Tag: lagos

  • ITF fixes Sept 21 deadline for Governor’s Tennis Cup

    ITF fixes Sept 21 deadline for Governor’s Tennis Cup

    The International Tennis Federation, ITF, has fixed Thursday, 21 September as the deadline for players willing to participate in the pro circuit competition.

    This is in readiness for the 17th Governor’s Cup Lagos Tennis Championship scheduled for 6th-21st October, 2017 this year.

    This was contained in a notice published on the website of the ITF with other instructions on how the players could register for the two weeks event in Lagos, after payment of a $40 entry fee.

    The ITF also directed that Tuesday, 26 September will be the deadline for withdrawal of any player who is not willing to play in the competition after registration. The ITF said that the qualifying matches for the first leg (Fixtures 4) of the tournament will be played from 7th-8th October, while the Main Draws will be held from 9th-14th October at the Lagos Lawn Tennis Club, Onikan.

    For the second leg (Fixtures 5), a deadline of Thursday, 28 September has been fixed for registration, while the 3rd October date has also been fixed for withdrawal.  The second leg will end with the final matches and presentation of trophies on 21st October.

    However, Tournament Director, Prince Wale Oladunjoye has hinted that the $100,000 prize money championship is going to be bigger this year with lots of attractive packaging that will make the tournament more glamorous. He said the Local Organising Committee (LOC)  headed by Chief Pius Akinyelure in conjunction with the Nigeria Tennis Federation (NTF) will leave nothing to chance to ensure that the 17th Governor’s Cup Lagos Tennis lives up to its bidding.

    This year’s competition will likely attract more players across the world than the previous editions, going by the interest shown by the emerging world tennis players to visit Lagos. They are not only coming to win the dollar prize money; but they will play in the competition and pick points to enhance their rating in the world.

    The Governor’s Cup Lagos Tennis Championship has been a tournament staged every year to celebrate the sitting Executive Governor of Lagos State, one of the largest mega cities of the world.

    There has been no year without the Governor’s Cup being staged since the administration of Honourable Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.  The incumbent Governor, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode, since he assumed office, showed exceptional interest in seeing that the annual competition meets up its dates on the ITF calendar.

    “This year is not an exception,” said Prince Oladunjoye, who commended the Governor for the support and other friends of the Governor who have over the years showed their unflinching support for the Governor’s Cup Lagos Tennis.

    “This competition started with Asiwaju Tinubu, whom we all know as a great leader. Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola succeeded in improving on this tournament and we are so happy that Governor Ambode, with his love for sports, has ensured that the Governor’s Cup Lagos Tennis becomes a bigger tournament that will attract more players to the city of Lagos,” Oladunjoye said.

     

  • Lagos disburses N742m pension rights for August

    Lagos disburses N742m pension rights for August

    The Lagos State Government has disbursed N742 million pension payments for August.

    A statement issued by the Head of the Lagos State Pension Commission (LASPEC), Mrs. Basirat Lawal, said on Monday the money was released for the payment of 255 retirees.

    “Lagos cares and that is why it is committed by being up-to-date in pension payments. This administration advised the retirees not to live extravagantly.

    “In two years, from August 2015 to August 2017, the administration of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode through LASPEC has paid over N30 billion to retirees in form of accrued pension rights.

    “The Accrued rights were paid into the Retired Savings Accounts (RSA) of 7,232 retirees.

    “This is an achievement no other state has attained,” she said.

    Lawal said the beneficiaries were also urged to counsel relatives and friends still in service to embrace the Additional Voluntary Contribution (AVC) into their RSA.

    “The deduction field for AVC is now on the State Government’s Oracle HR application.

    “The AVC will guarantee more comfortable life for retirees as the funds are invested and can be accessed immediately by a retiree on retirement.

    “It can also be used to boost pension received in retirement,” she added.

  • Lagos flags off Oshodi-Int’l Airport road

    Lagos flags off Oshodi-Int’l Airport road

    The Lagos State Government on Monday flagged off the reconstruction of the Oshodi-International Airport Road, with a pledge to complete the project within the next fifteen months.

    The State Governor, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode had last month at the quarterly Town Hall Meeting held in Badore area of Ajah, announced that the reconstruction of the road, which is a major gateway to the country, would commence in September, and that the construction would facilitate the transformation of the road to a world class standard.

