Tag: lagos

  • BA treats Abuja passengers to classic lounge

    Premium passengers of British Airways (BA)  flying from Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport, Abuja, will be treated to royal reception before departure courtesy of Strong ground Delivery Services Enterprise (SDS) Lounge Services,  which has provided a world-class lounge for BA passengers.

    Unveiled in Abuja, at a ceremony graced by major stakeholders, the newly set-up Lounge is a replica of one at Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, where BA premium passengers are the treated to assorted cuisine and pleasure.

    Speaking at the cake-cutting ceremony, BA Customer Service Duty Manager ( Abuja) Mr. Jide Oladoye said BA customers deserve royal treatment. “They deserve it, and today marks a turning point for our customers, particularly our premium customers. Definitely, our passengers are going to relate with this experience. For a while now, they have been wanting great experience in our lounge.

    This is just the beginning,  because by the time we moved to the new terminal,  I’m sure we are going to even do better than what we are having here today “,said Oladoye.

    Federal Airport Authority Nigeria (FAAN) Regional Manager, Mr. Mohammed Sanni said SDS Lounge is the best of its kind.

    “This is a well-furnished, equipped lounge.

    Read also: Abuja Disco promises uninterrupted power supply in Niger

    “We pray they move to the new terminal where you will see a more improved facility passengers can enjoy. We have always insisted we should improve our facilities time to time for the comfort of our passengers.

    ‘’With this development, I ’m not surprised it has keyed in into our plans,” the Airport Manager, observed.

    FAAN Chief Security Officer, Abuja International Airport, Mallam   Mohammed Tijani Yakassa lauded the initiative. He said: “It ’s a good innovation. I’m really impressed with the way they changed the pattern of the Lounge.   Initially, the lounge was not as large as we have it now. The way it’s transformed now is very interesting.

    ‘’They have done a good innovation job here. Initially, the lounge is for BA. I think there is a cooperation between BA and SDS. Probably, the SDS are going to manage it for British Airways.

    “The British Airways passengers will be using it. Most of the passengers will be surprised, including those that have been using it. By the time they come back they will be surprised with the changes that has taken place, “ he said. BA Global Lounge Manager Mr. Lukasz Wyrzykowski expressed satisfaction with the new lounge under the management of SDS.

    “In Nigeria, we have our lounge in Lagos at the international airport and in Abuja. I’m impressed with what I see here. The lounge is beautiful. We have been operating in Abuja for about 20 years.

    ‘’We operate a daily flight, we operate first class. Therefore, we have many customers who expect to have a lounge before they go on board of our aircraft. We are working with SDS. We refurbished it to a very high standard. We have got beautiful furniture. We improve our catering proposition so that customers can enjoy; have something to eat before they go on board the flight; they can have a drink, they can have some wine, coffee and they have a selection of foods.

    “We have a real working partnership with the SDS in Abuja.

    ‘’They helped us to developed the lounge. I have seen the two terminals and  I’m happy they are looking great.

    ‘’At some point we will move to the new terminal and this will be massive improvement for our customers,“ Lukasz said.

  • Photos of Lagos building collapse

    A three-storey building collapsed in Kakawa Street, on Lagos Island on Monday.

  • Sanwo-Olu, Hamzat to get certificates of return Friday -INEC

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has shifted the date for the issuance of Certificates of Return to the Governor-elect, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu, and his deputy, Dr Obafemi Hamzat.

    The INEC Spokesman, Mr. Femi Akinbiyi, who disclosed this in statement on Monday, said that the event, earlier scheduled for Wednesday would now hold on Friday.

    Read also:UPDATED: INEC declares Ganduje winner of Kano rerun

    Akinbiyi, however, said that the commission would later announce a new date for the issuance of the certificates to the 40 lawmakers-elect of the Lagos State House of Assembly.

    “The event will take place at the INEC Lagos office, 6, Birrel Avenue Sabo-Yaba at 11a.m.

