Tag: lagos

  • 120 suspected cultists, hoodlums arrested in Epe

    The Ibile Vigilante Group, in Epe, has arrested 120 suspected cultists and hoodlums between January and November in Epe, Lagos State.

    Mr Olajide Monday, the Team Head of the group made this disclosure to the News Agency of Nigeria in Epe on Friday.

    He said that the suspected cultists were arrested in some areas of Epe, including Oke-Balogun, T-Junction, Lagos Road, Okemagba, Aiyetoro, Poka, Temu, Noforija and Papa.

    “These arrests were made during the initiation of new members into secret cult groups.

    “Some of the suspects were also nabbed during their usual gyration in some crime prone areas in the town and in the suburb areas of the community.

    “After the arrest, we hand them over to the police for further investigations,” he said.

    He said that the hoodlums were usually found disrupting peace in the community as well as invading political and other social activities in town, which led to their arrest.

    Monday said that since the last few years, Epe had always been a hideout for cultists, hoodlums and kidnappers.

    But after establishing this vigilante group in 2009, we have been able to reduce the activities of the cultists in the community through the arrests.

    “The reduction of cult activities in the town was achieved with the support of police and other security agencies.

    “The vigilante group works closely with government security agencies to ensure a peaceful atmosphere in Epe,” he said.

    Read Also: Pensioners hail Buhari

    He, however, lamented poor funding of the group.

    “The Epe Local Government pays our salary but the group has not been enjoying good welfare since the past one and a half years.

    “The previous council chairman, Mr Segun Agbaje, was the one, who inaugurated our group and we enjoyed working with him as a vigilante group then.

    “The group enjoyed good welfare package during his tenure but we are not getting similar treatments again,” he alleged.

    He urged the current council administration to gear up support for the welfare of his members in order to discharge their responsibility effectively.

    Monday said that the group lacked basic ammunition to tackle cultists, hoodlums, and kidnappers.

    “We have been working with the little ammunition at our disposal, such as, machetes, knives and other local weapons, ” he said.

    Monday lauded the financial, moral and physical support of traditional rulers in the area, the Divisional Police Officer (DPO), Epe division and other well meaning individuals.

    In his response, Mr Adedoyin Adesanya, the Chairman, Epe Local Government, said that the council was aware of the complaints and would look into their demands.

    The chairman complained of the vigilante group’s poor performances recently, adding that members of the group needed to be trained and retrained in order to discharge their duties responsibly.

  • Lagos urged to eradicate illiteracy

    Stakeholders in education have advised the Lagos State Government to prioritise the Universal Basic Education (UBE) programme, in order to eradicate illiteracy.

    The stakeholders, who spoke yesterday in Abule-Egba, Lagos at a meeting convened by a non-governmental organisation (NGO), the Human Development Initiatives (HDI), said they were ready to partner the government to eradicate illiteracy.

    HDI’s  Programme Officer  Johnson Ibidapo, who coordinated the meeting, said: “We are ready to partner the government to eradicate illiteracy. It is sad that some children in the state, who are of school age, are not in school. According to statistics, the Southsouth geopolitical zone has the lowest rate of illiteracy. We want to ensure that illiteracy is eradicated in the Southwest, starting from Lagos State.”

    Ibidapo, who represented HDI’s Executive Director Mrs. Olufunso Owasanoye, said the government should ensure that all children were enrolled for the UBE programme, which covered education from primary school to junior secondary school.

    He said: “The government should achieve education for all by reducing the number of school dropouts and out-of-school children, improving quality and efficiency of basic education, promoting the acquisition of literacy, numeracy, life skills and values for lifelong education and useful living.

    “The UBE programme acknowledges education as a fundamental right of all school-age pupils, and therefore makes education from primary to junior secondary school free and compulsory.”

    Participants at the meeting included members of school-based management committees, parents’ forum, school managers, community development associations and committees.

  • Lagos and the garbage question

    After much public outcry, authorities in Lagos seem to be according the long-running waste challenge the emergency response it deserves. There have been reports of re-mobilization of the existing waste management board which, in turn, has massively pressed men and materials to rid the highways and residential neighborhoods of garbage.

