Tag: Lagos govt

  • Lagos govt. to ensure justice for girl allegedly defiled by cop

    Lagos govt. to ensure justice for girl allegedly defiled by cop

    The Lagos State Domestic and Sexual Violence Agency (DSVA) says it will follow to the end and ensure justice for the 17-year-old girl allegedly defiled by a police officer at Ogudu Police Station.

    The agency’s spokesperson, Mrs Joke Ladenegan- Oginni,  stated this in a post shared on its X handle at @LSdsva on Wednesday.

    “The agency was notified of a distressing incident involving a police officer who was alleged to have defiled a child in a police station.

    “Upon receiving the report, the DSVA immediately facilitated the necessary referrals for comprehensive medical and psychosocial support, which were promptly provided to the survivor.

    “This matter was immediately escalated to the Gender Desk Department of the Lagos State Police Command, ” she said.

    Ladenegan-Oginni said that a painstaking investigation was ongoing into the matter.

    “We wish to assure the public that a meticulous investigation is currently underway.

    “We trust in the leadership of the Lagos State Police Command to conduct a thorough and transparent investigation into this incident.

    “We believe that this is crucial in maintaining public trust.

    “We reiterate the Lagos State Government’s Zero-Tolerance Policy for all forms of domestic and sexual violence and reaffirm our dedication to protecting the rights and dignity of all survivors, ” she said.

    Ladenegan- Oginni appealed to the public to report any case of domestic and sexual violence to its toll-free line on 08000-333-333 or via direct message on its social media platforms @lagosdsva.

    Read Also: Residents to Lagos govt: fix our collapsed bridge

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) had earlier reported that the senior officer allegedly defiled the teenager at the Area H Command, Ogudu.

    The girl was sexually assaulted while trying to recover her phone which was stolen by some suspected criminals.

    The officer, who offered to help the girl retrieve her phone, tricked her to the station on pretext that the phone had been recovered and the thief arrested.

    It was reported that when she arrived at his office, he allegedly forcefully had sexual intercouse with her at gun point.

    (NAN)

  • Residents to Lagos govt: fix our collapsed bridge

    Residents to Lagos govt: fix our collapsed bridge

    Residents of the Amje/Estaport community, Lagos State have appealed to Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu to address the collapse of the community’s bridge.

    In a statement, the Community Development Association (CDA) Secretary, Oredola Adeola, expressed frustration and concern over the severe neglect of critical infrastructure in their area.

    Read Also: Chima Udoye gets N30m as Nigerian Idol season 9 winner

    Adeola expressed regret that two months after the bridge collapsed on Olakunle Ojo Street in Agbado/Oke-Odo LCDA, the structure remains hazardous.

  • Lagos govt, stakeholders dialogue on path to clean air in Africa

    Lagos govt, stakeholders dialogue on path to clean air in Africa

    To combat the escalating impact of air pollution across Africa, government officials and stakeholders from various parts of the globe have convened in Lagos to seek lasting solutions to the problem.

    The ongoing four-day CLEAN-Air Forum Lagos 2024, organized by the Lagos State government in collaboration with AirQo, is centred on this goal.

    The policy forum has drawn 80 policymakers from diverse African cities and countries and is structured around four primary objectives.

    Dr. Tunde Ajayi, the General Manager of the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency (LASEPA), emphasized the necessity of strategic partnerships to ensure cleaner air during his address at the opening ceremony.

    He highlighted that the forum underscores the collective efforts and collaborations aimed at addressing air pollution, reaffirming LASEPA’s dedication to combating this environmental challenge.

    In his speech titled: “Advancing collaborations and multi-regional partnerships for clean air actions in African cities,” Ajayi said that the forum is to bring all African cities together to discuss how we can make air in Lagos, Nigeria and in Africa generally cleaner.

    Ajayi said that the forum calls for more consciousness for advocacy, adding that there is a need for transparency and agreement to include more people to drive the agenda of clean air further.

    He added that Lagos State “is also making commitments to ensure that we measure the quality of our air and we are also able to regulate that which will cause us pollution.”

    The event, which saw participants from across 34 countries in Africa, Asia, academia, researchers, and government partners, had 256 registered participants, was to map out the policy landscape across the continent, as they affirmed that data needs to advance evidence-informed policy development for quality management.