    “A new date will be announced later for the presentation of Certificates of Return to the 40 elected members of Lagos State House of Assembly,” Akinbiyi said.

    INEC had on March 21, in a statement signed by its Resident Electoral Commissioner, Mr Sam Olumekun, announced that it would present the certificates to the newly- elected officers on March 27.

    According to Olumekun, the presentation is in conformity with section 75 (1) of the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended).

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Sanwo-Olu, of All Progressives Congress (APC), polled 739,445 votes to defeat Jimi Agbaje of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who polled 206,141 votes, and other contestants in the March 9 Governorship Election.

    INEC declared Sanwo-Olu winner of the poll on March 10, with candidates of All Progressives Congress (APC) winning all the 40 state constituencies in the state.

  • My vision for Ninth Senate, by Lawan

    Senate presidential aspirant Ahmed Lawan yesterday kicked off his campaign for the number three position in Lagos, urging senators-elect to endorse him at the in-house poll.

    He unfolded his plans for the Ninth Senate, saying that his campaign slogan is: ‘A Senate and National Assembly that works for Nigeria.’

    The Senate Leader said the next Senate should assist the country by helping President Muhammadu Buhari to achieve his agenda in the areas of security, economy, job creation and anti-corruption battle.

    Lawan, who spoke with reporters in Lagos, said while he is conversant with the doctrine of the separation of powers, it should not translate into an unnecessary rift that will cripple harmonious working relations among the organs of government to the detriment of the country.

    The journey of the ‘Lawan Campaign Organisation’ to Lagos was delayed as the aircraft developed fault in Abuja, necessitating a change of aircraft.

    The Senate Leader was accompanied to the Lagos news conference by his campaign manager, Senator Yahaya Abdullahi (Kebbi North), Senator Oluremi Tinubu (Lagos Central), Senator Solomon Adeola (Lagos West), former Senate Leader Teslim Folarin, Senators-elect Ifeanyi Ubah (Anambra), Bayo Osinowo (Lagos East), Opeyemi Bamidele (Ekiti Central), Prince Dayo Adeyeye (Ekiti South), Lekan Mustapha, Adeleke Oriolowo and Senator Aliemekena (Edo North).

    Lawan, who is from Yobe State in the Northeast, showed interest in the position in 2015. For now, other aspirants  from the region are Senator Danjuma Goje and Senator Ali Ndume.

    Senator Abdullahi, the chairman of Lawan Campaign Organisation, described the Senate Leader as a household name in Nigeria, adding that he is eminently qualified for the position.

    Describing Lawan’s entry into the race as a new beginning for the Senate, he also hailed Senator Oluremi Tinubu for “the partnership for the progressive agenda”.

    Abdullahi said: “We want to have a Senate that will work with Nigerian people. That is our agenda. Senator Ahmed Lawan is known throughout Nigeria. We think Nigeria deserves Lawan as Senate President.”

    Lawan, who described himself as a progressive, observed that the next Senate will be made up of seasoned professionals, technocrats and statesmen, adding that “the experience we have garnered will help us to assist the country through legislation”.

    Justifying his fitness for the role, he said: “I have been in the National Assembly for almost 20 years. I have served in the House of Representatives for eight years and the Senate for 12 years, I thank God and my people for renewing my mandate.

    “I am a progressive. I was an APP and later, ANPP House of Representatives member and I am now in the APC. I believe in the progressive politics, in ensuring that ordinary people – the masses – get support and opportunities to actualise their potentials and dreams. We should support entrepreneurship and business to grow and thrive for employment to boom.”

    Reiterating his campaign slogan: ‘A Senate and a National Assembly that works for Nigeria,’ he said senators should work in a united manner for Nigerians, irrespective of their different political platforms.

    He added: “We need a National Assembly that will look at Nigeria as its constituency. We want a Senate and a National Assembly that will maintain cordiality, synergy and cooperation with other arms of government.”