    Already, assurance has been given that Lagosians can now contemplate 2019 without having to agonize over the nuisance of filth.

    Of course, to get there, the state government has had to discard its initial attempt at re-inventing the wheel; it simply went back to the existing template that had ensured relative hygiene and sanity before Visionscape came on board.

    By the way, before proceeding, let me admit that I have more than a passing interest here not just out of enlightened self-interest as a Lagos resident but also as a proud Lagos State Ambassador for Environment (decorated by Governor Raji Fashola in 2009).

    As one had argued in this column earlier, there is sense in the theoretical assumption underpining the Cleaner Lagos Initiative envisioned by Governor Akinwumi Ambode: seeking a new way to confront the mounting challenge of waste management in a fast-growing city.

    The only trouble is that the midwife the government engaged to birth the new order did not seem to have sufficiently understudied and understood the peculiarities of the patient before rushing to unleash the scalpel in the theatre.

    Perhaps, things would not have unraveled calamitously had Visionscape phased its intervention in pilot schemes, learning and fine-tuning things along the way before scaling up.

    Worse, it had not even assembled the requisite manpower and critical tools before setting out.

    The result was the harrowing meltdown suffered across Lagos metropolis for most of the year with the resurgence of garbage, completely obliterating the modest gains thought to have been recorded in the last decade in waste management in Africa’s most populous city, beginning from Y2004 when the PSP model was adopted from a blueprint fashioned by a panel headed by then deputy governor Femi Pedro and assisted by then environment commissioner, Tunji Bello. (Interestingly, also on the panel was Babajide Sanwo-Olu.)

    All things considered, there are surely lots of lessons to be drawn from the easing environmental crisis. Of course, chief among them is the futility of seeking to reform a process without the buy-in of critical stakeholders including the PSP operators.

    But beyond the assurance of immediate relief the ongoing emergency evacuation gives, there is no denying that public apprehension remains about the prospects of waste management after Ambode.

    So far, among the motley crowd of those aspiring to be the next Lagos governor, only Jide Sanwo-Olu would appear to articulate a vision indicative of an understanding of the real challenge of waste management in a megacity of Lagos stature in the decade ahead.

    Indeed, with a population in excess of 20 million and an economy rated fifth largest on African continent, the state generates a collasal 13,000 tonnes of garbage daily. As the population grows the more desperate things will surely get.

    Curiously, Sanwo-Olu’s main contender in the race, Jimi Agbaje, was rather effusive in his praise of Visionscape which most Lagosians see as lacking capacity and capability, hence the garbage crisis of the last twelve months. While featuring on a Channels TV programme on Sunday, he came across more as Visionscape’s PR officer. Maybe pharmacist Agbaje is seeing a chemistry different from the rest of Lagosians.

    Anyway, a poor reading of the challenge at hand is to assume it ends with the now familiar unsightly spectacle of communal wheelie bins overflowing with rubbish at the street-corners or bulging bin bags dumped in the median of the highways. No less critical is the issue of industrial waste. In fact, the unscrupulous manufacturers offloading toxic effluent into Lagos waters indiscriminately or those dumping medical waste around constitute graver danger to our collective humanity.

    To be honest, waste management poses a great headache even in relatively far more developed countries. But the difference is the creativity summoned to tackle such head on. Even today, London continues to face public uproar over the menace of uncollected waste polluting the streets. Part of official response is to scale up recycling. Such that the amount of waste being recycled has shot up from five percent in 1996 to more than  22 percent today.

    Under the new London Plan, the mayor has unveiled an ambitious target of Y2026 to achieve 100 percent waste management with zero-biodegradable or recyclable waste sent to landfill.

    The EU had set Y2020 as deadline for 50 percent recycle of waste.

    However, the 13,000 tonnes of waste Lagos daily generates is a child’s play compared to China’s monstrous 520,000.  Well, that is to be expected. China is world’s most populous nation. To confront its own demon, the strategy the Asian giant has evolved over the years is outright burning. Of course, the art of incineration has spawned a huge industry dominated by the private sector.

