Tag: KAI

  • Soldiers injure KAI officials in Lagos

    Soldiers injure KAI officials in Lagos

    • Commissioner condemns ‘unprovoked attack’

    Officials of the Lagos State Environmental Sanitation Corps (KAI) were yesterday attacked by soldiers for dismantling illegal structures in Yaba.

    The soldiers, according to Lagos Commissioner for Environment, Tokunbo Wahab, acted under the directives of two officers identified as Major Adebiyi and Captain Gowon.

    The LAGESC officials, as part of the #CleanerLagos campaign, had been embarking on clearance across the state.

    Illegal and makeshift structures erected under bridges, near major expressways and other public facilities were being pulled down, including 62 shops  around the perimeter fence of Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH) allegedly built by the army officers.

    In an earlier post, Wahab said the structures were demolished following the expiration of notices served, reiterating the government’s commitment to zero tolerance to environmental infractions in Lagos.

    But the exercise did not go down well with the Army operatives who descended on the LAGESC officials and left two of them with serious injuries.

    Footage shared on Wahab’s X account showed that one of the officials was bleeding from the head while the other was lifeless on the ground.

    Read Also: Police must ensure justice for murdered FUNAAB student – Kaiyee

    Condemning the incident, the Commissioner wrote: “Earlier today, officers of the Lagos State Environmental Sanitation Corps (KAI), lawfully engaged in their duties in Yaba, were subjected to an unprovoked attack by personnel of the Nigerian Army under the directive of Major Adebiyi and Captain Gowon.’’

    “We extend our sincere gratitude to the Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General T. Lagbaja, and the Director of Chaplain Services, Lt. Col. T. E. Ogbonyomi, for their swift and decisive intervention in support of civil authorities.

    “Their leadership has ensured that KAI officers continue to carry out their responsibilities without further disruption, reinforcing the principle that military personnel are subject to the authority of civil governance within their jurisdictions.

    “We strongly condemn this unwarranted and unacceptable assault on officers executing their lawful duties. Moving forward, such acts will not be tolerated.”

  • Lagos rejigs KAI for environmental law enforcement

    Lagos rejigs KAI for environmental law enforcement

    The Lagos State government is set to strengthen the activities of the Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI), an agency set up to safeguard the environment.
    The development is part of the measure to implement the Environmental Management and Protection Law recently passed by the Lagos State House of Assembly.
    The agency, the government said, will be transformed to Lagos State Environmental Sanitation Corps Agency (LASECORPS) to ensure enforcement of the law.
    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode said the agency would monitor and maintain surveillance on the highways, streets, public drainages, canals, markets and motor parks to ensure the state is rid of activities that may cause harm to the environment.
    The governor added that the mandate of the agency would include a task to ensure residents fulfil their civic duty by paying public utilities levy, which is payable by property occupants for the management of wastes in the state.
    Speaking after he signed the Environmental Management and Protection Bill into law, Ambode said: “Compliance is the key to ensure the state maintains safe environment. The burden of the cost of providing these services will remain low if everyone plays their part and pays their Public Utilities Levy as required by law.”
    LASECORPS’ activities, the governor said, will be based in communities to enforce the laws. Ambode said government would have zero-tolerance policy in enforcing the law, noting that offenders would be prosecuted in line with the provision of the state environmental law.
    “The primary driver of the new bill and the initiatives that we have undertaken is not just cosmetic but to save lives. Therefore, we will unapologetically prosecute offender to the full extent of the law. We will make CEOs accountable, from the very top to the bottom, and the law is very specific about the consequences of non-compliance,” Ambode said.
    LASECORPS’ performance evaluations and remuneration will be tied directly to the number of actionable fines they issue for non-compliance, The Nation learnt. Government said defaulters would face stiff penalties, which include fines ranging from N250,000 to N5 million and imprisonment.
    The government said it would make it mandatory for commercial vehicles operating within the state to carry a litterbin to stop indiscriminate dumping of waste materials on the road. The government said it also plans to remove illegal structures on sewage systems and gives permit for sinking of borehole.

  • Lawyer writes Ambode over non- payment of KAI commanders

    A lawyer, Olumide Lapite, has written Governor Akinwunmi Ambode over the alleged non-payment of 11 Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI) commanders.

    The lawyer said his clients were engaged in 2003 as founding KAI members and were deployed as Area Commanders by the Ministry of the Environment.

    He said they were re-appointed by Governor Babatunde Fashola (SAN) on May 9, 2008.

