Tag: lagos

  • Lagos partners pharmacists on drugs

    Lagos State government is partnering Pharmacists Council of Nigeria (PCN) to prevent the sale of Chinese drugs allegedly containing human parts, Health Commissioner Dr. Jide Idris has said.

    He told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday in Lagos on the sidelines of the Association of General Private Nursing Practitioners (AGPNP) that the government was keeping an eye on areas it felt would be at risk of the drugs.

    The National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) had assured Nigerians of safety, warning people to beware of the poisonous drugs.

    Idris said: “Every importation is actually at the purview of the Federal Government, NAFDAC, SON, among others.

    “But, Lagos State is trying its best to collaborate with the Pharmacists Council to regulate and monitor that these drugs don’t get into our markets.

    “Our drug quality laboratory control is also working to check any drug that is brought in, which efficacy is not known before distribution into the health facilities.

    “We also have our task force established by the Lagos State government working to ensure that people are safe.

    “We have not failed in sensitising and enlightening people about the inherent dangers in taking these drugs.’’

    A pharmacist, health and safety professional, Mrs. Fayo Williams, urged the Federal Government to pay attention to every importation right from its country of origin.”

  • Lagos restores waste evacuation by PSP operators

    Lagos State government has directed the Association of Waste Managers of Nigeria (AWAM), otherwise known as PSP operators, to resume door-to-door evacuation of waste.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the government gave the directive during a meeting with the waste managers yesterday in Lagos.

    The Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Mr Tunji Bello, said in a statement that the PSP operators should go back to their areas of operation and restore the door-to-door evacuation of waste.

    Bello said the directive was in making good the government’s promise to achieve a cleaner and healthier environment.

    He said the government had constituted a committee, headed by him, to review the situation and design template for the restoration of the services of PSP operators.

    “This move is to reassure you that we are set on a new beginning and it is to consolidate what we have achieved. Everybody must work together to restore the glory of Lagos,” the SSG said.

    He said the government had appointed Mr Ola Oresanya, former General Manager of LAWMA, as a consultant to work with the state to fashion out a format for the restoration of door-to-door waste collection.

    Bello urged the PSP operators to be ready for work and set aside any misgivings, adding that he was in touch with the leadership of AWAM, who had assured him of their cooperation.

    The Commissioner for Environment, Mr Babatunde Durosinmi-Etti, urged stakeholders to recognise the need to clear the backlog of waste in the metropolis, while a holistic solution was being worked out simultaneously.

    “Being aware that PSP operators were in business to make profit and sustain employment, government therefore enjoins residents to pay for waste collection by the PSP operators,” Durosinmi-Etti said.

    The Chairman of AWAM, Mr Oladipo Egbeyemi, hailed the government for the development.

    He advocated thorough situation review and provision of enabling environment for unhindered performance by members of the association.

     

  • Lagos unveils ANPR to track traffic violators

    Lagos State Government has rolled out an e-inspection technology application to tackle traffic and vehicle documentation violations. The new effort, which takes fines to violators’ doorstep, will eventually ensure that only healthy vehicles are on the roads, writes ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE

    Imagine a return of the banned Vehicle Inspection Officers (VIOs) to all roads in Lagos State. Also, imagine that your location is not only captured by Google map, but that you are actually being monitored by VIO right on the road. What will you have done rightly?

    You can no longer hide, so long as you ply Lagos roads. This is because technology will fish you out if you commit a traffic offence.

    Some Lagosians have had a bitter taste of this technology. Some of them, Tiamiyu Mohammed, a Uber operator and Moses Adeife, a car owner, are among the hundreds, who have been caught by this technology  deployed three weeks ago after a long period of test-runing to restore sanity to Lagos roads. Interestingly, offenders are rushing to pay their fines.

    Deploying technology to drive traffic compliance is no longer a dream in Lagos State. If you drive a vehicle that is not road worthy on Lagos roads, or you drive with expired driver’s or vehicle licence, or you do not have hackney or inspection/testing permit, or any other documentation that authorises you to ply the roads, the sanity of your vehicle, you may be the next victim.