    Responding to questions on how Lagos accesses the level of pollution in the state, Ajayi said: “We are addressing each of the causes of pollution in several areas. For example, in Bariga, we are building a team for the women to tackle pollution because of their fish-smoking trade.

    “In several other areas like Ikorodu, we are insisting that organisations and industries install pollution abatement plants.

    “In other areas in Lagos, we ensure that people reduce the amount of pollution they emit into the system. We also stop open burning in many communities, we ensure that their waste is properly disposed of in a more controlled way and we hand solid waste to LAWMA and ensure that they are properly disposed.”

    He said that the state has put in a lot of actions through publicity, sensitisation and awareness creation, as well as ensuring that they shut down agencies that have refused to install pollution abatement plants. For instance, several times, you see in the media that a lot of companies have been shut down primarily due to air pollution.

    Also, Founder of Airqo, Prof. Bainomugisha of Makerere University, Uganda, said that there is a need for collaborative efforts to fight pollution as air quality affects the quality of lives in all our cities in Africa.

    Bainomugisha said that in Africa, several strategies can be done to be able to achieve better clean air.

    The first strategy, the Ugandan don said, is an investment in air quality monitoring, adding, “This is what Airqo is building on, manufacturing low-cost air quality monitors to enable African cities to be able to monitor air quality. If all cities in Africa can monitor air quality, we can scale the magnitude of air pollution and other actions can follow.”

    Bainomugisha said that several actions that can follow are investment in the sectors that are considered to be key drivers in air pollution, sectors like transport, and investment in the mass transit systems to reduce the number of vehicles on our roads while ensuring that our roads are safe.

    He added that the other investment is in the waste management sector “because we know that if waste is not properly managed, it ends up in the air, resulting in air pollution. “Ultimately, we need to know that air pollution ends up in our lungs and causes a lot of illnesses.”

    The other one is education and awareness, we need to raise awareness among different stakeholders to increase the priority on addressing air pollution.

    He added: “The public needs to know the importance of air quality and also begin to demand actions from the government in improving air quality.

    “Most importantly, knowing what they can do as part of action to improve air quality. If you are a citizen and your vehicle is not properly serviced, you are contributing to air pollution, if you are not disposing of your waste properly, you are contributing to air pollution.

    “We need more collective actions to bring our air quality back and at the same time, small collective action can help improve this, proper waste disposal.”

    On regulation of air quality, he noted: “We need to be able to know what are the permissible levels of air pollution in different cities, and countries so that we will be able to know whether we are progressing or not.

    “These are some of the actions to consider to improve air quality in Africa. We need to know that it is a multi-national, multi-stakeholder problem. You can’t live in one part of the country and think that you can clean up the air quality alone.

    “You must collaborate with other regions. One country cannot clean up the air quality alone, there is a need to collaborate with several other countries. That is why this forum has brought several partners and stakeholders from across the continent to see that together we can start making progress on improving air quality in the continent,” he added.

    Read Also: Lagos deficient by 30,000 medical doctors – Commissioner

    Dr. Bolajoko Malomo of the Department of Psychology, University of Lagos (UNILAG), said that Nigeria’s population is growing rapidly with much industrialisation, including an increase in the use of vehicles and vehicular movements, causing the emission of fumes.

    She said that efforts to check air pollution are ongoing in the state but a lot needs to be done. She said that the event was significant as it reawakened the consciousness of participants to the populace on the importance of environmental health.

    Lamenting that poor quality of air causes sicknesses such as cancer, and respiratory diseases, among others, because of the heavy pollution in the air, Dr. Malomo urged the press to take on the challenge of better sensitization of the public on the dangers of air pollution to human health.

    Malomo called for a collaboration from all stakeholders, urging the media, and policymakers, among others, to create awareness of the menace.

  • Epe deserves more from Lagos govt, says group

    Epe deserves more from Lagos govt, says group

    • …as new president promises development

    A non-profit social group, Club Seventies Epe, has said that the Epe Division in Lagos deserves more attention from the state government.

    Speaking at his inauguration as the new president of the club, Yusuf Yunus, called on the state government to accord the Epe Division its rightful place in the scheme of the state’s affairs.

    “We deserve more economically, politically and in terms of infrastructure. We shall use this opportunity to facilitate more development to our people,” he said.