    The value-addition here is that the heat from burning garbage at more than 1,000 degrees Celsius produces enough electricity to power more than 140,000 homes.

    However, realizing the collateral implication of that option, the emphasis of the Chinese authorities is then on who can burn waste in the cleanest way with a high-tech filtration system that removes dioxins and other toxic gases.

    But I must say that watching Sanwo-Olu speak on this critical issue recently surely offered some relief, even hope.

    To begin with, it is reassuring to learn that Sanwo-Olu, having apparently learnt from some of the shortcomings of Visionscape, agrees that reforms in any social intercourse is impossible without first securing the inclusivity of stakeholders. These include not only the generators (both industrial and domestic) but also service providers (private or community-based) and recyclers.

    Going forward, he seeks an engagement that will radically improve on the present structure to, in fact, turn it to value- creation. So, the new advocacy, according to him, will first target the home. People will be made to see the wisdom in separating wet waste from the dry ones, the organic from the non-biodegradable like plastic.

    Of course, such preliminary processing makes for easier management. Non-biodegradables can easily be recycled while the organic waste is processed into manure.

    To say nothing about the waste-to-energy possibility.

    In framing his own policy on environment, Sanwo-Olu says he draws inspiration from the sort of audacity behind the Bill Gates Initiative in the United States turning human faeces to drinkable water. It may sound crazy; but Gates’ idea is already being viewed in enlightened circles as the future’s more sustainable way to fix waste disposal as well as quench man’s natural thirst for water.

    Well, for now, I am sure Lagosians are more keen about hygienic environment before considering such outlandish invitation to sample Gates’ “treated water”.

    In the main, Sanwo-Olu looks beyond present utility of an efficient collection and disposal mechanism in Lagos. Indeed, a more sustainable containment strategy for the future trasnscends the tokenism of mere acquisition of more compactors or expanding the capacity at the dump-sites.

    There is, therefore, a lot of sense in Sanwo-Olu’s seeking to inculcate a new culture of sorting waste at the primary generation points. Experiment has proved that once garbage is sorted, the cost of eventual conversion in the value chain is cut by almost half.

    In the circumstance, the smart investor will then need no further prompting to know where to put money to make profit on a sustainable basis. That way, waste becomes a goldmine. Insofar man continues to draw oxygen and live, he certainly will never stop generating waste.

    Ultimately, this surely is the way to go since it guarantees cost-recovery, thereby relieving the government the current burden of heavily subsidizing waste management. Again, such prescription is consistent with the new thinking in sustainable environment management integrating three key pillars: people, planet and profit.

     

  • Lagos goes orange to stop violence against women, girls

    The Lagos State Ministry of Justice and Office of the Public Defender (OPD) marked the International Day on Elimination of Violence Against Women and Girls last weekend in Lagos. ROBERT EGBE and RASAQ IBRAHIM report that the event, with the theme Orange The World. #HearMeToo, affirmed the state’s commitment to tackling gender-based violence.

    Kikelomo  Woleosho was seven years old when her neighbour, ‘Uncle Deji’ introduced her to a new version of children’s role playing game, Mummy and daddy.

    But this version, involved the innocent child playing Uncle Deji’s real life secret bed partner.

    Woleosho, now 31, narrated her ordeal as a survivor of domestic violence during the 2018 United Nations’ 16 days activism for the International Day on Elimination of Violence Against Women and Girls, organised last Friday by the Lagos State Office of the Public Defender (OPD).

    She said: “My childhood was stolen from me at seven years when my neighbour, uncle Deji raped me under the pretext of ‘mummy and daddy play.

    “And from that day forward, I began to masturbate and it started with an unbearable urge to fondle my genitals.

    “Several other nights my uncle who came to visit us would roam my body with his hand, particularly my thighs and pubic area.”

    Woleosho told the shocked audience that the incident continued, when her aunt’s husband joined in.