    Gone are the days, when VIOs chase vehicles round the streets. That era stopped last year vide an executive order when Governor Akinwunmi Ambode ordered them to get off the roads.

    Their presence, as it were, has been replaced by the Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) and Closed Circuit Monitor (CCTV) devices to track vehicle administration offences and traffic violations.

    The VIS has these two categories all over Lagos. They are the fixed monitors, which are installed on all major roads and highways in all the 57 Local Governments Areas (LGAs) and Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs) and the mobile units installed on all VIO vehicles moving round locations not captured by the fixed units.

    The feat, according to the VIS Director, Hafiz Toriola, an engineer, is the culmination of a three-year research, which has taken officials of the agency round the world to understudy the technology in other developed societies where such had been in use for decades.

    It was also the crystallisation of the e-inspection and e-billing, launched last year by the Ambode administration. It is meant to use street cameras to identify vehicles plying the roads without valid documents.

    Automatic number plate recognition according to Wikipedia can be used to store the images captured by the cameras as well as the text from the license plate, with some configurable to store a photograph of the driver.

    The systems commonly use infrared lighting to allow the camera to take the picture at any time of day or night, with the ANPR technology taking into account plate numbering variations from place to place.

    ANPR was invented in 1976 at the Police Scientific Development Branch in the United Kingdom. Prototype systems were working by 1979, and contracts were awarded to produce industrial systems, first at EMI Electronics, and then at Computer Recognition Systems (CRS) in Wokingham, United Kingdom (UK). Early trial systems were deployed on the A1 road and at the Dartford Tunnel. The first arrest through detection of a stolen car was made in 1981.

    However, ANPR did not become widely used until new developments in cheaper and easier to use software were pioneered during the 1990s. The collection of ANPR data for future use (i.e., in solving then-unidentified crimes) was documented in the early 2000s. The first documented case of ANPR being used to help solve a murder case occurred in November 2005, in Bradford, UK, where ANPR played a vital role in locating and subsequently convicting killers of Sharon Beshenivsky.

    Critics have described the ANPR as a form of mass surveillance. Concerns about the system centered on privacy as citizens feared that government was tracking their movements. There are also cases of misidentification, high error rates, and increased government spending.

    How Does It Work?

    According to toriola, both the fixed and the mobile variant, work by capturing vehicles at random and the details of the vehicle would run automatically through the various databases such as the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Motor Vehicle Administration Agency (MVAA), Police and the Nigeria Insurance Association (NIA) and the Lagos State Transport Department, all of which are already configured into the operating system, and instantly, a result of the vehicle’s compliance of violations would emerge. Where all details; such as road worthiness, vehicle licence, and for commercial vehicles; hackney permit, the Lagos State Drivers Institute certification (LASDRI) are in order, the vehicle is certified okay, but where one or more documents is invalid either because it has expired or not available, the system generates a fine/bill, which will first be sent as a text message to the offender, and the hard copy taken to the offender’s house address as captured on the data base.

    According to Toriola: “In a case where we are unable to get the address of the owner, maybe due to relocation or as a result of fake address, we would blacklist the vehicle and flag it, so that we would begin to monitor it and enforce arrest and compliance anytime the vehicle gets back on our roads.”

    He said the camera of either the fixed or the mobile units on VIO vehicles will take the picture of the vehicle, zoom in on the number plate of the vehicle and when the offence was committed. It will state the offence(s) and give the offender seven days to seek redress (in case of doubts) or payment.

    The VIS Director said the agency has started billing offenders who have been coming to pay. “Most offenders were shocked at the level of sophistication and detailed capturing of their offences, which has rightly put Lagos alongside countries that are deploying the best global standards in driving its transportation architecture,” Toriola added.

    He said from the back end, the agency can see any vehicle anywhere in the state, see its state of health and can put an off the road sticker on any vehicle delivered to the home of the owner of such vehicle.

    He said: “We now have so many of these cameras on our roads across the state. And our message for now is that our people should obey the law and maintain their vehicle. They should get all the prescribed particulars for their vehicles and obey traffic rules and regulations. If they do this, they need not be afraid of this new innovation which is meant to drive sanity down our transportation system,”Toriola added.