    According to Lapite, despite their appointments not terminated, his clients were not paid salaries from June 1, 2011 to December 2014.

    He said they wrote Fashola on April 30, 2015, following which he approved N500,000 as part of the salary arrears for each of the commanders.

    The commanders, who claim they have not been formally disengaged, are demanding full payment of their outstanding salary arrears and emoluments which they said amounts to about N35million.

    In a January 31 letter to Ambode, the 11 appointees said their services were still being retained without payment, adding that they had been rendered redundant.

    “Our clients are APC members and party faithful who stood with the party at all times. We appeal to the governor to look into their matter and pay them as they have family responsibilities and dependents that look unto them for survival,” the lawyer wrote.

    A copy of the letter was also sent to the House of Assembly Speaker. The commanders are Ogunlana Akindele, Oni Anthony, Atiti Joseph, Adebo Phillip, Obe Ganiyu, Ogungbiye Ayodele, Ogunmefu Taiwo, Lawani Rasheed, Ogunrinola Ajikawo, Agbabiaka Ganiyu and Animashaun Nurudeen.

  • ‘KAI committed to keeping Lagos clean’

    Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI) Brigade Marshal General, JimohAmusat, a retired Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), has restated the commitment of the organisation to keep Lagos State clean as the mega city prepares for the challenges of ever-increasing population, street trading, hawking and perilous pedestrian crossing of major highways even when the state Governor, Akinwumi Ambode has spent billions to provide footbridges.

    Speaking during a ceremony to mark the promotion of KAI officials into higher cadre at KAI Brigade Headquarters Multi Agency Complex, Bolade, Oshodi, he said the newly promoted officers of the organisation were gathered to express gratitude to the governor for his passion to develop the state.

    He said: “This glorious moment in the history of the brigade is further to appreciate the Lagos State government under the leadership of our visionary and dynamic Governor Ambode for his unalloyed commitment and unflinching support to the development of KAI Brigade.

    “No doubt, it is a thing of joy for the KAI operative to be part of the civil service mainstream and also promoted to higher cadre for the first time since its establishment. This is highly commendable as it will continue to boost the morale of KAI operative to the highest level in the discharge of their duties.

    He said the role of KAI officials in Lagos, as a mega city with an ever-increasing population and attendant environmental sanitation challenges, especially the menace of street trading, hawking and pedestrian crossing among others, could not be over-emphasised.

  • ‘Not all our officers are bad – KAI Public Affairs Officer

    ‘Not all our officers are bad – KAI Public Affairs Officer

    At the state command office of the brigade, the Marshal-General, CSP Jimoh Bola Amusat was not available for interview, but the Public Affairs Officer, Mrs Rahmat Alabi stood in well for him.

    When confronted with the numerous allegations against the KAI officers, Mrs Rahmat Alabi said the management is not unaware of some of the allegations of officers’ misdemeanour but said the brigade has been taking steps to address them. As a starter, she said the organisation only recently established the KAI Transformation Centre, where erring officers are sent to for reform. Aside that, she said the body conducts regular seminars, workshops and talks for the officers, just so they understand their mandate and not become terror onto the citizens.

    Said Alabi: “Once they are caught for such misdemeanour, we bring them to the Transformation Centre and put them through rigorous reorientation, all in a bid to transform them and make sure they don’t go back to their old ways. We tell them their role is to help the citizens know their rights and that if they see somebody who is just coming from their village into Lagos via places like Ojota, their duty to such person, first and foremost, is correction. Tell them to use the pedestrian bridge and that it is not safe to cross the highway. Also tell them that there is a law forbidding it, rather than arrest and extort them. The same applies to hawkers. Tell them, ‘Look here, this is not allowed. For your own safety, don’t go onto the road. There are vehicles plying on high speed.’ Remember the case of the hawker who got killed while running away from a KAI arrest? We don’t want such incident repeating itself.

    “To the traders, I’d say, don’t endanger your lives. Also, don’t cause traffic bottleneck. By the time one car stops to buy from you and another follows suit, you are automatically causing traffic build up, which may soon become a serious jam. So KAI’s job is to help save people from themselves, as well as help the city function seamlessly. And people are duty-bound to comply.”

