Tag: Lagos Assembly

  • Lagos Assembly calls for strict action against open defecation

    Lagos Assembly calls for strict action against open defecation

    The Lagos State House of Assembly has called for stricter measures against open defecation and homelessness.

    The lawmakers urged the Ministry of Environment and Water Resources to fully enforce environmental laws prohibiting open defecation and ensure the widespread availability of free public toilets across the state.

    They also commended the Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources, Tokunbo Wahab, for his commitment to maintaining a cleaner Lagos.

    Read Also: Offering didn’t buy our first aircraft, God bought it – Bishop David Oyedepo

    Raising the matter under Urgent Public Importance, Hon. Stephen Ogundipe, (Oshodi-Isolo1) warned that open defecation tarnishes Lagos’ reputation and hampers sustainable development.

    Speaker Rt. Hon. Mojisola Lasbat Meranda strongly condemned the practice, stressing the urgent need for improved sanitation infrastructure.

    Hon. Bonu Solomon, representing (Badagry 1) advocated for the arrest of homeless individuals contributing to the sanitation crisis and urged local government chairmen to support state efforts in maintaining cleanliness.

    Hon. Gbolahan Yishawu, representing (Eti-Osa1) proposed the introduction of affordable public toilets across the state as a solution to the issue while Hon. Femi Saheed, representing (Kosofe 2) called for clear policies to ensure the proper management of public sanitation facilities.

    Linking waste accumulation to open defecation, Hon. Aro Moshood, (Ikorodu 2) emphasized the need for stricter waste management measures, particularly in market areas like Mile 12.

    The Assembly however resolved to intensify public awareness campaigns and collaborate with private sector stakeholders to fund sanitation initiatives across Lagos.

  • Lagos Assembly raises seven-man panel to investigate N24b Light-Up project

    Lagos Assembly raises seven-man panel to investigate N24b Light-Up project

    Lagos State House of Assembly has called on Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu to speed up the implementation of the Light-Up project.

    The house has set up a seven-member ad hoc committee to investigate the N24b Light-Up project initiated by the state government.

    The project aims to deploy street-lighting infrastructure across the state.

    Olumoh Saad representing Ajeromi Ifelodun Constituency 1, who presented the issue during plenary session yesterday under Matter of Urgent Public Importance, expressed concern about the poorly lit streets in Lagos.

    The lawmaker urged the governor to expedite the award of contracts for the streetlights project, as outlined in the 2025 budget.

    Read Also: Rethinking the Lagos Assembly impasse

    He implored the governor to direct the Commissioner for Energy and Natural Resources to ensure existing streetlights are functional, as budgetary provisions have been made for their maintenance.

    He also called on local government chairmen to fulfil their constitutional duty by providing streetlights on local government roads.

    Olumoh emphasised the urgency of the matter, citing the negative impact of poorly lit streets on security and welfare, while highlighting the need to explore alternative energy sources such as solar power, which has been successfully implemented on the Third Mainland Bridge by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    He said:” Lagosians are complaining that since the streetlights are not functioning, we need to be up and running and do something about it. We are also mindful of the fact that we need to explore other alternatives for sourcing energy, especially on this streetlight issue.”

  • Lagos Assembly announces standing committee chairmen

    Lagos Assembly announces standing committee chairmen

    Lagos Assembly has announced the chairmen of its standing committees. 

    Speaker Mojisola Meranda made the announcement during Monday’s plenary session.

    The newly appointed committee chairmen are: Hon. Temitope Adewale (Business and Rules Committee); Hon. Richard Kasumu (Legislative Compliance Committee); Hon. Setonji    David (Ethics, Protocol and Privileges Committee); Hon.Surajudeen Tijani (House Services Committee) and Hon. Stephen Ogundipe (Information, Strategy and Security Committee).

    Read Also: Rethinking the Lagos Assembly impasse

    This announcement comes after the House dissolved its standing committees and set up a selection committee to choose new committee members.

  • Rethinking the Lagos Assembly impasse

    Rethinking the Lagos Assembly impasse

    The January 13, 2025 removal of the Lagos State House of Assembly speaker, Mudashiru Obasa, came out of the blue. He was on holidays when the putsch took place. On his return, he has quibbled about the legality and semantics of the removal, insisting that during and immediately after the process some people used the words removal and impeachment interchangeably to describe what was done to him. It is true that some reports described his removal as impeachment, but it is equally true that the Assembly described his ouster as removal. Regardless of his book knowledge or his conviction, there is no semantic stalemate regarding his removal. His colleagues, all 32 of them out of 40, knew what to call the process that led to his exit, and they are comfortable and adamant about it. They deserve the support of everyone.

