Tag: lagos

  • FEAAN holds shows in Abuja, Lagos

    The Female Artists Association of Nigeria (FEAAN) will hold two exhibitions of diverse media in Abuja and Lagos. With the theme, Balance for Better: Women Unite, the art show held yearly to commemorate the International Women’s Day celebrations will open on different days in the two cities. While the Abuja show will open on Thursday, March 7 till 13 at Culture Centre of China and Kulture KIode Art Hub; the Lagos-leg will hold on Friday, March 8 to 13 at Nike Art Gallery.

    Over 30 women are expected to participate in both exhibitions which will feature over 50 works, it was said. According to FEAAN National President, Chinze Ojobo, said the exhibitions will be projecting the talents of women artists while highlighting women issues.

     

  • Woman accused of slapping ex-stepmother

    A 28-year-old woman, Amaka Okolie, who allegedly slapped her ex-stepmother and destroyed her necklace worth N190, 000 during an argument, has appeared at an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court, Lagos.

    Okolie, whose lives at 4, Taiwo Street, Mafoluku, Oshodi, Lagos, is charged with two counts of assault and wilful damage.

    He pleaded not guilty.

    The prosecution alleged that the defendant slapped her ex-stepmother, Mrs. Ngozi Okolie, tore her dress and cut her gold necklace valued at N190, 000, during an argument over the complainant’s refusal to leave her father’s apartment.

    Prosecuting Sergeant Michael Unah alleged that the defendant committed the offence on February 18, about 8:40am, at her residence.

     

  • Lagos. The Moment. The Man.

    God in the moment makes things happen beyond ourselves. Progress is a road that forever extends itself the more we travel it. It never ends but continues to urge us forward.Genuine progress weds the finer aspects of our past to the possibilities of our greater future. As we approach the Governorship election, I believe Lagos is ready to keep faith with its strong tradition of progress. This is a tradition of excellence that has served us well during the past 20 years. Our state has been on a journey of improvement of our infrastructure, our public transportation and roads, physical security and law enforcement, the judiciary and administration of justice, health care, and our educational system. The state has become a welcoming home to business innovation and investment.  Lagos drives the national economy more than any other states. It sets the standard by which all others are measured.

    As excellent a city as Lagos is and as profound as its journey has been thus far, Lagos is ready to become its greater self.

    For us to reach these heights demands the best possible leadership.  During the past 20 years, the state has benefited from such leadership. This leadership has guided us on our collective journey to progress and toward a greater Lagos. Under the progressive leadership of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, a team of able and innovative minds joined together to articulate and then to begin implementing a blueprint for the revival, modernization and improvement of this state, its governing institutions and its economy.  The improvements we see today are the seeds planted and germinated by that team.

    After Tinubu, Tunde Fashola followed and held close to the strategic plan.  Lagos continued to flourish under him. Governor Ambode came on board and tried to the extent he could understand the collective and overarching vision.

    The people who served Lagos during the Tinubu/Fashola period have distinguished themselves in sustained service to the state and nation.

    One such exemplary person is Babajide Sanwolu, a leader but also a team player with the rare talent of making things greater than how he met them.  He is my friend and brother. During the many years we have known each other, he has always amazed with his wealth of knowledge and deep understanding of the working of government. He is a man equipped with strategic vision as well as an eye for detail and a able hand to implement even the most complex task. During this time, I come to know Jide as someone who does excellently whatever he commits his mind to. And he has always committed himself to the wellbeing of the people of Lagos. He was always ready for a task or assignment.  Also ready to pitch in or to give advice. Always ready to team up to get things done. Always on the look out for others. He is someone who quickly comes to the aid of a needy friend or extends a helping hand to a stranger in distress. That is the Babajide Sanwo-Olu I know.

    His grasp of issues was uncommon. His networking ability unprecedented.

    Exactly 3 years ago, I made a remark that first startled him but now has proved to be prescient. Jide as I love to call him had developed the habit of checking up on me at work. Working with Asiwaju Tinubu one had no need for a clock because work never ends.  You just keep at it. Weekday, weekend, holidays — they are all the same. They are workdays.  He was always there to encourage and support me.  We discussed many issues. Our hopes.

     

  • Trader arraigned for allegedly defiling girl

    A 30-year-old trader, Onyekachi Peter, has been arraigned at an Ikeja Magistrates’ Court, Lagos, for allegedly defiling a 14-year-old girl.