    When reminded that the brigade could easily station men at 50metre radius of the highway to bar people from crossing the highways, if truly their mission is to prevent people from crossing the road, Alabi said, “But there have been sensitisation through the mass media via radio jingles, television and even the print media. Except for the new entrants, which granted are a common sight in Lagos (because of the belief that once you come into Lagos, prosperity is certain), nobody can really claim ignorance of these laws. People just choose to be unreasonable and that is why we have to compel them. But if you ask me,  I think it really does not make sense that we have to compel people to do something that will help preserve their lives.”

    When asked if the body punishes officers found guilty of extortion and overzealousness, Alabi said most times, such officers are removed from such posts, demoted and committed to the Transformation Centre for as much as three months.

    She said the brigade has yet to apply dismissal as punishment, but said it may soon begin to consider the option to force the officers in line. “Sometimes,” she said, “they are also issued queries and put on suspension, and you know what this means for a civil servant.”

    Alabi however sues for patience and understanding on the part of the citizenry. She opined that in spite of everything, there are still very good officers amongst the brigade and cautions against generalisation. “Not all of them are that bad. Some are working tirelessly. You have to understand that it is nearly impossible to have one hundred per cent compliant staff to a set rules in any organisation.”

    On the allegation of unruly behaviour, which many argue may not be unconnected with poor education, lax recruitment process and poor orientation, Alabi said “We actually have more graduates amongst them, who conform, largely. Of course when the brigade initially took off, it took in all sorts of people; but as time went on, they’ve gone through the process of refinement. I will not shy away from the fact that there are some areas prone to a lot of officers misdemeanour but the onus lies on the citizens themselves. If you’re not convinced of the offence you have been held for, you can come to our office and make a report. Admitted, they usually instil fear in the people just to have them pay their ways through; but after the ordeal, you can come to our office to make a report. They have their name tag and such cases of maltreatment and extortion will be investigated and the officers, if found guilty, dealt with.”

    She disclosed that the officers are on a regular basis reminded of their expected roles and comportment as officers mandated to enforce discipline. “Regularly during our Monday and Thursday parade, our management go over the message from scratch, telling them what is appropriate and expected of them. “

    Confronted with the allegations of KAI officers’ pacts with roadside traders and that they even remit proceeds to senior officers in the offices, Alabi shook her head in disagreement. “To start with, the part about remitting to the superiors in the office is not true. That is one hundred per cent false. The truth is that when people are prevented from displaying their wares at spots, where they feel they’ll make good sales, they resort to blackmail and concoct all sorts of stories to tarnish the image of the officers, especially if they are the incorruptible type.”

    Asked whether it is possible to extend KAI’s closing hours beyond 4 O’clock, since traders now wait until the men close to storm the roadsides and display their wares, Alabi said, “As a matter of fact, we normally work until 6 to 7pm but right after that, we have to let them go for security reasons. Don’t forget that their job is a risky and sensitive one and some aggrieved traders may seize the opportunity of the cover of the night to unleash terror on them.”

    On penalty for offenders

    Soon, Alabi said the body will be printing out the laws for easy access to the people, so that they can be better educated about their rights. She however said that those who are caught for crossing the highway are expected to be taken to the mobile courts, where instant judgment are dispensed. She said the sentence depends on the discretion of the judge and the fine is around N5,000. If it’s a minor, he or she would be made to go through community service, such as washing public toilets or cutting overgrown grass and the likes. “And if a person claims that he has no money, he is also made to go through community service.”

    She affirmed that crossing highways, though an offence, may not require anyone going to jail, since it is a minor one. But for street trading, that is  major offence, an offender’s punishment may range from a fine to a jail term. Again, she said “The punishment is at the discretion of the judge. Ours is to apprehend offenders.”

    On confiscated goods, she said these are grouped into perishable and non-perishable goods. “The perishable ones are forfeited to motherless babies homes. We have their list and you can go through them. For the non-perishable goods, you pay fine. That’s our way of earning revenues for the state.  It also serves as a deterrent, so that you don’t go about displaying your wares where you shouldn’t. However, if the goods are illegal or contraband, then that is even a bigger offence and out of our hands. That goes to the police and the criminal courts.” Alabi said.

    She rounded off by commending the brigade. In spite of everything, she said “Our men are working. You can see the sanity and orderliness on our highways. People should not because of the activities of a few bad incidences, generalise and condemn all the good works of KAI.

  • KAI: Disciplinary agency under trial

    KAI: Disciplinary agency under trial

    Amidst complaints of sundry excesses of some officers of the Lagos Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI) Brigade by frustrated citizens, Gboyega Alaka attempts an X-ray of the agency’s activities. He also sought audience with the agency’s management.