    Assuring the club of his team’s readiness to hit the ground running, Yunus promised to lobby the administration of Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu to look in the direction of Epe Division. 

    “We shall not let the people down. We shall lobby Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s administration to look at Epe direction. We shall fulfil our mandate of making life better for the people of the division,” he said, adding that the task of reinventing, rejuvenating and promoting Epe is a collective responsibility of all.

    Yunus, who took over as the fifth president of the club, pledged that the club would continue to have footprints in different areas such as community service, projects, opportunities and youth empowerment, among others. 

    He, therefore, called on all members to join hands to actualise the dream of the founding fathers of the club.

    Describing the time as most challenging, Yunus expressed his resolve to lead and not to rule over the members, assuring that his team would consult and dialogue with the people and would never dictate to them.

    He said: “We shall reach out to all but never put down a single person for holding views contrary to our own. We are here to further mend and heal this club, not to tear and injure it.

    Read Also: Ajeromi gas explosion: Lagos govt to pay survivors’ medical bills

    “I will float committees to expand our Club’s involvement in all areas and continue the path of having all members included in at least one of the committees.”

    Vowing to prioritise members’ welfare and to follow up on members during and after meetings, the president said that he would encourage participation via committees and club events and to continue to work with all past presidents and elders of the Club to accomplish great projects.

    In his goodwill, the Otun- Balogun of Epe kingdom, Chief Wale Mogaji, urged the newly inaugurated executives to be steadfastness in steering the ship of the club to the greater heights the more.

    Describing the club as one of the best in Epe division in promoting the development of the community, Mogaji assured the club of his total support. He urged members to re-dedicate themselves towards deepening community development.

    The other newly sworn-in executives of the Club included Alagabi Gabusiu (Vice President), Sikiru Taoreed (Secretary), Gbajumo Olalekan (Assistant Social Secretary), Kadiri Rahmon (Treasurer), Moruf Shittu (Financial Secretary), Olabode Taiwo (Chief Whip), and Shonibare Olalekan (Welfare Officer).

  • 80 percent of buildings in Lekki have no approval – Lagos Govt

    80 percent of buildings in Lekki have no approval – Lagos Govt

    Lagos State Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Oluyinka Olumide, has said that 80 percent of buildings in the Ibeju Lekki-Epe have no government approval.

    In an interview with journalists, Olumide disclosed that despite the rigorous processes involved in securing government approval, developers and property owners are still circumventing due process.

    He said: “Just last week Thursday and Friday, my team and I were in the Ibeju Lekki and Epe axis and you would agree with me that anybody passing through that corridor would see a lot of estates marked. We went there, and I can tell you that from what we saw, over 80 percent of them do not have approval.

    “The procedure to get approval is first to get the planning information, as to what those areas have been zoned for. In this case, what we have is agricultural land, and people now go to their families to buy agricultural land. Of course, those lands would be sold because those families do not know the use such land would be put to.

    “The next thing to do is the fence permit. If you missed the earlier information on not knowing the area zoning, at the point of getting the fence permit, you would be able to detect what the area is zoned for. After that, the layout permits a large expense of land follows.”

    Read Also: Lagos to clear shanties from Adeniji Adele Bridge today

    “So, you can see all these layers, but people still go ahead to start advertising. Some have even gone to the extent of displaying the sizes they want to sell. Imagine someone in the diaspora who wants to send money without any knowledge.

    “Then, no approval is eventually gotten. Even if they pass the assignment and the survey to them, we would not grant the individual permit, because that area is not zoned for that purpose,” he said.

    Meanwhile, on Sunday, May 5, Lagos Commissioner for Environment, Tokunbo Wahab said owners of recently demolished property in Maryland had been served notices since 2021.

    “We are not just doing demolitions. The law allows us to remove encumbrances on the right of way of the drainage channels,” Wahab said on Channels Television.

  • Lagos govt kicks off ‘Use the Toilet Campaign’

    Lagos govt kicks off ‘Use the Toilet Campaign’

    The 2024 ‘Clean Nigeria: Use the Toilet Campaign’ kicked off yesterday at the Ojo Local Government Area. The campaign is part of strategies towards ending open defecation by 2025.

    The Lagos State government, through the Ministry of Environment and Water Resources, kicked-off the campaign during the Year 2020 World Toilet Day with a view to decentralising it in all local government areas. The campaign reached 10 councils, and the government aims to cover the remaining ten this year.