    The defendant, a resident of Oworonsoki, Lagos, was arraigned on a one-count charge bordering on defilement.

    Prosecuting Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Ezekiel Ayorinde said the defendant committed the offence on February 3 at his home.

    He alleged that the defendant unlawfully had carnal knowledge of a 14-year-old girl.

    The prosecutor said: “The girl’s father saw a love letter inside his daughter’s school bag. He read it and questioned her.

    “She confessed to her father that the defendant had slept with her many times.

    “When the father wanted to beat her, the girl ran to the defendant’s apartment and passed the night there. He again had sex with her.

    Read also: Netpreneur prize names Nigeria, others regional partners

    “The case was reported and the defendant was arrested,” the prosecutor said.

    Ayorinde said the offence contravened Section 137 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    The defendant denied committing the offence.

    Magistrate Mrs. B.O. Osunsanmi granted the defendant N300, 000 bail with two sureties in the like sum.

    The case continues on March 25.

  • Lagos: A strong case for Sanwo-Olu

    Both I have known for over a decade. Having reported national politics in my close to thirty-year career in journalism and privileged to occupy the editor’s chair for two of the three decades, it is impossible not to have struck up acquaintanceship, if not friendship, with a good number of contemporary actors animating the nation’s political firmament.

    My bias for one over the other is, therefore, based on an evaluation of the contrasting characters Jimi Kolawole Agbaje (JK) and Babajide Olusola Sanwo-Olu (BOS) have shown respectively in the intervening years.

    While sitting with other Sun editors back in 2006 to grill Agbaje during his first shot at Lagos governorship on the platform of DPN, one could not help being seduced by his dimpled smile, the throaty laughter, this sociable air perhaps best illustrated by the shimmering gold necklace around his neck.

    Though he didn’t eventually go far in the election results, the mere spectacle of a pharmacist entering the political arena and promising to cure what ailed the Lagos polity was surely enough to capture the popular imagination then.

    The gospel of change he preached while the campaign lasted certainly echoed much longer in enlightened circles in Lagos.

    Conversely, three years earlier, one could not have failed to take notice of the story of the dashing whizkid who quit a senior portfolio in the banking world to take up a relatively “lesser” job of Special Adviser to the then Lagos deputy governor, Femi Pedro.

    BOS’s arrival in Alausa was, of course, preceded by a reputation as a committed member of then emergent evangelical movement in corporate Lagos canvassing the application of strong Christian ethic in the civil space – whether the public service or the business community, led by debonair Pastor Paul Adefarasin of the House on the Rock.

    However, from the lofty rhetoric of 2006, the JK we see today is, sadly, one toiling hard to profit from divisive politics by exploiting the Igbo sentiments, thereby unwittingly putting a razor on the tie that otherwise binds all of us together, seeking to poison the liberal climate that had fostered peaceful co-existence among the mosaic of ethnic nationalities over the years.

    The great Lagos we have always known is one whose values of accommodation and competitive spirit are blind to ethnicity, colour or creed. Its soil bred the legend of Nnamdi Azikiwe, prospered the mercantilist talent of the senior Ojukwu, inspired the activist instinct of Chima Ubani and nourished the prodigious intellect of Pat Utomi.

    When the nation was faced with grave moral crisis in the past, an illustrious Igbo like Ndubuisi Kanu, for example, was not known to have paused even for a moment to first make some cold ethnic calculations, before taking a stand. At a time when even many Yoruba elders had betrayed MKO to Abacha for the proverbial thirty shekels of silver, it is on record that Kanu was one of those who, at grave personal risk, stood for June 12 till the very end.

    The great Lagos we have always known provided the rendezvous for Ekiti-born Dele Alake to make friends with Danladi Bako (now the Koguna of Sokoto) and Abia-born Prince Emeka Obasi in the 80s; friendships that morphed into brotherhood and have endured till today.

    It is one where a Tunji Bello started as professional colleague of Delta-born Sam Omatseye in the 80s and both relate today more like biological brothers.

    Resident popular Fuji musician, Adewale Ayuba, is happily married to an Igbo lady.

    Indeed, there are thousands more of such stories of ethno-religious integration that have over the years deepened the fabric of Lagos as a melting-pot, a truly cosmoplitican city.