    When an agency instituted by a government to curb indiscipline ends up with its fingers soiled in all manners of indiscipline acts, including extortion, bribery and unruliness,  then there may be need for worry, or at best a review of its activities.

    This probably sums up the story of KAI (Kick Against Indiscipline); an agency originally set up in 2003 by the Lagos State government to “effect a change in attitude and promote clean and hygienic culture among the people of Lagos State,” but of which many Lagosians now have tales of woe to tell.

    While evident positive changes in the conduct of the citizenry have been noticeable in most parts of the state, there have also been complaints of misplaced priority in the conduct of the brigade and a deliberate or calculated effort by its officers to extort money, especially from ignorant citizens, who run afoul of the state’s civil laws. Many complain that the brigade has deviated from its original mandate of preventing street trading and promoting clean environment, to fishing for unsuspecting people and visitors, crossing the highways and feasting on poor traders struggling to make a living in a hard economy.

    From Cele Bus Stop along Oshodi-Apapa Expressway, to Oshodi under Bridge on Agege Motor Road to Oke-Odo in Abule-Egba, Onipanu, Palm- Grove, Obanikoro, all along Ikorodu Road through to Ojota, regarded as the number one entry point to Lagos; the stories have not been too complimentary. While one cannot deny the visible orderliness attained in some hitherto notorious areas like Oshodi, Cele by Oshodi Apapa and Ikotun; the question has been about the method through which the officers achieve it. Many accuse the KAI guys of using brute force. They wonder why a civil brigade should be so brutal in its quest to arrest and insist that the body has become wayward, negating the primary aim for which it was set up. They cite cases where traders have been chased into moving vehicles, such as the incident that happened on Ikorodu Road last year.

    23 year-old Nkechi spoke of how a certain KAI officer almost got her killed all in a bid to arrest her for crossing the expressway at Onipanu Bus Stop. She admitted to being wrong to have attempted to cross the road, but said the manner in which the KAI officer waylaid her mid-way into the expressway so scared her that in a bid to retrace her step and avoid being arrested, she almost ran into a moving bus.”It was only by the grace of God that I am alive today,” she recounted. “I only escaped by an inch, having stopped in my tracts in time. I bet they must have killed so many people in that manner. Please tell them that that is crude and counter-productive,” she concluded.

    At Oshodi, a former IT trainee with a media house, who would rather not have her name mentioned, narrated her ordeal. “I had just crossed the road at Ojota successfully, when two men in lemon and brown and khaki uniform held me by the hand and started dragging me to a spot, where there were several other men in the same uniform. It took me a while to understand that I may have contravened some laws. I suddenly remembered that this is Lagos and all the stories I’d heard back in Osogbo, where I grew up, about people being arrested for crossing the highway came to me. I’d thought all the while that they were fabricated stories.”She recalled.

    But her story did not end there. She narrated how they took her to corner behind their vehicle and demanded money from her. “They said if I didn’t want to be put in their van (Black Maria) and driven straight to prison, I should settle them with two thousand naira. When I told them that I am only an IT student and new in Lagos, they asked if I was willing to pay my way with my body. One of them actually tried to pull me to himself and even asked to see my breasts. It was when I told them that I was working with a newspaper house and threatened to call the police and report to their office that they soft-pedalled and let me go.”

    Joe, a journalist with a national daily is irked at the fact that an organisation mandated to enforce discipline has become so enmeshed in untoward acts. Recounting his own experience, he said on one occasion he was arrested for crossing the highway at Palm Grove Bus stop along Ikorodu Road, but said what annoyed him was that rather than take him to court and make him pay the fine, the officers began demanding money from him and other offenders. Said Joe: “While others were busy paying their ways to freedom with whatever they could afford, I just stood aside. Later one of them came to me and said, ‘Ol’ boy you no go bail yourself? But I told them to take me to their mobile court and that rather than pay bribe to them, I’d rather pay the fine. This surprised them and after much foot-dragging and deliberations, they told me to go. This proved to me that they are mainly out to make their own money rather than do the job they were mandated to do.”

    Continuing, Joe spoke of how the KAI officers even use touts to grab and arrest people crossing the expressways. “I’ve seen cases where innocent people crossing the expressway were grabbed by the hands and dragged to KAI officers. Apparently, they have discovered that people will not fall prey once they see uniformed officers around, so they employ touts whom the innocent citizens are hardly wary of until they are arrested. If they’re desperate, why use touts to arrest people. Sometimes, they even use them as baits. In such cases, you see the touts crossing and think it is safe to cross and before you know it, you’re in their dragnet.”