    Lawan said the welfare of Nigerians should not be compromised, stressing that jobs and wealth should not be concentrated in a few hands.

    He stressed: “You can’t sleep with two eyes closed, if the wealth does not go round, if there is poverty, if the children of the poor cannot go to school.”

    Lawan, who emphasised his belief in the concept of separation of powers as guaranteed by the constitution, said the doctrine does not connote an infinite independence, but inter-dependence of the three arms.

    He said the relationship among the three organs should be characterised by cooperation, collaboration, partnership and synergy.

    Lawan stressed: “We may disagree. Our perspective may differ. We don’t go to the market square to settle our differences. We should be able to meet and discuss issues and make compromise in the national interest. That is the way to grow democracy. We may disagree, but the disagreement should not escalate.”

  • Command nabs nurses for allegedly selling baby 

    Lagos State Police Command has nabbed two nurses working at Trinity Clinic, Meiran, Lagos, for allegedly selling a woman’s baby and deceiving her that she had a stillbirth.

    It was gathered that the nurses, Mrs. Marbel Onochel and Dorcas Omitogun, allegedly sold the baby for N350,000 to Mrs. Helen Okoh, a resident of Ajah in Lagos.

    The police have also arrested her.

    The suspects were alleged to have told the baby’s parents that it died and they buried the stillborn to save the family the trauma.

    Besides allegedly engaging in child theft and trafficking, it was learnt that Onochel, a Delta State indigene, also ran an illegal traditional hospital at Meiran.

    Trouble, however, reportedly started after the woman’s family insisted that they wanted to see the body, but the suspects could provide it.

    The Nation gathered that when the family insisted on seeing the body, the nurses claimed that the baby’s head was bad, prompting the family to report at the police station.

    Read also: Police arrest suspected serial killer, cultists 

    It was learnt that the suspects were arrested and during investigation, they confessed to have sold the baby to Mrs. Okoh.

    It was gathered that Onochel kept N250,000 from the sale and gave Omitogun N100,000.

    During interrogation, the woman who bought the baby said she was desperate for a child because she was unable to conceive, as she had fibroid.

    Confirming their arrest, police spokesman Bala Elkana, a Deputy Superintendent (DSP), told The Nation that the baby had been recovered from the buyer.

    He said: “We have recovered the baby, arrested the woman who bought the baby and the two nurses who conspired and sold the baby. The suspects will be charged to court.”

  • APC wins supplementary election in Lagos, Ekiti

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has declared the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate for Ibeju-Lekki State constituency I, Mr Fatai Adebola Mojeed, winner of the election.

    With the victory, the APC has secured all the 40 seats in the state house of assembly.

    Mojeed, a current member of the assembly, was declared the winner yesterday after the conclusion of the supplementary polls in nine polling units in the constituency.

    The commission had declared the March 9 assembly election in the constituency inconclusive, because of over-voting in the nine polling units, covering two wards of the constituency.

    Prof. Rasheed Ojikutu the Returning Officer, announced the result for the state house of assembly election at the Collation Centre located in INEC office in Ibeju-Lekki council at about 6:30 p.m.

    Ojikutu, of the Department of Actuarial Science and Insurance, Faculty of Business Administration, University of Lagos, first announced the scores of each political party on March 9 election, before reeling out total votes in the supplementary poll.

    According to him, in the March 9 election, APC polled 8,525 votes and PDP scored 1, 786, SDP got 63, ADP scored 54 votes, Accord got 50 votes, AD polled 59 votes while other political parties scored less than 40 votes each.

    The returning officer said that, at the conclusion of the supplementary election, Mojeed polled a total of votes 9,484 to defeat his closest rival from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Mrs Tare Oliver who got 1,901 votes.

    Accord Party scored 51 votes, AD polled 60 votes, ADC polled 26 votes, SDP got 64 votes, AAC polled 27 votes, ADP got only 55 votes while others got less than 10 votes each.