    It is, therefore, very troubling reading lately reports of violent clashes between the Yoruba and Igbo in some neighbourhoods in Lagos over electoral preferences in the ongoing general polls. In my nearly thirty-year residency in Lagos, I cannot recall any such violence between the Yoruba and the Igbo before. At worst, Yoruba/Igbo skirmish over election matter was a rarity.

    But many saw this coming the moment JK, obviously out of political desperation, began to sound more like Igbo champion than someone aspiring to be governor for hundred more ethnic nationalities in Lagos. I noticed that JK’s descent began in the build-up to the 2015 elections in which he found himself in PDP, this time as the governorship candidate.

    With Goodluck Ebele Jonathan (GEJ) as the presidential candidate, the 2015 polls was characterized by a divisiveness never seen in Nigeria’s history. It became quite convenient then to dress “Ebele” as not only carrying the presidential flag on behalf of predominantly Christian Niger Delta, but also in the name of mostly Catholic Igbo.

    Naturally, such profiling redounded on Lagos PDP with JK eventually garnering substantial number in the governorship election in April 2015, predictably with a bloc vote from the resident Igbo community.

    Four years on, apparently lacking the creativity to proceed in his third attempt at the governorship, JK would now plumb deeper into the sewer of ethnic baiting. Of course, nothing forbids you from cultivating a base in an electoral environment. But the real danger is the reckless intensity JK has brought to bear this time by appointing himself an emergency Igbo advocate.

    Without shame, he now seeks to wail louder than the bereaved by reminding them of even the little things they lack, but none of the significant benefits they enjoy. But, shrewd as they are, I am sure the enlightened ones among the Igbo themselves know too well that, while not being averse to more concessions from the system, their collective interest and continued prosperity in a multi-ethnic milieu are best guaranteed under a liberal culture as has been demonstrated in Lagos over the years, as against the toxic ideology JK is retailing.

    In framing campaign messages that subtly incite Igbo against their host and neighbour, JK will, for instance, conveniently forget to acknowledge that those he accuses of “monopolizing” power in Lagos in the last twenty years have never discriminated against Igbo pupils when offsetting WAEC or NECO fees in public schools. No one has formulated deliberate policies to prevent Igbo from running their legitimate businesses in Lagos.

    Neither has the state employment policy ever been sectional. Non-Yoruba today account for over forty percent of teaching staff in Lagos public schools. Nor will JK also be charitable enough to acknowledge that an Igbo man, Ben Akabueze, made history as the longest serving state commissioner in Nigeria by serving four terms in Lagos in the strategic Budget Ministry under Tinubu and Babatunde Fashola.

    Like someone already put it jovially, to truly prove his love for Igbo, maybe Agbaje should have started by throwing wide open to them the doors to his community pharmacy in Apapa for free medicine.

    In contrast, I have not seen any signs of obsession for power or the desperation to do anything to attain same in BOS over the years. Rather, by personal example, he has demonstrated that you don’t necessarily need political power to impact the community. This perhaps explains why when he was not renominated as commissioner in 2015, not once did the charity outreach he had instituted and nurtured over the years stop. From his own personal pocket, he never stopped passing supports quietly to orphanages and lifelines to indigent patients unable to pay hospital bills.

    Of course, BOS is younger. But grey hair isn’t fair ground to put JK down. Rather, what should alarm us is the age of his ideas. Consider just one example. The PDP candidate has promised to funnel whopping fifty percent of state budget into education to create in Lagos what he fantastically dubbed “an education/knowledge economy” as the fulcrum to making it the second largest economy in Africa by 2029.

    Such outlandish proposition is bound to elicit a standing ovation in beer parlours and other unenlightened circles. But it only exposes JK’s shallow understanding of the basic rudiments of efficient resource-allocation in the public sphere.

    Even by United Nations standard, the universal benchmark for education-funding is 26 percent – a target most municipal authorities across the world still find unattainable. (The national government in Nigeria is, in fact, still struggling to meet six percent in the ratio of budget for education.)

    Pray, if JK packs 50 percent of Lagos cash into his quixotic education parks, what margin then goes into equally critical subheads like healthcare, environment and security in a jurisdiction of estimated 20 million people?

    To say nothing about the construction or maintenance of road infrastructure and traffic management!

    From his exuberant tone, it is possible that JK may have been leafing through the memoirs of Lee Kuan Yew, the philosopher-king who transformed Singapore (a city state like Lagos) from near destitution in the 60s to the First World within three decades by first prioritizing education.