    There are indications that in one form or the other the Governance (or Governor’s) Advisory Council (GAC) was involved in the removal, perhaps even sanctioning it. The Council may be an extra-constitutional body, but it has remained influential since it was set up under the Bola Tinubu governorship. Soon after Hon. Obasa was unhorsed, his successor, Mojisola Meranda, visited the GAC and received their blessing. Their assent as well as the visit should have been more nuanced, lest many analysts begin to squirm over the role of the Council, even believing erroneously that it was behind the putsch. But since the mistake was made, both the GAC and the Assembly have battled to sustain the action the state’s lawmakers took against Mr Obasa. It has turned out that a few members of the GAC, perhaps three or four out of about 24 have balked at the former speaker’s removal, but regardless of the stridency of their voices and protests, they have been unable to give traction to their reservations. There are speculations about All Progressives Congress (APC) hierarchs wanting to return Mr Obasa to his seat, but no one is sure the rumours are not just amateur name-dropping or red herring.

    The procedure adopted by the lawmakers to remove Hon. Obasa was democratic. His removal over alleged financial misappropriation, misconduct, and high-handedness cannot be downplayed. Indeed, the lawmakers could even remove him if they happened to take a dislike to him at any time and at any point. It is unclear what role the GAC played in the removal beyond merely assenting it. If the party and its hierarchs begin to nitpick over such removals, ignoring the sensibilities of the lawmakers, and overplaying their hands, they risk alienating the rank and file. Worse, they risk becoming accessory to the many alleged misdemeanours of errant officials. Hon. Obasa was in his tenth year as speaker; he had become complacent, imperious and garrulous. For these and other reasons, his colleagues got tired of his tyranny and wanted him out. The removal may upset the political permutations of the party, but they would be courting disfavor, if not disaster, to insist on reinstating him. If the removal blindsided them, they must find intelligent and democratic ways of closing ranks and regaining control of the party and the legislature.

    Read Also: EU builds capacity of young Nigerians in governance, politics

    Hon. Obasa makes it hard for party leaders and members to defend or back him. Regardless of his misunderstanding with Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, his response to the governor’s budget presentation on November 21 exhibited poor judgement and a lack of grace and understanding. He was not only mortifyingly indecorous, he was also bombastic and boastful. How he managed to hold down the speakership position for so long must remain a mystery. It is uncertain whether party leaders looked deeper than the surface of his leadership; but the near unanimity of opinion against him by most of his colleagues, past and present, speaks to the poor choice they made of him when they first elected him speaker nearly 10 years ago. It is possible the GAC had been uncomfortable with him for some time, perhaps after recognising his limitations; but they were probably too noble to force the matter. His colleagues, therefore, had to endure him.

    The GAC and the party must now move beyond Hon. Obasa. Their speakership choices have not always been flawless, as evidenced by their election and sustenance of the former speaker. It is, however, time for them to begin seeking ways to match the election of their legislative officials with a clear vision, in fact grander vision, of the dizzying heights where they hope to take and put Lagos. If their vision of Lagos remains lackluster and pedestrian, then they could continue electing principal officers who cannot transcend the ordinariness of their collective aspirations. Lagos has attracted an incredible influx of people from other parts of the country, many of them young but ethically unmoored. The state, therefore, needs men and women in key positions who can think fast and loftily on behalf of the state, without sacrificing the interests of the indigenes. So far, Lagos has not quite transcended its amorphousness; and Hon. Obasa was simply incapably of embodying the hopes and aspirations of a new, bigger, more modern, and cosmopolitan megacity.

    It is disturbing that the GAC and the party have hemmed and hawed over a fairly straightforward matter. Mr Sanwo-Olu himself has kept discretely silent so as not to be accused of having a hand in the removal of his combative nemesis. The problem with Hon. Obasa, however, is not just his politics, as fairly ineffective as that was, nor even his serial indiscretions, as mortifying as they were, nor yet his mistreatment of his colleagues, which was enough to earn him a place in the guillotine, nor even the suspicion that his successor could be overwhelmed by the speaker’s office. What ailed the former speaker so profoundly is what all these damning attributes say of his person and his judgement, in short what they say of his lack of leadership character. That cannot be remedied by any reinstatement, no matter how temporary it is designed to give him a soft landing. And from all indications, given his age and the level he has attained in politics, not to talk of the undignified and ignoble way he has handled his removal, it would be a mistake to give him any kind considerations when he does not even know what that means.

  • Lagos Assembly: Obasa’s removal followed due process – Ex-lawmaker Jimoh

    Lagos Assembly: Obasa’s removal followed due process – Ex-lawmaker Jimoh

    Former Deputy Majority Leader of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Olumuyiwa Jimoh, has cast doubt on former Speaker Mudashiru Obasa’s legal acumen and understanding of government processes following his removal from office. 

    In an interview with Channels TV, Jimoh dismissed Obasa’s claims that his removal did not follow due process, arguing that more than two-thirds of the House supported the decision, making it legally valid. 