    Ojikutu said that the total number of registered voters was 122, 442 while the total accredited voters for the election was 12,245. The party agents took turns to sign the results.

    Dr Adeola Afonja, the Collation Officer for Ibeju Ward I, reeled out the scores obtained by each of the parties in the six polling units where supplementary election was held in the ward.

    According to Afonja, APC polled 520, PDP scored 43 votes, ADC got 2 votes, Accord and ADP got one vote each while other parties got no vote.

    She said that the total number of registered voters of the six polling units where the supplementary election took place was 3,989.

    Afonja added that the total number of accredited voters was 592, total valid votes 567, rejected votes 22, while the total number of votes cast was 589.

    Also, Dr Ijeoma Patience, the Collation Officer for Iwerekun I, gave the scores obtained by each of the parties in the three polling units where supplementary election was held in the ward.

    According to her, APC polled 439, PDP scored 72 votes, while other parties got 2 votes.

    Patience said that the total number of registered voters of the three polling units where the supplementary election took place was 8,722

    She added that the total number of accredited voters was 529, total valid votes 521, rejected votes 8 and total vote cast 529.

    Prince Wasiu Elemoro, candidate of PDP for Ibeju-Lekki Federal Constituency described the election as far better than the previous polls.

    Elemoro said that the supplementary election was free, fair and peaceful.

    Also, INEC has declared the APC winner of the Ekiti East Local Government Constituency 1 supplementary election.

    Its candidate Adegbuyi Olajuwon was declared winner of the election by the returning Officer, Dr Chika Asokwa yesterday evening.

    The election had earlier been suspended by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on March 9 when the Governorship and House of Assembly elections were conducted.

    Asokwa said Olajuwon of APC polled 5,484 votes defeat Ojo-Ade Fajana of the Peoples Democratic Party who garnered 3, 258 votes.

     

  • Lagos and the O to ge meltdown

    They may as well be aptly christened the “O to ge” elections. I refer to the February 23rd and March 9th, 2019, national and state executive as well as legislative polls, which are being concluded today with supplementary elections in five states. Of course, O to ge has now become part and parcel of the ever fascinating and evolving grammar of Nigerian politics. It is the quaint Yoruba expression for ‘enough is enough’, reflective of the idiomatic phraseology of the Yoruba of Kwara state extraction, in North-Central Nigeria. From east to west and north to south, the new no-nonsense O to ge mood of the Nigerian electorate has seen bloated egos deflated mercilessly and one Lilliputian political David after the other not only felling but ruthlessly decapitating overrated electoral behemoths with pleasurable relish.

    Not surprisingly, Kwara, which gifted the nation the succinct and surgical O to ge sobriquet, has also been the most visible and prominent theatre for the manifestation of this near revolutionary phenomenon in contemporary Nigerian politics. The Saraki dynasty had for close to five decades been the dominant dynamo in the politics of Kwara. In the wake of the O to ge revolutionary gale, the imperious political tactician, who takes no prisoners, Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, not only lost his re-election bid to the Senate, his Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) stranglehold on the politics of the state was decisively broken.

    Ironically, the prime victim of the O to ge blitzkrieg in Kwara, Dr. Bukola Saraki, must also be credited for, even if subconsciously, sowing the seeds that have become a veritable new Iroko in the forest of Kwara politics. Ever since this writer attained enough political consciousness to serve as a teen age polling agent of Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) in the heart land of Ilorin, (Pakata), in 1979, the late Dr. Olusola Saraki, the one and only Oloye, had maintained an unbroken suzerainty over the politics of Kwara state.

    A most colourful, assured and masterly majority leader of the Senate on the platform of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) in the Second Republic, the Saraki patriarch bestrode the politics of Kwara like a colossus. He had a hand in the emergence, and sometimes untidy exit from office, of practically every elected governor in Kwara for over three and a half decades. These include Prince Adamu Attah, Chief Cornelius Adebayo, Mr. Mohammed Shaaba Lafiagi, and Col. Mohammed Lawal (rtd). Oloye’s crowning glory was the election of his ruthlessly ambition son, Bukola, as governor of Kwara between 2003 and 2011. But in that triumph were embedded the seeds of Oloye’s political demystification, a development that reportedly left him heartbroken till the end of his days.