    But if indeed JK or his handlers understood the South-East Asian visionary well, they should have realized that the Singaporean feat was not achieved by merely throwing more cash at education or indulging in empty sloganeering. Rather, it resulted from a sober diagnosis of the real challenge and a conscientious implementation of a sustainable action plan that soon ensured the availability of better educated and skilled workforce to meet industry demand within a reasonable time-frame.

    Well, maybe what JK meant is a re-ordering of policies, reinventing the curriculum with a view to ensuring the optimization of even the little fund available for education and equipping the Lagos school-leavers with usable skills and knowledge to take advantage of the boundless opportunities offered by the global economy in the twenty-first century.

    On the contrary, in my view, BOS has, through various public engagements in the last few months, undoubtedly demonstrated a sharper grasp of relevant issues in public governance, bringing to bear his rich experience in the private sector.

    I, therefore, have no doubt he is better equipped with the mental capacity and the emotional balance to be governor for all Lagosians.

  • Court remands woman for alleged manslaughter

    A Lagos High Court in Igbosere Monday remanded in prison custody an ex-staff of Olab Private School, Lagos, Rukayat Amisu, following her arraignment for the death of a three-year-old girl who fell into steaming water.

    Justice Adedayo Akintoye made the order after Amisu pleaded “Not guilty” to a one-count charge of manslaughter.

    The Lagos State Government accused the defendant of committing the offence at about 10am on October 21, 2015, at Olab Private School, No. 11, Idowu Street, Lagos Island.

    Prosecuting Counsel Babatunde Sunmonu alleged that the defendant unlawfully killed one Aliyah Ahmed by negligently allowing her to be burnt by hot water.

    “The defendant negligently sat the little girl on top of a container containing hot water and the child fell inside the hot water,” he said.

    Read Also: Court orders actress Monalisa Chinda’s arrest over tax evasion

    The court heard that the baby died afterwards.

    According to Sunmonu, the offence contravened Section 227 of the Criminal Law Lagos State, 2011.

    Following Amisu’s plea, her counsel, A. O. Ladipo, told the judge that he had filed an application for her bail.

    Justice Akintoye adjourned till March 11 for hearing of the bail application.

    The charge against Amisu reads in part: “That, you Rukayat Amisu, on October 21, 2005 at about 10am at Olab Private School at No. 11, Idowu Street, Lagos Island, unlawfully killed one Aliyah Ahmed by negligently allowing her to be burnt by hot water.”

  • ‘Accept Buhari’s re-election as God’s will’

    Rt. Rev. Humphrey Olumakaiye, Diocesan Bishop of the Diocese of Lagos (Anglican Communion), has urged all Nigerians to accept the re-election of President Muhammadu Buhari as the will of God.

    Olumakaiye made the call on Sunday at the diocesan rally which was part of the activities marking the Centenary Celebration of the diocese of Lagos at Tafawa Balewa Square (TBS), Lagos.

    He said God had appointed President Buhari for Nigeria, so the people must try to cooperate and be patient with his government to push the nation forward.

    “We know that there will be light at the end of the tunnel. We must not do anything that will drag us back as a nation.

    “We have taken a bold step forward so let us continue to move forward,’’ he said.

    Read Also: Buhari’s victory is ordained by God – Prophet Omale

    The cleric urged all Nigerians irrespective of their faith, to promote religious harmony and peaceful coexistence for the sustenance of development in the country.

    “We may have different regions, but in Christ we are one. The message is one and we are one body in Christ irrespective of ethnic background.

    “There is no other option for us than to live a life worthy of emulating.

    “We want the society to learn from churches and if the society can be one, we believe that Nigeria will be better for it.

    “There would be no need for hate speeches, envy and pulling-down syndrome, a true Christian faith is a life lived in love.

    “Christ died for us so that we can be one; he brought us in reconciliation back to God. What we have done today we want it to reflect on the larger society,’’ he said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that 14 Archdeaconry in the diocese attended the ceremony in various floats, radiant dresses and decorations to make the event very colorful.

    NAN

     

     

  • Nigerians urged to prioritise character building

    THE need to build up the character of Nigerians, especially youths, has been emphasized.

    Speaking on Tuesday in Ikeja, Lagos, on the occasion of 2019 World Character Day and public presentation of a book titled: “Building Up My Character”, the author, Dr. Muyiwa Obiyomi, said moral decadence in the society should be curbed.