    Permanent Secretary (Environment and Water Resources) Gaji Tajudeen noted that the campaign is led by the Federal Ministry of Water Resources, and supported by UNICEF and other local and international partners. “The campaign seeks to promote the use of toilets and good hygiene practices in every community in Nigeria,” he said.

  • ‘Why Lagos govt opened amnesty window on planning permit’

    ‘Why Lagos govt opened amnesty window on planning permit’

    Lagos State Government has opened an amnesty window on planning permit, in the form of a three-month moratorium on penalties on completed buildings without planning permits across the state.

     This was contained in a statement issued yesterday by the Permanent Secretary, Office of Physical Planning, Oluwole Sotire, an engineer.

     According to the statement, property owners/ developers of existing (completed) developments without approvals can obtain their planning permits, otherwise known as building plan approvals, within the stipulated period of 2nd May to 30th July, 2024 without payment of statutory penalties that usually go with erecting buildings without approval in Lagos State.

     To access the amnesty programme, an applicant is expected to submit for assessment, through district offices of the Lagos State Physical Planning Permit Authority (LASPPPA) in the 57 local governments and local council development areas of Lagos State, and the Electronic Planning Permit (EPP) office at the LASPPPA Headquarters, Oba Akinjobi Way, and G.R.A Ikeja.

    Read Also: NEMA commiserates with Lagos govt over Dosunmu market fire

    Also, the applicant is expected to bring along his/her title document or proof of ownership, survey plan and as-built architectural drawings.

    Others are structural, electrical and mechanical drawings (where applicable),

    Non-Destructive Integrity Test Report (where applicable),

    Letter of structural stability and indemnity (where applicable),

    Land Use Planning Analysis Report, evidence of tax compliance, and other supporting documents, where applicable.

     Sotire said the amnesty programme, which is part of measures of the Lagos State Government to cushion the effect of current economic hardships on the built environment sector, also offers additional relief of five per cent discount on payments completed within 10  working days during the amnesty period.

  • Respite as Lagos govt, NPA dislodge trailer drivers on Tin-Can, Mile 2 road

    Respite as Lagos govt, NPA dislodge trailer drivers on Tin-Can, Mile 2 road

    The perennial traffic gridlock between Mile 2 and the Tin Can Island Port on Oshodi/Apapa Expressway in Lagos State has disappeared, The Nation can confirm.

    The huge relief follows a joint operation embarked upon by the government and the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) last Monday.

    Stakeholders who spoke with The Nation applauded the government and NPA for a job well done. They called for a sustainability of the joint exercise to ensure the gridlock does not return.

    Investigations revealed that motorists and commercial bus drivers now enjoy unlimited access to the Tin Can and Apapa ports from Oshodi.

    Secretary of the Lagos State Truck and Cargo Operators Committee (LASTCOC) Sanni Bala thanked the NPA and government for successfully opening the Tin-Can express road to boost businesses at the port. “NPA and Lagos State have successfully broke that jinx that makes opening of Tincan port access road look herculean. Opening Tin-Can Port access road would promote free flow of traffic, seamless evacuation of cargo, trade facilitation and ease of doing business.

    “It is our hope and prayer that the road clearance operation would be continuous to prevent re-grouping and return of extortion bandits taking advantage of gridlock to extort truckers and burgle containers in transit,” Bala said.

    Read Also; Killing of soldiers: Delta community deserted, residents flee home

    Manager of the Lagos Port Complex Manager and Chairman, Eto Project Implementation Committee, Charles Okaga, had spoken of plans by NPA and Lagos State to dislodge articulated trucks and all extortion points from the Mile 2/Tin Can Port access road.

    He said the NPA is worried that months after rehabilitation and completion of the road project, port users and motorist cannot access the port directly except by driving against traffic because of the indiscriminate parking.

    Okaga berated the activities of non-state actors and confirmed the readiness of the NPA to collaborate with the

    He said: “We have collaborated with the Lagos State government, we did some clearance of shanties and areas obstructing port movement last week on the Apapa area to Ijora side, we are moving to Mile 2 area to Tin Can Island Port by next week.