    Specifically, the design of the project include the reconstruction and expansion of the existing carriage to three-lane Expressway on both directions, construction of two-lane Service Road in both directions, construction of Ramp Bridge to provide a U-turn from Ajao Estate to Airport, construction of a flyover at NAHCO/Toll Gate and drainage works.

    Others include the removal of existing Pedestrian Bridge at Ajao Estate and construction of Pedestrian Bridges at Ajao Estate and NAHCO/Hajj Camp, construction of Slip Road to provide access to Ajao Estate, construction of Lay-bys and installation of Street Lights, among others.

    Speaking while flagging off the project, the State’s Commissioner for Waterfront Infrastructure Development, Engr Adebowale Akinsanya said the commencement of the project was in line with the commitment of the present administration to transform the entire axis, being the major gateway to the country’s commercial nerve centre.

    He said the State Government took it upon itself to undertake the reconstruction of the road being one of the busiest roads in the State with vehicular volumes averaging 50,000 vehicles daily, and that its poor state was not acceptable for the status of the State as the fifth largest economy in Africa and the nation’s commercial hub.

    He said some of the fences along the corridor have been identified to be within the right of way, but that government would minimize the impact of the project on property owners.

    He said in order to properly carry along people of the area, a stakeholders’ meeting will hold on Thursday to sensitize the people whereby they will have an opportunity to ask the necessary questions.

    He said to fast-track the project, three group of workers will work on the project and they would work day and night, while upon completion, the project will be linked to the Oworonshoki reclamation project, which is also ongoing and is aimed at transforming the corridor to a major entertainment and tourism hub.

    The Commissioner, however, urged residents and motorists to cooperate with government while the construction will last, saying that the intention was to transform the area.

    “There will be some minor inconveniences but we are going to try to mitigate the impact. The work will be accelerated. The project is to make life easier for everybody. We just want to appeal to people to cooperate with us. We will be here to talk to the people in case of any issue and we are also working with our partner, the Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN),” the Commissioner said.

    Also speaking, Managing Director of Planet Projects, the firm that designed the project, Mr. Biodun Otunola said prior to the commencement of the construction, adequate feasibility studies were carried out, and that the project, upon completion, would facilitate total transformation of Oshodi and International Airport corridor.

    He said in as much as there would not be alternative roads created specifically for the project, adequate measures have been put in place to educate the public on the staging that would be developed, saying that the project would be executed in phases, while motorists will make use of other sections of the road during construction work on a particular section.

    Otunola, whose company is also handling the construction of the Oshodi Transport Interchange, said by the time the road project and the interchange are completed, the whole axis would have been transformed to world class standard.

    “The desire of the State Government under Governor Ambode is to ensure that this whole corridor is turned into an international corridor so that investors and the people can be proud that we have an international gateway that we all can be proud of.

    “We are not just building roads, we are thinking of the transportation implication and so there is a bus reform project that is ongoing and every part of Lagos will be connected by bus and that is why this road project will be linked to the Oshodi interchange. So, there will be about 20 lay-bys, bus terminals and so on which are all flowing from the same Master plan for this area,” he said.

  • Death & The King’s Horseman hits Lagos

    Death & The King’s Horseman hits Lagos

    Wole Soyinka’s classic,Death and the King’s Horseman’, will be on stage tomorrow at the Terra Arena, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    Directed by Bisi Adigun, the presentation is produced by Arambe Productions, with support from management of Terra Kulture, owners of the theatre facility.

    Described as Soyinka’s “best illustration of the ritual theatre paradigm” by the foremost theatre scholar, Joel Adedeji (2005), the Sallah holiday run of the play, will feature a top-range cast and crew that includes Toyin Oshinaike, Tunji Sotiminrin, Bukky Ogunnote, Tunde Onikoyi, Wale Lampejo and others.

    Based on a real life tragic event, the play is set in Oyo during the Second World War, when Nigeria was still a British colony. The king has died and as his horseman commences the traditional ritual that will ensure the smooth transition of the dead king to the world beyond, the British colonial officer intervenes. In consequence, the harmonious co-existence between the living, the dead and the unborn is under severe threat.

    Will the turn of events cause a disruption of a cosmic order of the universe? Will justice be served?

    The answer will be provided at the Sallah holiday presentation, during which audiences will be entranced by the songs, music, chants, humour and the ’totality’ of Soyinka’s dramaturgy, as well as his linguistic dexterity. The play had earlier been staged to wide acclaim in July at the University of Lagos to mark the 83rd birthday anniversary celebration of the author, Soyinka, the 1986 Nobel laureate for Literature.