    Apparently convinced of the political impermeability of the political dynasty he had come to personify in Kwara, Oloye most inexplicably wanted his daughter, Gbemi Saraki, to succeed her brother as governor of the state. But Bukola, through wily tactical manouvres said no – O to ge. The younger Saraki ensured that he installed in office after him a successor of his own choosing, Mr. Abdulfattah Ahmed, the outgoing governor.

    In defying and defenestrating his father, Bukola sowed the wind. If the great Oloye could be so easily dislodged and caged, many Kwarans wondered, then the seemingly invincible dynasty must have feet of clay after all. Bukola reaped the whirl wind on February 23rd and March 9th. The O to ge message in Kwara soared on the wings of the inexcusable underperformance and underdevelopment of an otherwise richly endowed state in terms of human and natural resources punching embarrassingly below her weight. The rest is history. Fast forward then, to Lagos.

    On Thursday, February 28th, 2019, a group, the Free Lagos Orange Movement surfaced in Lagos ostensibly to replicate the Kwara O to ge revolution in the Centre of Excellence. Claiming that the group had no permit to organize a protest rally, the police prevented the Free Lagos Orange Movement from staging its demonstration at the Lagos Airport Hotel. However, one of the conveners of the group, a former President of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), Mr. Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), enunciated its aim to the press.

    In his words, “The Free Lagos Orange Movement is a non-political movement that is aimed at ensuring that we have good governance in Lagos State. We feel that Tinubu has had his time as the emperor of Lagos since 1998, and we are trying to mobilize Lagosians to say no to continuity of Lagos by Tinubu”. This is indeed most astonishing. So Lagos has had one emperor presiding over its affairs since 1999 and not governors democratically elected in 1999, 2003, 2007, 2011, 2015 and now 2019?

    Of course, the point that Agbakoba and the Free Lagos Orange Movement are trying to make is obvious. They seek to establish an equivalency between the Saraki and Tinubu political dominance in Kwara and Lagos, respectively, since 1999. Political influence and electoral dominance are not alien to democracy. However, every dominant political tendency will ultimately stand or fall on the basis of the verdict of the electorate on its impact on their lives, positive or native, as determined in free, fair and credible elections.

    It is thus instructive that the APC in Lagos won the March 9, 2019, governorship election by a more emphatic margin than it did in 2015 – a landslide. It was a grievous error of judgement for the Free Lagos Orange Movement to have extrapolated so carelessly from the politics of Kwara to Lagos without a more rigorous analysis. In the first place, the kind of feudal-oriented and essentially backward dynastic politics foisted on Kwara by the Sarakis over the last four decades is impossible to replicate in any South-West State least of all a cosmopolitan megalopolis like Lagos.

    Any dominant political tendency in Lagos can only sustain its relevance and enjoy continued popular support if it is perceived as utilizing its mandate to pursue the greatest good of the greatest number of the people.

    For 16 years between 1999 and 2015, Nigeria not only stagnated but even retrogressed badly on virtually all fronts – infrastructure, security, social welfare, poverty indices etc under the PDP. That fortunately has not been the fate of Lagos. With Asiwaju Bola Tinubu laying a solid foundation for the revitalization of the state and Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) as well as Akinwunmi Ambode building admirably on this inheritance, Lagos has witnessed a steadily incremental improvement in revenue capacity, modernization and expansion of infrastructure, enhancement in the quality and affordability of social services as well as better security among others.

    Equally instructive is the fact that not even the obstacles placed on the path of Lagos by a largely adversarial PDP-controlled centre between 1999 and 2015 have been able to impede the state’s progress.