    “In the advocacy efforts in encouraging people to comply and conform, the first thing is to provide the right environment for business to thrive. If you cannot drive freely in and out of the ports, businesses cannot thrive. The pressure on the Apapa-Ijora axis is as a result of the activities of the non-state actors along the Mile 2- Tin Can axis, there are more than 20 points that trucks and truckers are meant to part with money before getting into the port.

    “In a bid to avoid these things, both Tin Can bound trucks and Apapa bound trucks now ply the Ijora corridor to reduce cost of access.”

    “Right now, there are rehabilitation works on the bridge, so the volume of traffic and pressure has increased, and because of this, there is more pains.”

  • Street gate closure: Lagos govt warns offenders

    Street gate closure: Lagos govt warns offenders

    Lagos State Government has said it will issue warrant of arrest and prosecute persons who permanently keep their  street gates shut during and after the festive period.

    The General Manager, Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA), Mr Olalekan Bakare, made this known in a statement through the Director, Public Affairs and Enlightenment Department, Mr Taofiq Adebayo, in Lagos.

    Bakare said the government had warned landlords and Community Development Associations (CDAs) to comply with regulations, directing that all interlink roads should be accessible on a daily basis across the state.

    He said non-conformity with directives on the closure of estate/street gates might lead to issuing warrant of arrest and prosecution of representatives of non-complying communities, where necessary

    Bakare said those acting contrary to street gate regulations were posing a great security threat to the government’s resolve to achieve a safe and secure environment.

    “They are advised to desist from the unwholesome acts,” he said.

    Read Also: Lagos’ dismal record in HPV vaccination

    Bakare said the policy on street gates was meant to enable easy access for residents and all road users in the state.

    He said the act of denying motorists and pedestrians access through the community gates before the stipulated time was unacceptable to the state government.

    “Traffic officers have been facing serious challenges in diverting motorists to alternative routes through nearby streets because these streets are gated.

    “The illegal closure of these gates, some of which are feeder roads to connect highways, also contributes to the activities of criminally minded individuals who indulge in dispossessing residents of their belongings.

    “The street gate closure is thereby making it difficult for security agencies to come to the rescue of victims or apprehend the perpetrators.

    “The act of partial or permanent closure of gates in violation of the regulations of the state affects businesses, encourages miscreants to take advantage of residents and get away with their belongings.

    “In case of fire outbreak, the community affected will not be easily accessible by the rescue teams,” Bakare said.

    He said activities of the affected communities had further made free vehicular movement difficult in those restricted areas where roads leading to the closed gates were inaccessible to the motoring public.

  • Farmers petition Lagos govt over harassment by land grabbers

    Farmers petition Lagos govt over harassment by land grabbers

    A Lagos based farmers’ group, Afero  Commercial Farmers, has petitioned the Lagos State government over the menace of land grabbers on their farms.

    The petition signed by the Chairman, Prince Wale Oyekoya and the Secretary, Idowu Sulyman Dalegan and addressed to the Lagos State  Commissioner for Justice and Attorney General, reads:   

    “Your honourable Sir, You will recall  that the Lagos State Government, under the governorship of his Excellency, Babatunde Fashola, with your honourable self as the Solicitor General, assigned to us some parcels of farmland at Mutako  Eluju, Mowo and Egan villages as replacements for our various farms that were taken off us by the state for the proposed Epe International Airport. We commenced our farming activities on the allocated parcels of land immediately we were issued letters of allocation while waiting for the promised CofO to be released to us.

    Read Also: FCT safe, secure, says Commissioner of Police 

    “Unfortunately, we have not been able to achieve our expected progress in putting  the land to full use  because of harassment from different groups of people. First were the Omooniles and estate developers claiming titles to the land.

    “Some of us have lost  assets and farm produce to Omooniles’ thugs while some have been taken to police stations and courts. We are sad to say here that we have reported some of these challenges to various  departments including ministeries of Agriculture, Justice, Lands, ALHA, Commerce and the office of the governor and no help has come to us from any.

    “The most frightening and intimidating lately is the coming of the military into the theater; they are also claiming title to the land. In their characteristic manner, they come in number, talking tough and threatening fire and brimstone. We are now forced to keep away from our farms for fear of physical assault.

    “We hereby appeal that you please use your good office to assist us and urgently to ward off these invaders so that we may be able to return to our farms without fears; expedite the Issuance of the promised CofO.”