    “The worst part,” Joe argued “is the fact that in arresting offenders crossing the highways, the officers only target well-dressed, decent-looking people, whom they feel they can make money from. I have seen a case, where a number of people were crossing and they only went for the guys in suit and ties. That, to me, is in itself criminal.”

    He advised the government to erect barricades like they’ve done in some places to other vulnerable spots to deter people, if in fact that is the government’s motive.

    A pact with the street traders

    Another worrisome trend that people, especially market women, complain about is that roadside traders in most markets now form a pact with KAI officials in their respective areas by contributing certain amount of money, which they give to the KAI officials as bribe in order to be left alone to perpetrate their street trading act. It is said that once these traders comply, there is usually a truce and the officials look the other way, while street trading goes on. By implication, this leads to inconvenience for the road users, who are left to manage whatever is left of the road.

    They allege that the officers now have a list of the names of roadside traders in most markets, where each of them pay as much as N500 every week. It is said that those who decline to pay usually end up being harassed, and their goods seized.

    An attempt to however confirm this allegation from the market women in the Ikotun Market in Ikotun area of Lagos met a brickwall, as the women vehemently denied the existence of any such pact. One woman, who sells fresh fish by the roadside said almost aggressively, “Who told you? There is no such practice here.”

    Asked how come she was selling her fish by the roadside (this was around 5pm) and if she didn’t have a stall or shop inside the market, she said she only relocates to the roadside in the evening, when the KAI officers would have closed for the day. She confessed that customers would only stop to patronise them if they are by the road because most Lagosians are always in a hurry, especially at the close of work.

    On whether she didn’t know that activities of people like her contribute to the daily traffic gridlock on that side of the road, her reaction was “How?”

    Another woman who was within earshot of this conversation however interjected that “Look, the overzealousness of those KAI people is too much. Are they the first to do the job. Everybody knows that Ikotun is a traffic hold-up area, yet they keep harassing us and blaming us for the traffic. Vehicles have their job to do, while we also have our business to do. I don’t see how we stand in their way. In fact, that is why I now come out only in the evenings, when they would have gone away with their nuisance.”

    Clash of interests

    Another feeler from areas like Ikorodu speaks of how KAI’s insistence on no street trading has caused clashes even with the local land owners, who complain that they are no longer able to earn revenue from the traders. A resident of Ikorodu, Ademola Adeoye, said the culture has been that some people, who claim to be representatives of the omoniles (land owners) collect fees from the street traders. He allege that even touts (agberos) collect their own, thereby making the job of the KAI officers difficult.

    Adeoye said this is the pattern in virtually all the markets in the state and advised the government to first sort out that part of the set up, if it truly wants KAI to function effectively.

    When asked if he is aware that the traders also contribute money to bribe the KAI officers, he said “That may not be out of place. You know already that corruption is endemic in the country and it will take greater effort than we’re putting in to significantly curb it.”

    Brute force

    Another major complaint against the KAI officers is the brute force which they use to arrest so-called offenders. Fidelis, a trader at Oshodi was an eye-witness to one of such arrests, and lamented that ‘It was horrible.’ He said the man had just crossed the express at Ojota and because he was putting up a little resistance, three of them descended on him, pulling and tugging at his trousers and suit, while others were hitting and dragging him. And this was a man fully dressed in suit. They didn’t even consider the fact that he may be going to an office for an appointment or for a job interview. By the time they finished with him, he was an eyesore. I bet that man, if he did not end up in their ‘Black Maria,’ would surely have to go back home. I think that is crude. They need to be tutored to be more civil in the dispensation of their duties.

    “I also do not like the way they put people through corporal punishment, as if they were school children and shove them into their Black Maria, as if they were already convicted. ” Fidelis rounded off.

    Asake, a trader along Alade Axis of Allen Avenue down to Ikeja Medical Centre area by Allen Avenue said the manner in which KAI officers swoop on traders smacks of petty thievery and sadism. He likened them to rats, whose main aim is to pilfer and that they do this under the guise of doing their job. “Even some of us that are not on the major road still get harassed. How do they want us to survive?”

     

  • Commuter, KAI official fight at Oshodi

    A commuter apprehended for flaunting the traffic law yesterday wrestled an official of Lagos State Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI) at Oshodi.