    Citing Section 92, Subsection 2 of the Nigerian Constitution, Jimoh explained that the removal of a Speaker or Deputy Speaker is carried out through a resolution passed by a two-thirds majority of the House of Assembly members. 

    “You can understand his predicament,” Jimoh said. “Someone who has enjoyed the benefits and privileges of office for 10 years suddenly loses everything. It’s like he’s contemplating political suicide by making baseless claims.” 

    Jimoh further stated that Obasa’s removal was based on serious allegations, including financial misappropriation, disregard for merit and tradition, and high-handedness toward fellow lawmakers who had initially supported his leadership. 

    Questioning Obasa’s legal competence, Jimoh remarked, “He claims to be a lawyer, but I wouldn’t trust him with a legal case. His argument about due process is flawed—due process was followed, as more than two-thirds of members supported his removal.” 

    Jimoh also clarified that the process of removing a Speaker differs from that of a Governor, stating that Obasa misunderstood the constitutional provisions.

    “Section 92, Subsection 2 of the Constitution is clear—you can be the Speaker in the morning and lose your position by afternoon if your colleagues decide so.”

    He added: “You can understand his predicament, his predicament is that someone who has been in office for the past 10 years, and suddenly all those benefits and privileges have been withdrawn, so he feels like committing suicide.

    Read Also: Obasa absent as new Lagos Assembly Speaker moves into office

    “He’s committing suicide in the sense that the point is making is out of point, the removal of the speaker is only by two-thirds of the majority of the honourable members and they’re more than two-thirds, and the allegations were itemized and characterized by financial misappropriation, no respect for merit and tradition of the house and high-handedness of colleagues who made you speaker.

    “It is these people that have the right, prerogative, and authority, to remove you, which they’re more than two-thirds.

    “Obasa claims to be a lawyer, which I don’t believe in a lawyer that I can’t give a case to litigate for me as a person. He claimed that it was not due process, what due process do you need to remove a speaker, due process is done since two-thirds of the honourable members, more than two-thirds.

    “The erroneous impression got to his head that the removal of governor is the same method you can use to remove speaker which is not, it is stipulated in the constitution section 92, subsection 2 states it clearly. You can be the speaker in the morning and your colleague feels the cap you put on.”

  • BREAKING: I remain Lagos Assembly Speaker until due process is followed – Obasa

    BREAKING: I remain Lagos Assembly Speaker until due process is followed – Obasa

    Former Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Mudashiru Obasa, has insisted that he remains the rightful speaker of the assembly based on constitutional provisions.

    Obasa made this declaration on Saturday in Ikeja GRA during a welcome event organized in his honor by supporters from Agege, Alimosho, and Kosofe local government areas.

    Read Also: Obasa versus Sanwo-Olu: Lessons in leadership

    The Nation reports that Obasa was removed from office by his colleagues in the House over allegations of gross misconduct and financial mismanagement.

    Addressing his removal, Obasa argued that the process did not follow constitutional procedures. 

    He, however, stated that he would accept his removal if it is carried out in accordance with constitutional guidelines.

    Details shortly…

  • Lagos Assembly urges swift action against scavengers, manhole theft

    Lagos Assembly urges swift action against scavengers, manhole theft

    The Lagos State House of Assembly has called on the state government to take immediate action against scavengers and the rising cases of manhole theft, which have become a growing menace across the state.

    The call was made during a plenary session presided over by Speaker Rt. Hon. Lasbat Meranda, where lawmakers urged Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu to direct the Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources to enforce the Environmental Management Protection Law of 2017 and impose sanctions on those violating it.

    Hon. Gbolahan Yishawu, representing Eti-Osa 2 constituency, who raised the issue, highlighted the significant investments made by the government in infrastructure, including underground ducts, iron-cast manhole covers, and bridges with steel safety rails. 

    He stressed that these facilities are essential for public safety, easing traffic congestion, preventing flooding, and enhancing the overall road network in Lagos.

    “If this trend is not swiftly curtailed, the destruction of critical road infrastructure, increased road accidents due to open manholes, and blocked drainage systems leading to flooding will pose serious setbacks to the state’s development efforts,” Yishawu warned.

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    To tackle the problem, the Assembly proposed several measures, including the replacement of stolen manhole covers with composite materials such as glass-reinforced plastic, which have little resale value. 

    They also called for public awareness campaigns to educate residents on the dangers of manhole theft and encourage reporting of suspicious activities.

    Additionally, lawmakers recommended the establishment of a whistleblower program to facilitate the arrest of perpetrators and the formation of neighborhood groups to monitor and protect public infrastructure.

    The Assembly further urged law enforcement agencies to clamp down on illegal scavenging activities, arrest offenders involved in manhole theft and vandalism, and ensure they face the full force of the law.