     

    “Orange The World.#HearMeToo”

     

    Woleosho’s story was not much different to that of other survivors of sexual and domestic violence who narrated their experiences at the event organised by the Office of the Public Defender in collaboration with the Lagos State Ministry of Justice.

    The programme themed, “Orange The World #HearMeToo” was organised to raise awareness and highlight the scale and true nature of the Violence against women and girls (VAWG).

    But, according to Lagos State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr Adeniji Kazeem SAN, the state was prepared to give everything to eliminate the scourge.

    Kazeem said there would be justice for all survivors who came forward, irrespective of social class, economic status, gender and religion.

     

    ‘Free legal services to over 1,059

    survivors of domestic violence’

     

    Lagos, the AG said, had recorded huge success in its bid to offer free legal services to the less privileged with a special focus on the socio economic rights of women, children and persons with disability.

    He said between January and September, the OPD gave free legal services to over 1,059 survivors of domestic Violence.

    He explained that the services ranged from obtaining restraining orders against perpetrators, making reports to the police with a view to ensuring arrests and prosecution of the offenders, filing for divorce and giving psychosocial support to the survivors.

     

    ‘Culture of silence’

     

    According to Kazeem, violence against women and girls “is one of the most widespread and devastating human right abuses across the globe.

    “One of the biggest challenges to ending violence against women is the absurd and repugnant culture of silence.”

    He said the government had “put substantial measures in place to ensure that violence against women and girls is brought to an end once and for all.”

    He listed some of these measures to include the enactment of Domestic Violence Law, 2007 (which is currently undergoing some review), to protect the rights of Survivors of domestic violence”.

    Kazeem said: “The Family Courts and Sexual Offences Courts have been established for speedy dispensation of justice for survivors of Domestic Violence.

    “And there has been an increase in the number of convictions in these courts.

    “The state has taken pragmatic action by raising the bar with effective campaign awareness across the electronic, print and social media.

    “This is geared at bringing to the fore, the forms, nature, dangers and consequences for any would be perpetrator of any act of violence against any woman in the State with the collaborative efforts of Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Team (DSVRT) which OPD is a member.”

     

    Challenges

     

    Kazeem lamented that one major challenge hampering the fight against domestic violence is that ‘influential members of the society are encouraging these horrendous acts of violence by pleading on behalf of the perpetrators of domestic and sexual offences.”

     

    “Causes, consequences of gender inequality”

     

    OPD Director, Mrs Olayinka Adeyemi, said the United Nations’ (UN) international Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women “is a day set for Governments, Government agencies, International organizations and non-governmental organizations to raise public awareness of violence against women.

    “It has been observed on November 25 each year since 2000. Like previous editions, the date marks the launch of 16 days of activism that will conclude on 10 December 2018, International Human Rights Day.”

    Adeyemi lamented that there were “deep rooted social norms, attitudes and behaviour that discriminate against and limit women and girls in the society” and that these “were all causes and consequences of gender inequality.”

    She said gender based violence affects families, schools and workplaces and holds back society from reaching its full potential.

    The Director added: “Beyond raising awareness, we at the Office of the Public Defender are always constantly looking into new ways to promptly and urgently address gender based issues and crime that affect women and girls as they are reported to the Office.

    “As part of the initiative to bring violence against women and children to the barest minimum, the Office recently set up a Family and Child Justice Unit that specializes in representation for women and children in civil and criminal cases that involves them with the sole aim of ensuring the protection of their socio-economic rights.

     

    ‘Collaborate, speak out’

     

    Adeyemi observed that there had been a spike in recent years in the number of these crimes recorded by the police, the DSVRT and the Office of the Public Defender as a result of multi agencies collaboration.

    She urged stakeholders to step up the collaboration.

    “To do this we need to make tackling violence against women and girls everybody‘s business. From health providers, to law enforcement, to employers, social media, friends and family we all need to play our part.

    “By allowing women to disclose violence as part of their everyday interactions we can support earlier identification and intervention to stop violence and abuse from escalating to critical levels.