    Obiyomi, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Creativedge Communications, Victoria Island, Lagos, said there was no gainsaying that the wall of morality had broken down.

    “We are here today, heavily concerned about this moral burden. Afterall, character is the foundation of all true success. We all need to build strong personal brands since our character affects our career, business and life. I was heavily concerned about this, and so in 2004, I set at writing a handbook on character building development. The frequently asked question is, how can we rebuild this broken wall of morality? The answer is reinvent the people. But how can this be achieved?

    “The solution is, therefore, not in our ‘stars’ but in ourselves. It is in us. After all, when we are faced with decision, we have three choices: Do what will please, do what others do, or to do what is right?” he said.

    The Pro-Chancellor of the Crawford University, Igbesa, Ogun State, Prof. Peter Okebukola, who spoke at the event, said character was the sum total of all the negative and positive qualities in a persons’ life, exemplified by one’s thought, values, motivations, attitudes, feelings and actions.

  • Olabisi Silva: An Amazon goes to rest

    MEMBERS of the Nigerian art community were united for a common cause, as they gathered to celebrate the life and times of an accomplished art scholar, curator, Olabisi Silva, for an evening of tributes at Freedom Park in Lagos.

    https://youtu.be/CdA6EluHx4Q

  • Injured INEC official undergoes surgery

    •Decries commission’s inability to visit him

    An official of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mr. Ganiyu Ogundipe, who was injured by hoodlums at Ago Palace Way, Isolo, Lagos, last Saturday during the Presidential and National Assembly elections, has undergone surgery.

    It was carried out by an orthopaedic surgeon under anaesthesia, to fix his dislocated right shoulder.

    Ogundipe slipped while running for safety during the attack and dislocated the shoulder.

    The man, who is recuperating at TSH Medical Centre, Mushin, Lagos, will wait till September before his arm can heal.

    Thugs during the elections stormed polling units on Ago Palace Way and set ablaze cast ballot papers.

    The INEC official said nine hoodlums came on three motorcycles.

    Ogundipe, who worked as one of the Residential Area (RA) Technicians, said: “The hoodlums stoned and chased us away before setting ablaze the cast ballot papers and other materials.”

    Speaking with The Nation, he said he returned to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi Araba after the surgery for another X-ray.

    The X-ray, he said, was to see if the operation carried out to correct the Humero-Scapula dislocation was okay.

    “The result of the X-ray showed that it was well carried out. Although the orthopaedic surgeon has re-fixed the bandage, we later discovered that my body is reacting to it (bandage), which means I’ll have to get another material as recommended by the surgeon. I’m now waiting for him to come around. He’s going to remove this and fix another one that my body can respond well to. This, I learnt, will aid the healing,” Ogundipe said.

    He said the bandage would be on him for three weeks.

    “I may not perform my duty during the governorship and house of assembly elections scheduled for March 9 because of the stress that may be involved.

    “The doctor said after removing the bandage, I shouldn’t overwork the hand, to allow the shoulder to be well fixed. He said it will take about four months for the arm to be firm so that I can use it for any work. After the first three weeks I will wait for about four months for it to be back to its normal position,” Ogundipe said.

    The attack, he said, left him disappointed, as he was serving his fatherland.

    “I feel disappointed about this incident. We were attacked during a national assignment. Now I’m not medically fit to perform my duty.” Ogundipe said.

    He lamented that the INEC chief in Lagos State has not visited him in hospital.

    Ogundipe said: “Although I learnt they attempted to come last Sunday. I’ve received a call from the state headquarters.  They felt sorry for what happened to me, but I think they can do better. They’re also humans who should understand the financial implication of the issue at hand and its urgency. Visiting me and taking up the hospital bills and other expenses will go a long way as a morale booster for me and other ad-hoc workers. I can’t work for the next six months. What will I use to take care of my family? This is why the INEC authority should be of assistance not only to me, but other ad-hoc workers injured during the elections. ”

    He said his family, relations and friends have been of assistance to him concerning the medical bills.

    TSH Medical Centre Medical Director Dr. Adeniyi Busari told The Nation that the X-ray showed that the induction was ok.

    “He will be in the position for three weeks and after three weeks, he will come back to hospital. He will undergo physiotherapy and gradually he will use the hand. The physiotherapy can take three months,” he said.