    Another revelation according to him, is that the device has exposed the cartel that runs a ring of fake vehicle particulars in the state. “The device is helping us to detect a lot of fake documents; such as fake driver’s licence, fake vehicle licence and fake insurance and road worthiness licence. Those, who fall victims of these are calling their agents and we are now hearing so many funny confessions.”

    He said the ANPR would be complementing the computerised vehicle inspection system, which was rolled out last year, where vehicles can undergo comprehensive diagnosis, away from the manual checking, which VIS men, hitherto carried out, and the acquisition of the Magneto Optical Device, a technology, which helps in diagnosing any vehicle’s details.

    According to Toriola, the future of seamless transportation in a state with above the national average of vehicular density. With the right technology, according to him, Lagos is moving away from manual inspection, testing and billing as electronic alternatives are being deployed and more loopholes which make the system dysfunctional are being identified and blocked.

    Throwing his weight behind the innovation is a road safety advocate and founder of Safety Without Borders, Patrick Adenusi, who commended the state for blazing an uncommon trail. To him, the innovation ought to be a national agenda.

    Adenusi said Lagos, in driving its transportation architecture with ANPR, was 35 years late.  “It is the global best practice and one should say that it is not only Lagos, but all the federating states and the security system, including the FRSC, the police and other security agencies that ought to be on the system.

    He said the system has attracted excellent ratings across the world in countries like United Kingdom, US, Canada, Switzerland, France, UAE, Germany, Netherlands and several others where it has been introduced because it has not only contributed significantly to curtailing traffic infractions, it has also helped to burst criminal activities, especially car thefts.

    According to him, every vehicle like human being, has a name and identification numbers, which is called the Chasis number. He said though engine numbers may change, chasis number never changes as it is the identity of the vehicle. People can attempt to alter the vein number of stolen vehicles, but they are often exposed once they are captured by the ANPR device.

    In the US, the ANPR is being manned by the police. As one passes a police patrol with such device, the police officer will just  capture your number plate and input this on the software on his laptop or ipad and instantly all one’s details are available to him. Where one is not supposed to be on the road as a result of a violation; either of non-inspection, or carrying an expired document, he issues a bill and send same to one’s mailing address or phone number, same way that Toriola had stated that the VIS system runs.

    He said: “If we are adopting the same thing in Nigeria it is excellent as it would help everyone to do the right thing.”

    Adenusi observed that there are quite a number of vehicles operating in Lagos and across the country without valid papers. Citing the instance of a situation where a VIO had stopped a woman, who claimed she was a civil servant and works at the state’s secretariat, Alausa, but whose particulars expired five years before.

    He added that a check of the military, para-military and other security personnel would also reveal that so many of them ride freely on the roads without any valid documentation. “They just did the initial registration and thereafter, you will see them fix stickers of their stations, either Airforce, Navy, Police, Army or any other security outfit and brazenly go about the violations in a who-dare-accost-me manner. Many would not even use seat belt and some would put their beret on the dashboard. But does being in any of these say you should flout basic laws that guarantees safety?” he asked.

    He said though this kind of innovation is salutary, ensuring compliance of all categories of citizens without having sacred cows, will determine how successful it could be.

    According to Adenusi, if we want the government to provide basic infrastructure that meets global standard without going aborrowing, one of the ways is to support this kind of avenue where only those, who are able to maintain their vehicles can only keep them on the roads.

  • Sinach, Eben, others for Night of Mercy

    The Holy Ghost Centre will be holding a program themed ‘Night of Mercy’ on November 9, 2018 with Dr Amos Fenwa as the host pastor.

    The event which is scheduled for 7 pm at the National Stadium, Lagos Nigeria will feature ministration from different musical groups including the Gratitude (COZA) and the Paraclete Mass choir (PMC).

    Other special guest artists who are expected at the event includes: Efe Nathan, Eben, Sinach, Chioma Jesus and Tope Alabi.