    “By improving confidence in the criminal justice system we will be able to bring more perpetrators to justice as well as doing more to rehabilitate offenders

    “One of the biggest challenge to ending violence against women is the absurd and repugnant culture of silence. In recent time women are struggling speak out. Hence I am charging everybody present here today whether man or woman to ensure that they speak out against any violence against any girl or woman and to also remind us that the law has made us mandatory reporters hence we are obligated as residents of this State to report any form of violence.

    “No woman should have to live in fear of violence. No man should think it acceptable to perpetrate violence against women. No child should grow up in a home where violence is an everyday occurrence. Working together we can make that a reality in Lagos State.

     

    Advice for parents

     

    Woleosho noted that she experienced such ordeals because of lack of parental responsibility and care.

    She advised that children shouldn’t be left unsupervised, regardless of how busy they are, parents should find a way to create space for their children to thrive under close supervision.

    Assistant Commissioner of Police, Olasoji Akinbayo, of the Area D Command, Lagos, pledged that the Police would collaborate with other stakeholders to curtail gender based violence.

    He said that men and women need to be sensitised on the consequences of gender based violence and “the government should enact enabling laws to minimise domestic violence.”

     

     

  • ‘Lagos in tune with HIV/AIDS fight’

    As the world took stock of the progress made in the fight against HIV on World AIDS Day, the Lagos State AIDS Control Agency (LASACA) has assured it will do its best to attain the Vision 90:90:90.

    According to  LASACA CEO,  Dr Oluseyi Temowo, the state is unrelenting in ensuring that all people get screened, all that turns positive get treatment, and HIV transmission in any positive person remains insignificant across the state. He stated this at the conclusion of an HIV/ AIDS Awareness Walk organised by LASACA.It is in demonstration of its commitment towards public enlightenment and other things that can help in eradicating HIV/AIDs that LSACA held a walk from the Ikeja  Local  Government  through Awolowo Way under Bridge, and terminated at the Old Secretariat.

    Staff and other participants used the event to distribute male and female condoms, IEC (information, education and communication) materials, and campaign for all and sundry to screen for the virus, and if negative stay safe, and if positive to access free treatment. And if on treatment, they are advised not to disrupt same.

    At the event, the United States disclosed that Nigeria may be closer to achieving HIV epidemic control than previously thought.Citing data from the National AIDS Indicator and Impact Survey released last week, Public Affairs Officer at the U.S. Consulate  General, Lagos, Mr. RussellBrooks, said the survey indicates that the majority of Nigerians who report being on HIV treatment have suppressed their viral replication, allowing them to thrive and not transmit the virus.

    “PEPFAR,  the U.S.  President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, in partnership with the government and people of Nigeria, has prevented millions of Nigerians from being infected by and dying from HIV. In Nigeria alone, we have invested more than $5 billion in the national HIV/AIDS response,” Brooks stated.

    “In 2018, PEPFAR provided life-saving HIV treatment to over 800,000 Nigerian men, women, and children living with HIV. Approximately 7.4 million Nigerians have received HIV counseling and testing services; more than 1.6 million pregnant Nigerian women were tested for HIV; and more than 1.2 million orphans  and vulnerable children received care and support services” he added.

    PEPFAR was established in 2003 and this year marks the 15th anniversary. It supports Nigeria in the critical areas of policy development, human capacity development and the improvement of health infrastructure, including the provision of state-of-the art laboratories and pharmaceutical warehouses. Over the last three decades, the U. S Government, through PEPFAR and other interventions, has contributed to bringing the HIV/AIDS pandemic from crisis toward control, with AIDS-related deaths falling globally by 50 percent since 2005 and the number of new HIV infections being reduced by 47 percent since 1996.

  • Ambode: Lagos got nothing from PDP’s 16-year presidency

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode yesterday took a swipe at the 16 years of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on the nation’s drivers’ seat.

    He said the period between 1999 and 2015 under PDP’ watch amounted to nothing for Lagos, Nigeria’s economic capital.

    Ambode spoke at the National Consultative Forum of the National Committee of Buhari Support Groups (BSG) at Nicon Luxury Hotels in Abuja.