    The unnamed man was said to have been arrested by an official clad in mufti for crossing the expressway. In an attempt to resist arrest, the man allegedly gave the official fist blows, prompting retaliation.

    The duo fought fiercely on the road until an elderly man, said to be a driver at the Mushin Bus Station intervened.

    According to the pedestrian, the fight ensued because he refused to give bribe, adding that the official held him by the cloth and insisted he must part with money.

    He said: “I was crossing when he came to meet me and started challenging me that why did I cross the road? And I was carrying some load on my shoulder. I said arrest me for what? Later, he started saying I must pay and I refused. Then he started dragging my cloth anyhow before we started fighting.”

    But the official said the man responded violently when he was told that he has violated the law, adding that the man said he cared less about the rule.

    He said: ‘‘As he crossed the road, I approached him and told him he was wrong and under arrest for crossing without using the bridge. I said it politely, and asked if he didn’t know that we do arrest people here. He just scorned me and said it was none of his business. I held him as he wanted to go but he kept insisting that he won’t wait. The next thing, he punched my face. That was how the fight started. I changed to mufti because of the rain. I was in my uniform since morning but when the rain started, I changed.”

  • KAI nabs 46 street hawkers

    KAI nabs 46 street hawkers

    Operatives of the Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI) Brigade have arrested 46 street hawkers for obstructing traffic flow along major highways in the state.

    The hawkers were arrested at Maryland, Ikeja, Nitel and Mobolaji Bank Anthony axis between 4pm to 6pm.

    The offenders have been arraigned at the Samuel Ilori Court, Ogba.

    A statement by the agency’s Public Affairs Officer (PRO) Rahmat Alabi said the arrest was in furtherance of its campaign against unbridled sales of goods especially in undesignated areas of the state.

    She said their arrest was to deter other erring traders from indulging in street hawking as it is not only illegal, but unsafe.

    The agency vowed to rid the streets of illegal hawking in accordance with stipulated law.

    KAI Marshal General (KMG) and Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) Amusat Jimoh said: “tough actions would be taken against offenders in the renewed efforts at combating the menace in the metropolis.”

  • Hawker’s death: Hoodlums destroy 14 BRT buses in Lagos

    At least 14 Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) buses were on Wednesday vandalized by suspected hoodlums along the Ikorodu Road in Lagos.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the hoodlums were protesting the death of a street hawker, who was knocked down by an articulated vehicle while  trying to evade arrest by Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI) officials at Maryland Bus Stop.

    After the incident, the hoodlums pounced on the mass transit vehicles to express their displeasure with the hawker’s death.

    A BRT driver, Mr. Adedeji Adeosun, whose vehicle was vandalized, said, “I was in traffic for about 20 minutes at Maryland.

    “Then I saw some people running from Maryland and I opened the door to see what was happening.

    “I heard shouts from people that we should come down, so, I immediately removed my uniform.

    “I saw about 100 hoodlums otherwise called `area boys’ coming with stones and I ran away.

    “All the passengers on board my bus also came down and ran for dear life. I was hit by a big stone.”

    Another driver, Mr. Michael Onabolu, added, “I saw people running and shouting that I should come down from the bus.

    “And all of a sudden, I saw some guys surrounding the buses, asking my passengers and I to come down.

    “Before I knew it, one of them hit the bus with a big stone and I could not move because of the traffic. I was wounded on my hands and my tights with stones.”

  • KAI arrests 90 for crossing expressway

    KAI arrests 90 for crossing expressway

    inety persons, including expectant and nursing mothers, were arrested yesterday at Oshodi in Lagos by officials of the Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI).

    They were apprehended for not using the pedestrian bridge.

    The action, it was learnt, was aimed at improving road safety and reducing accidents called ‘hit and run’, which had claimed lives.

    In the exercise, which caught many unawares, pedestrians were arrested at Oshodi under bridge by stern-looking KAI officials, who marched the offenders into a Black Maria from where they would be taken to the agency’s office for trial.

    The enforcement was the first major operation under the Governor Akinwunmi Ambode administration.

    The action forced many people to use the pedestrian bridge.

    One of such people, a marketer, Miss Margret Oladele, said she couldn’t remember when last she used the pedestrian bridge in the last five years.

    A KAI official, who preferred anonymity, said the move was to reduce deaths on the roads, adding that no fewer than 10 persons were knocked down daily while crossing expressways.