  • Retrained artisans, tradesmen graduate in Lagos

    About 1500 artisans and tradesmen have been retrained under the empowerment scheme of the Lagos State government.

    This was disclosed at the 9th tradesmen and artisans week and graduation ceremony for re-trained artisans with the theme “growing capacity for a dynamic economy; the artisans perspective.”

    The graduation is held annually after the tradesmen must have undergone eight weeks capacity training.

    The Commissioner of Wealth Creation and Employment Mrs Uzamat Akinbile said over 1500 artisans were re-trained by Lagos State Tradesmen and Artisans Empowerment program (LASTVEP) and they were able to access loans.

    She also said the second edition of artisans and tradesmen compendium has been produced for sale at the ministry

    LASCOTA President Alhaji Nurudeen Buhari urged the government to provide a befitting secretariat for the council and employment for graduates who are qualified for various openings.

    He also said the government should patronise products and brand for the government projects which are civil work, paintings, granite supply and sewing of the government uniforms.

    Secretary to the State Government Mr Olatunji Bello urged the artisans and tradesmen not to see the trade they learnt as a money making venture at first but invest in the business.

    He said they should be loyal to their customers, take advantage of opportunities and be employer of labour.

    He launched the web page of the LASCOTA www.lagosartisans.com

    Awards were presented to the Best managed zonal Body association; Alimosho Construction Workers, Most socially responsible ;Lagos State Tie and Dye Association , Best managed state body association ;Lagos State Tailor and Fashion Designer Association of Nigeria , Leadership Award female category; Mrs Idayat Lawal, Leadership award male category ; Arch.C.A .Olowe and life achievement award to the former President of LASCOTA, High Chief Bola Sanusi.

    One of the graduating trainees, Mrs Folasade Idowu urged the government to sustain the training of tradesmen and artisans in the state.

  • Lagos restates commitment to economic diversification

    The Lagos State government has restated its commitment to economic diversification through effective policies and implementation to boost the Agricultural sector.

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, who was represented by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Mr. Tunji Bello, spoke yesterday at this year’s World Food Day with the theme: Our Actions Are Our Future: A Zero Hunger World by 2030 is Possible.

    He said: “I wish to emphasise that the Lagos State government, through the Ministry of Agriculture, has developed agricultural initiatives aimed at addressing the need of diversifying the economy. The recent breakthrough in rice-agribusiness, considering the collaboration between Lagos and Kebbi states on large production, processing and distribution of the LAKE Rice product, has created a land mark in economic diversification.”

    The governor said the state has acquired a 32-metric tonnes per hour rice milling plant, which will become operational next year, to ensure that Lagos meets up with the demand of its LAKE rice consumers.

    He added that Lagos is also collaborating with Ogun, Oyo, Osun, Ekiti and Ondo states in rice production to ensure that the rice mill gets sufficient staple.

    According to him, the rice mill will provide over 200,000 jobs in the rice value chain in the state.

    Ambode said the state had established an Agricultural Estate Initiative, promotion of vegetable production with the use of greenhouse technology, cage and pen culture in fisheries production.

    The governor said the state was also strengthening farm settlement initiative, empowerment of farmers and other initiatives to improve agricultural development and sustainable food security in Lagos.

    He added that the Ministry of Agriculture had established community-based processing centres in three coconut-producing communities at Ajido in Badagry, Magbon-Alade in Lekki and Irewe in Ojo.

    Ambode said: “The processing centres have been equipped with modern facilities to reduce human dredgers. The rehabilitation of the coconut belt is ongoing. This activity will protect the coastal shoreline to attract more tourists to the state as well as provide improved and high-yielding coconut seedlings to farmers.”

     

  • ‘My husband attacks me with deadly weapon’

    A housewife, Sylvia Ekejelape, 38, on Tuesday pleaded with a Badagry Customary Court to dissolve her 13-year-old marriage alleging that her husband, Stanley, always attacked her with dangerous weapon when fighting.

    Sylvia, a businesswoman and a mother of three, who now resides at No1, Oja Tuntun, Akure, Ondo State, also told the court that she could no longer tolerate his adulterous behavior, adding that there was no more love in the marriage.