    The BSG is the coordinating body of all groups campaigning for President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo’s re-election next year.

    The governor said Nigerians, having crossed the Red Sea, would not go back to Egypt by bringing PDP back to power.

    He said that the APC was able to lay a solid foundation for economic growth and prosperity within three and half years of assuming power 2015.

    Ambode described the Buhari/Osinbajo ticket as the best option to take Nigeria to the next level and loftier heights from next year.

    The governor said: “Sixteen years of PDP, I can say it clearly that Lagos State never enjoyed anything from them. Three and half years of APC, I can clearly attest here that whatever it is that we have achieved in Lagos in the last three and half years, the present Federal Government has largely contributed to the things that we have achieved be it in terms of right of way, be it in terms of approval for waivers for import duties and other things that have actually made Lagos to be on the progressive trajectory that it had been in the last twenty years.

    “So, for me, it is very easy and it is just common sense that we have to uphold the Buhari/Osinbajo ticket to allow that economic progress and the growth in the GDP that we want for Nigeria rather than allowing it to get dismantled and then make us to go back to Egypt after crossing the Red Sea and we are not going back to Egypt.”

    He said since assuming office in 2015, the Buhari administration had worked tirelessly to bring about fundamental paradigm shift and returning the country to the part of progress.

    “The onus”, he noted, “is now on the entire country to give the APC a chance to consolidate on the massive development already embarked upon.

    “I just want Nigerians to understand and also to encourage all our members here that what we have started as a support group coordinating everything that is happening is not necessarily for you but it is a selfless service to put Nigeria on that trajectory that grows prosperity and also conveniently in another four years, we would make all Nigerians proud and I am very proud to be part of this.

    “We have made up our mind that we are going to work tirelessly; we would do everything that is possible in terms of supporting and campaigning to let Nigerians understand that there are two parallel lines between what we stand to offer which is growth and prosperity for this country and what PDP is trying to come and re-engineer to take us back to the debris of the past that we don’t want to ever go back to.

    “So, I just want to congratulate Mr. President, Muhammadu Buhari and also the Vice President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo and assure them that when they look at their back, they have true Nigerians who believe that yes, we want to build a skyscraper but we need solid foundation to be able to enjoy that skyscraper and then the next level we are thinking on is to be able to put the proper aesthetics and lay the proper foundation to allow Nigeria to make progress and that is what the Buhari/Osinbajo ticket speaks about.”

    Besides, the governor said it was also gratifying that all APC governors were united in ensuring victory for APC in the forthcoming presidential and other elections.

    “All APC Governors, I can speak on their behalf, are resolved that the Buhari/Osinbajo ticket is what Nigeria needs and that is what we are going to pursue and I am happy that a handful of our gubernatorial candidates are here to align with us to make sure that what we would deliver is what Nigerians want and what Nigerians want is the APC President.” Ambode said.

  • Lagos boosts entrepreneurs’ capacities on non-oil exports

    Lagos State is one of the nation’s success stories in non-oil exports as key components of economic diversification. Its Ministry of Wealth Creation and Employment has held a workshop to expose entrepreneurs to export opportunities, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    Oil exports have weathered many storms in the last five years as prices keep falling and rising, causing disruptions to revenue projections.

    To address this, the Federal Government has implemented reforms and pursued economic diversification to cope with the changing dynamics in the global energy market. These include raising revenue from new sources amid uncertainties over the pace of oil demand.

    Following this, non–oil exports, taken through Lagos ports annually is worth more than $10 billion, highlighting their importance to economic growth.  Encouragingly, non-oil exports have been growing in recent years, though oil still makes up a significant majority of the country’s external sales.

    Lagos State wants more activities within the sector and is ready to support internationally-engaged businesses and entrepreneurs to reap the rewards of trading with global customers.

    To stimulate the growth of non-oil exports, the state has started a campaign to promote non-oil products.

    However, big companies have continued to dominate the export industry as a few small and medium enterprises (SMEs) participate in export business.