  • APC advises new Lagos Assembly Speaker, Meranda

    APC advises new Lagos Assembly Speaker, Meranda

    The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State has advised the new Speaker of the state’s House of Assembly, Mrs Mojisola Meranda, to discharge her duties diligently and conscientiously.

    The APC Spokesman, Mr Seye Oladejo,  gave the advice in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Tuesday in Lagos.

    Oladejo urged Meranda to do her best to build confidence in the  House and meet  the expectations of the people.

    Oladejo said: “We want to congratulate the new speaker on her well deserved election.

    “She needs no reminder that she’s first among equals, hence the need to remain a team player and maintain the cohesion , confidence, mutual respect and understanding that brought her to office.

    “It is imperative to uphold and remain loyal to the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria which she swore to.

    “She must remain committed to democratic principles as regards the fulfillment of the social contract with the good people of Lagos State for which our dear party, the APC, is well known.”

    The spokesman, however, said that the party had no doubt that Meranda, the first female speaker of the House, would deliver on this mandate and make the leadership and members of APC proud.

    “As she rightly expressed on a number of occasions, a good working relationship with the executive is a prerequisite for success and in the overall interest of all and sundry,” Oladejo added.

    NAN recalls that the erstwhile speaker, Mr Mudashiru Obasa (APC-Agege 1), a sixth-term lawmaker, was removed by lawmakers on Jan. 13.

    Read Also: Sanwo-Olu to Meranda: we will work together

    Thirty-two (32) out of the 40 lawmakers, at an emergency plenary, impeached Obasa via voice votes, over alleged gross misconduct.

    The assembly subsequently elected and swore-in Deputy Speaker, Meranda (APC-Apapa I) to replace Obasa, while Mr Fatai Adebola (APC- Ibeji-Lekki I) was elected as the Deputy Speaker.

    Meanwhile, Meranda, on Monday led her team of new principal officers of the House on a courtesy visit to Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu in Ikeja.

    Meranda said the visit provided an opportunity to reaffirm the Assembly’s commitment to maintaining a harmonious working relationship with the executive arm of government.

    (NAN)

  • Lagos Assembly names new principal officers

    Lagos Assembly names new principal officers

    • New Speaker promises transparent leadership

    The Lagos State House of Assembly has named four new principal officers following the impeachment of the former Speaker, Mr. Mudashiru Obasa.

    The Speaker, Mrs. Mojisola Meranda (APC-Apapa 1), disclosed on Friday while presiding over the plenary as the new speaker.

    Obasa was impeached on Monday over alleged gross misconduct by 32 out of the 40 members.

    The Clerk of the House, Mr. Lekan Onafeko, was also suspended over alleged gross financial impropriety.

    The House also dissolved all the standing committees inaugurated by the former speaker.

    Read Also: BREAKING: Lagos Assembly elects new principal officers

    According to Meranda, the announcement of new officers results from the change of the leadership of the House.

    “The House has named Mr. Temitope Adewale (APC-Ifako-Ijaiye 1) as the new Majority Leader, while Mr Adedamola Kasunmu (APC-Ikeja 1) is the new Deputy Majority Leader.

    “This House has also named the Chief Whip, Mr. Setonjo David (APC-Badagry 2), while the Deputy Chief Whip is now Mr Babatunde Saani (APC-Kosofe 2),” she said.

    It will be recalled that before Obasa’s impeachment, Mojeed Adams was the Majority Leader, Adedamola Kasunmu was the Deputy Leader, the new Deputy Speaker, Adams, was the former Chief Whip. At the same time, Setonji David was the Deputy Chief Whip.

     Three lawmakers (Obasa, Adams, and Mr Akinsanya) were absent from the first plenary, which the new leadership presided over.

    In her speech, Meranda said she will not dwell on past controversies but focus on the pressing legislative tasks ahead.

    Meranda said this during her inaugural speech as the new speaker on Friday at the assembly’s complex in Ikeja.

    She said the House of Assembly, under her leadership, would focus more on passing bills that would ensure the people of the state enjoyed the dividends of democracy.

    The speaker said one of her priorities was to deliver better legislative service to the state’s people.

  • BREAKING: Lagos Assembly elects new principal officers

    BREAKING: Lagos Assembly elects new principal officers

    The Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Lasbat Mojisola, has announced new principal officers following the dissolution of the former committee. 

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    The new appointments are: Hon. Temitope Adedeji, representing Ifako Ijaye 1 Constituency as Majority Leader; Hon. Richard Kasumu, representing Ikeja 2 Constituency, Deputy Majority Leader;  Hon. David Setonji, representing Badagry 2 Constituency, Chief Whip and  Hon. Semiu Okanlawon, representing Kosofe Constituency 1, Deputy Chief Whip.