    “I met my husband in 2004 at Alaba International Market, Lagos; he proposed to me and i agreed.

    “We did introduction; he married and paid my dowry in May 7, 2006.

    “But eight months after our wedding, he started maltreating me like a slave.

    “He always beat me and throw my belongings out of the house in the middle of the night, telling me to go anywhere I like.

    “The reason for the beating was that my husband is a womanizer and he used to bring them home without any regard for me and my children.

    “Anytime we are fighting, he used to attack me with deadly weapon like bottle, knife and iron rod.

    Read Also: Rain in Ado-Ekiti ahead of Fayemi’s inauguration

    “He is a very dangerous man, who has no respect for me, he has publicly disgraced me on many occasions, I am through with his womanizing attitude,” she said.

    The respondent, Stanley, however, denied all the allegations against him by her wife, Sylvia.

    Stanley, 40, an electrical contractor, who lives at No 8, Muriana Str., Ajangbadi, Lagos, said that he was not against the divorce suit filed by the wife.

    The court President, Mr Sakirudeen Adekola, adjourned the case until Nov. 8 for judgment.

  • Belgium defender, Vermaelen, suffers fresh injury

    Belgium defender Thomas Vermaelen has suffered another injury and will be out of action for several weeks after straining an adductor muscle on international duty.

    The 32-year-old would miss Tuesday’s friendly against the Netherlands in Brussels, Belgian FA officials said in a media advisory on Monday.

    Read Also: Africa and the Nobel prize

    Vermaelen was taken off after 73 minutes of Belgium’s 2-1 win over Switzerland in the Nations League on Friday.

    The Barcelona defender has been hit by a succession of injuries since signing for Barcelona in 2014.

  • Lagos: A plan matters

    A master plan is special, serious and specific. Its implementation demands a sense of concentrated commitment. The question of a master plan and questions about its implementation were at the centre of the October 2 All Progressives Congress (APC) Lagos governorship primary.

    Indeed, the issue of a master plan determined who lost the primary and who won it. Governor Akinwunmi Ambode had 72, 901 votes while Babajide Sanwo-Olu had 970, 851 votes.

    Why was the matter of a master plan so pivotal in the primary? A pillar of the party, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, said in an illuminating statement on the eve of the primary: “Roughly 20 years ago, a corps of dedicated and patriotic Lagosians, put aside personal interests and rivalries, to put their minds and best ideas together for the good of the state. Out of this collaborative effort, was born a master plan for economic development that would improve the daily lives of our people. Bestowed on me was the honour of a lifetime when I was elected to be your governor in 1999. My administration faithfully implemented that plan. The government of my immediate successor, Tunde Fashola, also honoured this enlightened plan. Where state government remained true to that blueprint, positive things happened. During my tenure and Governor Fashola’s, Lagos State recorded improvements in all aspects of our collective existence, from public health to public sanitation, from education to social services, from the administration of justice to the cleaning of storm and sewage drains. Businesses, large and small, invested, hired millions of workers and thrived.”

    Tinubu provided an insight into the defining principles of the master plan: “All Lagosians were to fully participate and justly benefit from the social dividends and improvements wrought by this plan. From the common labourer, to business leaders, to professionals and our industrious civil service. We all were to be partners in a monumental but joint enterprise. None was to be alienated. None was to be left out. And none were to be pushed aside. This is especially true for those who contributed so much to our development, whether as a business leader who has invested heavily in Lagos, the homeowner who struggles to pay his fair share of taxes or as someone employed in the hard work of keeping our streets and byways clean so that others may go about their daily tasks unimpeded.”

    It is interesting that Ambode had acknowledged the master plan implementation by his predecessors in a thought-provoking article published last year. Ambode’s words: “I am sharing my thoughts in this article, not necessarily as the Governor of Lagos State but as a Nigerian; a Nigerian who wants to see progress and sustainable growth in our country. I have been lucky to be administering over a state that has been put on the right track by my two predecessors, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN). I do not think I have done anything special except to bring my own style of leadership, my own experience and my vision.” Ambode’s failure in the primary implied that his style of leadership, his experience and vision were out of sync with the master plan he was expected to implement.

