look at what has been done before and exercise patience, knowing full well that the chairman and his team are here to meet the need of the people of this council area,” he said.

    According to a record of projects presented to our reporter, the council undertook a total of 24 projects under the general heading of Works and Housing Department in year 2012. These include reconstruction of drains, construction of culverts, renovation of public offices and rehabilitation of Kujore street, Ojota.

    It carried out the repair of collapsed drains, construction of boreholes, installation of transformers, rehabilitation of blocks of classrooms and construction of event centre in the Ogudu area office, Ogudu.

    The document also listed other areas of where the council has worked to include education, medical, environmental, agriculture and poverty alleviation.

    Alimoso, one of the largest councils in the state, still has a lot to do. Starting from major roads like the Egbeda-Akowonjo road, it is evident that the authorities need to do more to ease traffic congestion, which is caused by flood that submerge the road during rainy season.

    At the Idimu Egbeda LCDA, the chairman was commended for what he is doing. According to a resident, he has constructed several link roads and also sunk several boreholes to ease the problem of shortage of water faced by the people in the area.

    A taxi driver, Mr Owolabi Taiwo, who lives in the area said: “Hon. Adebayo Bello is trying as far as we are concerned, there is no doubt that he has put to judicious use the resources at his disposal and I think if other council chairmen emulate him, Lagos State will live up to the expectation of a mega city. The Governor, Babatunde Fashola is doing very well but he must be complemented by the council chairmen to make the whole thing work together.”

    The Chairman of Oriade LCDA, Hon Ibrahim Sanusi, said: “Local Governments in Lagos have been constructing roads, there is no local government that has not tarred one or two roads. Local governments now use good edifices as their secretariat. In the area of health, most local governments in the state now have their health centres and that is why there is reduction in mortality rate due to the health care services. We have renovated one or two primary schools to show our concern for quality education. We have also put in place poverty alleviation programmes for our youths.

    “In as much the local councils have not relented on their oars in the performance of their duties, the truth is that Local Governments still battle with the Federal Government over the allocation of funds in Lagos due to the creation of 37 LCDA. Therefore, it has brought about appropriation of funds between Local governments and the Local Council Development Area”.

    Ayodele Adewale, the Chairman of Amuwo Odofin Local Government, said: “The people of Amuwo Odofin alone are 1.8 million people, I use the resources to carry out duties in a federal estate. The Federal Government has not attended to Festac Town for over 25 years. The biggest challenge is funding because local government is the tier of government that is closest to the people. Expectedly, people want the council to solve all their social problems as quickly as possible but the fund is not there to shoulder such responsibilities”.

    He appealed to the Federal Government to come to the aid of Local Governments by increasing the funds and also taking responsibilities of infrastructural projects like roads and electricity.

  • Govt advised on cargo truck, tanker accidents

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola has called for minimum standard of safety for all vehicles that carry cargo in and out of the ports including tankers that carry fuel which suddenly fall and erupt into flames.

    Fashola said it only means the cargo vehicles and tankers are either not built to the appropriate specification or something is wrong somewhere.

    The governor spoke during this year’s edition of the stakeholders’ yearly interactive session with the Lagos State government, entitled “An Evening with Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola.”

    The session, initiated by On Wheels Magazine, was held at the Federal Palace Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    Fashola said: “There is a multilevel governance structure (Federal, state and local) and each having its functions. The Federal controls the port and all that happens in it. And so with the structure on ground, the state cannot do anything. I have communicated with the National level, I have written to the Federal Government through the Minister of Transport and the Port Authority through the Ministry of Finance, the supervising Ministry. It all depends on the priority we place on life and safety as against money. There must be minimum safety in vehicles carrying cargoes in and out of our port. Same can be said of tankers that convey fuel because they just suddenly burst into flames killing and maiming people and destroying properties in the process,” he said.

    He said: “There is no city-state in the world that moves the volume of cargo that we move from the ports and tank farms across the country on our roads daily.

    The tonnage, he said, is too severe for the survival of the roads.

    “So, when we keep Lagosians moving as you see them, it only means that this government is performing only something near a miracle. For us, it is important that transportation is efficient. Yes, we have congestion, problems on our roads, but remember that it is the consequence of over 21 million people choosing to leave in the smallest land space in the country. As I tell people, there is no congestion in the desert,” he said.

    He described transportation as a linchpin of modern civilisation.

    “In fact, transportation assets are shared assets and that means you can’t own the road. The rule therefore is that when you don’t need to be on the road, don’t be on the road because we cannot work our way out of congestion. We can only work around congestion. But as a people, we still carry on business as usual. Some people still get into their cars just to go and just with a friend when they can use the phone. Once we recognise that the road is a shared asset and should only be used when there is no alternative. This will allow all of us who want to use those assets to share them in a very beautiful way,” said.

  • Lagos pays N3.5b to 780 retirees

    Lagos pays N3.5b to 780 retirees

    THE Lagos State government yesterday paid N3.5billion to 780 re tired civil servants.

    Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) presented retirement bond certificates to the retirees at a ceremony in Alausa, Ikeja.

    Fashola said the retirement savings account of each recipient in this batch had been credited with their accrued rights. This is the Eighth batch in the series.

    Fashola said since inception, the new scheme has made better the lives of retirees, affording them the peace of mind that should come with a fruitful retirement, as well as a relief from the past experiences, which subjected them to untold hardship.

    Fashola, who was represented by the Head of Service, Adesegun Ogunlewe, said: “Our experience since we began this new scheme indicates that all our retirees are currently enjoying their lives in retirement without the sad and pitiable experiences of the past where those who retired under the old Pay-As-You-Go scheme were and are still subjected to a lot of hardship.

    “There is a clear difference between the Contributory Pension Scheme and the old Pay-As-You-Go system. In fulfilling our avowed commitment to making the scheme work perfectly well, we ensured that both the 7.5 per cent contributions by the state government and the 7.5 per cent deductions from employees’ salaries, are forwarded to the custodial account of the employees nominated Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs).”

    He added that transparency was no longer a setback as employees received monthly credit alerts. Hard copies of quarterly statements of account are provided.

    He said one of the biggest challenges over the years has been in dealing with contingencies, explaining that such scenerios could occur, if more people than anticipated, choose to voluntarily leave the service.

    Fashola, however, assured that the government has “taken measures to address this by financing a monthly pension sinking fund. This is in addition to the statutory five per cent contributions that go into the redemption fund account.

    “This additional sinking fund ensures that those who have to cut short their service unexpectedly, through illness or other reasons, will not be short-changed,” he said.

    He said, at the last count, 2,604 retirees had been paid N14.5 billion under the Contributory Pension Scheme, saying that these retirees were enjoying their retirement benefits through the respective PFAs and the insurance companies that have provided the annuity service.