    Addressing a workshop on Non-Oil Export in Alimosho, Ikeja, Commissioner for Wealth Creation and Employment Mrs Uzamat Akinbile-Yussuf urged owners of small businesses to embrace the export platforms being created for them by the state to increase patronage for their products and services, saying efforts were on to support small business owners to export their products.

    The government, she said, is conscious of the need to diversify the economy, create jobs and increase foreign earning.

    By diversifying the economy, she said the government will be able to tap export earnings from value-added and manufactured products, pointing out that there are huge opportunities for entrepreneurs to explore in the non-oil exports.

    To achieve this, she said the state government is creating  a better business climate, including through incentives and better regulation, adding that the workshop was held to improve the value and competitiveness of non-oil exports and empower entrepreneurs with capacities to explore exports markets.

    She said as the state was driven by the desire to build its economy through economic empowerment of individuals. Creating an enabling environment for businesses to thrive and breaking limitations in non-oil export remain veritable tools to achieving this lofty goal.

    Mrs Akinbile-Yusuf urged entrepreneurs, who still view export as a slippery slope, to ignore their fears and leverage the structure created by Lagos State to build their capacity with a view to seeking external patronage for their products.

    The Commissioner assured participants that in line with its establishing mandate, the Ministry of Wealth Creation and Employment will continue to be an enabling institution that creates sustainable wealth for Lagos citizens and develop the capacity of entrepreneurs with potentials to become export champions.

    She bemoaned the age-long over-reliance on oil, stressing that “oil is not our messiah and waiting for its price to rebound in the international market is a recipe for disaster”.

    According to Akinbile-Yusuf, entrepreneurs’ exposure to exportation of their goods would increase employment and wealth creation drive of the state, urging them to leverage the viability of the social media platforms to boost sales and patronage for their businesses.

    Also speaking at the event, Senior Special Assistant to Governor Akinwumi Ambode on Wealth Creation and Employment, Mrs. Temiwunmi Tope-Banjoko, said the event was meant to build the capacity of entrepreneurs to develop an interest in goods and products exportation.

    According to the SSA, the present situation of businesses across the world demands that entrepreneurs should begin to think outside the box and explore new frontiers for their businesses.

    “As businessmen and women, operating in Lagos does not imply that you restrict or limit your operations to Lagos alone, take advantage of other states across the country and from there, you will gradually expand to some Africa countries and gain a global brand for your products,” Tope-Banjoko said.

    She also harped on registration with the appropriate regulating arm of the government like the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) and Corporate Affairs Commission, among others.

    The workshop facilitator,  who is also the Principal Consultant, Wiseplanne Consulting Ltd, Mr. Sam Omole, emphasised the need for local business owners, who are desirous of exporting their goods to foreign consumers, to follow due processes in positioning their products and making them export-worthy.

    According to him, lack of appropriate and market information about who the consumers of products are, their country of residence, their needs, philosophy and other relevant information, had limited the chances of exporting most of Nigerian products.

    Speaking on why most Nigerian products did not meet export requirements, the facilitator said  “most business owners do not pay attention to necessary details, they don’t follow due processes and structure and they do not have their businesses registered”.

  • Illegal possession of firearms: Court frees Small Doctor

    … Bounded to be of good behavior for one year

     

    An Ebute Metta Chief Magistrates’ Court Tuesday released hip pop musician, Temitope Adekunle, a.k.a. Small Doctor and three of his band members on a bail bond of N5 million each.

    Chief Magistrate (Mrs)  A. O. Komolafe who granted bail to the musicians also bounded them for one year “, not to engage, recruit, instigate or incite any member of the Shogunle community and Lagos State by extension, to cause breach of public peace or disturb peace within or outside the community.”

    Co-defendants in the suit filed by the Police against the musicians are Dare Osho, Sanusi Lateef and Hussein Darego.

    Chief Magistrate Komolafe gave the orders while ruling in a motion exparte brought before the court by the Police from the State Criminal Intelligence and Investigation Department (SCIID), Panti-Yaba, Lagos against the defendants.

    In the suit marked 3564/2018, the Police had prayed the court for a bidding order against “Small Doctor” and co-defendants.