    It is noteworthy that in 2017 Lagos was listed among the world’s 100 Resilient Cities (100RC). A project of the U.S.-based Rockefeller Foundation, the 100 Resilient Cities include places in Africa, U.S.A., South America, Europe, Asia and Middle East. According to a report: “President of 100 Resilient Cities, Mr. Michael Berkowitz, said out of the over 1,000 applications received and three rounds of selection process, Lagos was chosen for its innovative leadership, infrastructural strides and influential status not just in Africa but in the world.” The project has its definition of urban resilience, which provided a context for the listing of Lagos: “Resilience is about surviving and thriving, regardless of the challenge.”

    To what degree was this recognition ascribable to implementation of the master plan Tinubu highlighted? To Tinubu’s credit, he had remarked realistically, “I make no pretence that the master plan is perfect. It can always be fine-tuned,” adding, “However, whenever a government departed from this plan without compelling reason, the state and its people have borne the painful consequence of the improper departure.”

    The crux of the matter: “To ignore this blueprint for progress in order to replace it with ad-hoc schemes of a materially inferior quality contravenes the spirit of progressive governance and of our party. Such narrowness of perspective does not bring us closer to our appointed destination; it takes us farther from that destiny. For reasons unknown to me and most Lagosians, we have experienced such deviations from enlightened governance recently.”

    So, Ambode lost the chance for a second term. The lesson is that the importance of master plan implementation and the importance of having a governor who will demonstrate the desired intensity of commitment to the master plan cannot be overemphasised. If respecting the wisdom of the master plan was responsible for the positives of the Tinubu and Fashola administrations, disrespecting the blue print has been a costly adventure for Ambode.

    Tinubu’s decisive endorsement of Sanwo-Olu played up the master plan and his confidence in Sanwo-Olu’s grasp of its supremacy. Tinubu’s words: “I am encouraged by the emergence of a candidate in this primary who has served the state in senior positions in my administration, the Fashola administration and even in the current one. While possessing a wealth of experience and exposure, he is a young man endowed with superlative vision and commitment. Most importantly, he understands the importance of the blueprint for development. He esteems it as a reliable and well-conceived vehicle for the future development of the state. He also knows the value of reaching out and working with others in order to maximise development and provide people the best leadership possible.”

    It is creditable that the development of Lagos since the Tinubu era has been based on a master plan, allegedly downplayed by Ambode. It means that the city’s progress is planned. As Sanwo-Olu prepares for the governorship election, with the advantage of his progressive candidacy, he represents the superiority of planned progress.

     

  • Court voids sack of Unity Bank’s ex-director

    A National Industrial Court, Ikoyi, Lagos State, has ordered Unity Bank Plc to pay all entitlements and benefits pertaining to the office of a subsisting Executive Director of the bank, Mrs Arese Alonge, for wrong termination of her appointment.

    In a judgment delivered by trial judge, Justice John Dele Peters, the court held that Unity Bank had not followed the mandatory provisions of sections 262 and 266 of the Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) in the purported termination of Alonge’s appointment.

    The judge voided the sack.

    The claimant instituted the suit in Lagos and the trial was conducted in Lagos before the trial judge was transferred to the Ibadan Division of the court.

    The judgment was delivered in Ibadan on September 27.

    Section 262 provides that for a director to be removed, he or she must be served a requisite notice of a meeting, while Section 266 provides the procedures for removal of directors.

    Justice Peters said: “I note that for reasons best known to the defendants, they chose not to address the issue of service of requisite notice of meeting on the claimant; the pleadings of the defendants are silent on this.

    “Exhibit AA8, which is the letter conveying the alleged board’s decision to terminate the appointment of the claimant, did not state the date of the alleged meeting where the decision was taken.

    “I find and hold that the claimant was entitled to be served but not served notice of the board meeting, as required by law.

    “I declare that her removal was in violation of the provision of CAMA, particularly Section 266(1) and (2), and the violation renders the meeting invalid by virtue of Section 266(3).