    It is all too easy to assume that all this occurred through happenstance or sheer magic. In reality, it is a function of careful planning, policy focus and consistency as well as continuity in visionary governance since 1999. This in turn has been made possible partly because in June 1999, the Tinubu administration transformed the previously existing Plans, Programmes and Budget Bureau (PPBB) into a full- fledged Lagos State Ministry of Economic Planning and Budget (MEPB) as the organizational fulcrum for the long term development planning of the state. It is under the aegis of the Ministry that a Master plan has been produced and systematically implemented and fine-tuned by successive administrations with the period 1999 – 2024 as its first phase.

    Furthermore, Tinubu’s extraordinary ability to identify and develop talents as well as give them wings to fly on their own steam and become impactful leaders in their own right has been a key defining feature of governance in Lagos since 1999. This is of course contrary to the feudal ethos that has characterized governance in Kwara since 1999. Over the last 20 years, governance in Kwara has been plagued by policy adhocism, paucity of vision and an ascriptive rather than merit-driven mode of public appointments and elite recruitment with negative consequences for progress and development.

    Could Kwara have charted an alternative development course with more positive developmental outcomes than the pathetic situation in which the state finds itself today? Most certainly. Dr. Saraki has the talent and ability to have charted a transformational path for Kwara during his eight years as governor. The opportunity was unfortunately, in my view, squandered. Those who know him, say that the outgoing Kwara State governor is a man of competence and ability. But what template of governance did he inherit? What legacy of excellence in governance did he have to inspire him to rise above the mediocre? Was he bequeathed a governance ecology that would have enabled merit to thrive? Those are some of the questions that the Free Lagos Orange Movement should have carefully interrogated before jumping into the partisan fray in Lagos.

    Has Lagos then arrived at her Eldorado? Most certainly not. No polity ever does. Lagos is a work in progress. The mega city continues to experience her share of environmental, bureaucratic, ethical and several other challenges. However, Lagos remains the most successful state model of developmental democracy, economic emancipation and social progress in Nigeria over the last 20 years. That is why the O to ge movement that shook Kwara to its foundations suffered an anticlimactic meltdown in Lagos on March 9th.

    It is certainly not for nothing that Lagos remains the prime destination of choice for millions of Nigerians and even beyond who throng the state daily in search of success and prosperity. Perhaps the O to ge revolution will propel Kwara to discover and begin to actualize her immense potentials as a state.

  • FADAN boss Funmi Ajila-Ladipo returns to stage acting

    MANY may not know that back in those days, the President of the Fashion Designers Association of Nigeria (FADAN), Mrs Funmi Ajila-Ladipo, used to be a theatre enthusiast, who acted severally in different plays and enjoyed acting live on stage.

    Well, we can authoritatively tell you that, after reaching the peak of a successful career in fashion, acting and stage performances have beckoned on Ajila-Ladipo and she has resolved to give it a good shot once again.

    So, come April 20, along with an array of other talented thespians,  Ajila-Ladipo will take to the stage in live performances at the AGIP Hall of the MUSON Centre, Lagos.

    And they will be there to thrill the audience of all ages and interest from  April 20, all the way to April 22, 2019, at different times of the day, as the Thespian Family Theatre & Productions, brings ÌTÀN, The Story, back on stage.

  • 6 parties for Lagos Supplementary election tomorrow — INEC

    The Independent National Electoral Commission ( INEC ) in Lagos State says that only six political parties will participate in the Saturday’s supplementary election at Ibeju-Lekki State Constituency I.

    The INEC Spokesman, Mr. Femi Akinbiyi, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Friday in Lagos that the commission was ready to deliver its mandate of conducting free and fair election.

    “Six political parties will be participating in the supplementary election at Ibeju-Lekki State Constituency I scheduled for Saturday, March 23.

    “’The political parties are: Accord (A), Alliance for Democracy (AD), African Democratic Congress (ADC), Action Democratic Party (ADP), All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP),” he told NAN.