    The application was supported with a seven-paragraph affidavit deposed to by Inspector Kasali Saturani.

    Saturani had stated in the affidavit that the defendants were allegedly found in possession of a double barrel pistol at Shogunle area of the state.

    The musician was represented during proceedings Tuesday by his counsel, Mr. Yakubu Eleto, while Akeem Shittu represented others.

    Prosecuting Police officer, Cyril Ajifor, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), while arguing the application, had prayed the court for an order requiring ‘Small Doctor” and other defendants to execute or enter into a recognizance with sureties to keep the peace in Shogunle and its environs of Lagos, for a period of one year.

    Ajifor also asked the court for an order that the defendants, “should not engage, recruit, instigate or incite any member of the community to cause breach of public peace or disturb peace within or outside the community” for same period.

    He had also asked for other orders as the court may deem fit.

    ASP Ajifor told the court that the order sought against the musicians was predicated on three grounds and a written address stating reasons why the court should grant the application.

    Upon hearing from the police lawyer, Chief Magistrate Komolafe granted all the orders as sought by the Police in their motion exparte.

  • Residents arrest suspected armed robber with toy gun in Lagos

    A suspected armed robber who attempted to rob a business woman in front of her house at Ojota, Lagos, was arrested by residents of the street after the woman raised alarm.

    Witnesses told our reporters that the incident happened on Friday night at Olabisi Street, Ojota, at about 8. 30 p.m. while the victim was about entering her house.

    The suspect brought out his toy gun and pointed to the woman as she opened the door of her car and carried her baby.

    The victim (name withheld), who also spoke with our reporters, said as she was coming out from her car, she discovered strange face standing before her.

    “As I carried my baby, the suspect brought out gun and warned me not to shout, but I screamed Jesus repeatedly, he tried to closed my mouth and pressed my throat, the gun fell from his hand.

    “When I looked at it on the ground, it was a toy gun. As I screamed louder, the gate man in my house rushed out and the Armed robber ran away. The gate man pursued him, shouting to attract the residents attention.

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    ”While the gate man was shouting thief thief, the suspect was also shouting thief thief while running to escape. The main gate of the street was already locked, the residents captured him before the final gate, “ she said.

    Before the police operatives from Ogudu division arrived, the residents were able to trace the suspect’s Jack knife that he threw away while running to escape, and the toy gun.

    It was learnt that the police came at about 9 p.m. and took the suspect, the knife and toy gun to Ogudu police station, while the victim and a member of the Street Association, Mr Victor Akhimien went to the station for statements.

    The police spokesman in Lagos State, CSP Chike Oti,confirmed the arrest, stressing that the suspect would be charged to court on Dec. 3 for armed robbery.

     

    NAN

  • Four sales reps face N15m theft charge

    Four sales representatives on Friday appeared before a Tinubu Magistrates’ Court, Lagos, over alleged theft of N15 million from their employer’s interior decoration store

    The accused – Afeez Adebayo, 30; Afeez Abdullahi, 30; David Ajayi, 43; and Nkiruka Chinedu, 35 – are facing a two-count of conspiracy and theft to which they pleaded not guilty.

    According to the prosecutor, Insp. Ben Ekundayo, the accused committed the offences from January 2017 to October 2018 on Holloway Street, Lagos Island.

    Ekundayo said that the accused sold some items from the store but failed to remit the money to their employer, Mrs Folashade Tokunbo-Esan.

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    He listed the items to include flower vases, storage boxes, pillows, chairs, clocks and mirrors. Ekundayo said that the complainant, Tokunbo-Esan,   discovered the theft when during stock-taking.

    “She reported the case to the police, and the accused were arrested for questioning,” he said. The alleged offences contravene Sections 287 (7) and 411 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    The Magistrate, Mrs A.M. Olumide-Fusika, granted the accused bail in the sum of N2 million each with two sureties each in like sum.

    Olumide-Fusika ordered that one of the sureties should be a relative of the accused and the other, a civil servant.

    The case was adjourned until Dec. 10 for trial.

     

    (NAN)