    According to him, the already collated result of the March 9 House of Assembly election in the constituency shows that APC is leading with 8, 525 votes followed by PDP with 1, 786.

    The Resident Electoral Commissioner of INEC, Mr. Sam Olumekun, had on Thursday in a statement said that the commission had concluded arrangement to conduct a supplementary election in nine polling units in the constituency.

    Olumekun said that the election was declared inconclusive because of over-voting in the nine polling units covering two Registration Areas (Ward) of the constituency.

    According to him, the affected polling units in Ibeju I Registration Area are polling units 001, 003, 004, 005, 006, and 009, while that of Iwerekun I Registration Area are polling units 002, 004, and 005.

    He said that only voters with valid Permanent Voter Cards within the constituency would be allowed into the polling units to vote.

    Candidates of APC won in all the other 39 constituencies where the House of Assembly election has been concluded by the electoral umpire.

  • Protesting Okota residents insist on prepaid meters

    Some residents of Okota, Lagos, yesterday insisted on being metered by the Ikeja Electric (IE), as they relaunched their compaign against “crazy bills.”

    During a protest at the Okota Road office of electricity distribution company (DisCo), the residents said they would no longer pay any bill that is over N5000 a month until they are provided pre-paid meters.

    But, in a swift reaction, IE implored the residents to explore dialogue to resolve the issue.

    The protesters, who are members of the Okota Residents Association (ORA) Zone A, arrived at the IE office around 7:30 am, bearing placards with inscriptions, such as: “No disconnection till you settle us”; ‘”No prepaid meters, no payment”; “No more estimated bills”; “No more meeting with ORA Zone A  executives till our demands are met”; “Install prepaid meters with immediate effect” and “Emmanuella Nwafor must go”.

    The Nation learnt that Nwafor is the IE marketer for the area.

    Vice Chairman of Bishop Okojie Street Resident Association Eze Phillips said they had been given estimated bills since 2016, adding that meetings with IE management have not yielded result.

    “We demand stoppage of the current estimated electricity bills. Until we are metered, any bill more than N5000 will not be paid. There should be no further disconnection of residents for failure to pay the exorbitant bills. Any attempt to disconnect us will be resisted. The Okota Zone A marketer should be redeployed because of her unruly and unprofessional conduct. She is rude to customers.

    “We also demand that there should be no more sales of prepaid meters. Installation of prepaid meters should begin with immediate effect. No more meetings with IE on our demands. The executives of ORA Zone A have met the management more than eight times since 2016, with no result. The promises made have not been fulfilled,” Phillips said.

    A resident, Olagunju Olamide, wondered why he should be billed N18,000  monthly.

    He said he paid N176,000 last year to clear his arrears, but stopped paying when he discovered that the bill was not going down. “Now my bill is almost N200,000 within a short period. Why should I pay IE bills like I’m paying house rent?”

    Another resident, Austine John, of Bayo Oyewole Street, said the House of Representatives had passed a bill outlawing estimated bills.

    “Why are we still being billed outrageously for the light we do not consume? We cannot have enough sleep or enjoy what we are paying for. This is not acceptable and we will resist it,” he said.

    IE’s Assistant Public Relations Officer Akinola Ayeni said protest was not the best way to resolve the issue.

    He added that the residents could not tell the firm who to hire or not as the marketer is doing her job.

    ”It is not true that prepaid meters are sold. We don’t sell prepaid meters, they are free.

    “We have finished one of the schemes for installing prepaid meters. We will begin another pilot scheme next month. We cannot meter everybody at the same time.

    “On the estimated billings, we are a standard organisation. We are guided by rules. We have a policy guiding us and we follow the rules to bill customers as they consume. We follow guidelines on how to bill our consumers. We bill them for what they use. If anybody has any issue with his bills or that we have billed them outrageously, they can come to our office and have a meeting with us. Most consumers don’t want to pay, some pay and we appreciate them. There are some consumers who are just billed N1000 but you will see them with other protesters claiming that they are overbilled.”