    Eid el Kabir, also called the ‘Feast of the Sacrifice’, is the festive period during which Muslims all over the world celebrate to honour Abraham, who was willing to sacrifice his son in submission to God’s command before God intervened by providing him with a ram to sacrifice in place of his son.

  • Shooting musical videos abroad is cost effective – Efa

    Shooting musical videos abroad is cost effective – Efa

    A rap artiste, Efa Iware, popularly known as “Efa”, says artistes prefer shooting musical videos abroad because it is cost effective and cheaper.

    Iware told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that in Nigeria people tend to be unprofessional in doing their jobs “which is not the case abroad’’.

    “There are some sophisticated equipment and modern technologies required for good productions that we do not have in the country and in terms of logistics, it is very terrible here.

    “If you schedule a video shoot for 8a.m., it may not start till 3p.m. or later because of hold up and other problems.

    “If structures and amenities are in place in this country and we have less hold ups, maybe artistes will not go out to do their videos,’’ he said.

    Iware said that if the artists were being empowered and if they could get their money’s worth from the works they released, they might be forced to do their shootings in the country.

    “They may be able to produce more quality videos because they have the money to go for that.

    “If we have videos that are poorly produced and it is showcased, people will not go for them.

    “We need to scale up our production to be as good as those produced abroad,’’ he said.

    The musician noted that lack of good equipment in the country was one of the challenges facing production of good video.

    “These equipment cost a lot. It is few individuals that own them and they loan it out for just a day or hours because they will need to give it to others too.

    He said that the country needed to put the right policy in place and give artistes rebates on  importation of musical equipment.

    Iware studied Geography in University of Ibadan; he is a rapper, an actor, who played with a group known as X-Factor in 2011.

    His songs are “Sunmobi-2014’’, “Balling Like Don Jazzy-2014’’, Bottom of the Glass-2015’’, “Brandi-2o015’’, “Obandi’’ and others.

  • Why contaminated ‘pure  water’ abounds in Lagos

    Why contaminated ‘pure water’ abounds in Lagos

    In this concluding part of our investigative story on the conditions of different brands of sachet water sold to unsuspecting consumers in Lagos as ‘pure’, HANNAH OJO reports on the result of the second batch of 15 laboratory-tested samples randomly selected in the five divisions of Lagos. With six of the samples revealing acidic content beyond the World Health Organisation (WHO) standards, environmental factors and acute water shortage appear to be prime reasons for the contamination of water sources in the state. 

    LAGOS residents who drink ‘pure water’ would have to be more discerning in their choice as six out of another set of 15 laboratory-tested sachet water revealed high acidic content. The pH level of the six acidic water ranged from 4.64 to 6.22, falling below the WHO minimum requirement of 6.50 for potable water. Last week, The Nation had published results from the first 15 samples out of which nine samples recorded the presence of contaminants such as coliform, microbial count, acidity and pathogenic bacteria.

    The test also revealed LASPOTECH water has a slightly low pH at 6.22, with the analyst recommending treatment. The samples were selected in the month of August.

    The result of the second batch brings to 15 the number of contaminated brands out of the 30 samples taken to the laboratory. The water samples, selected between May and August, were contracted to the University of Lagos Consult Limited for a laboratory test. The physical, chemical and microbiological characteristics of each sample were examined.

    A registered public analyst and chartered chemist from the Chemistry Department of the University of Lagos issued an analyst’s certificate on each sample, in accordance with the Institute of Public Analysts of Nigeria (IPAN). The brands were coded at the time they were tested in order to conceal their brand names.

    A Consultant Public Health Physician/Epidemiologist, Prof Akin Osibogun, in an interview with The Nation, said the main danger from low pH of water (acidity) is that such water is corrosive and dissolves metal pipings, which may lead to high level of metals in the consumed water, in addition to the economic costs.

    “High pH of water, on the other hand, renders chlorination less effective and therefore increases the likelihood that bacterial agents of disease may persist in such water and when consumed, may result in diarrhoeal diseases,” Prof. Osibogun added.

    He also said that some chemical contaminants may have acute or relatively immediate toxic effects, while other chemicals may have long term carcinogenic effects.

    “There are over 10,000 chemicals now being used in industries, and careless disposal of industrial wastes is one source of pollution of water sources,” he said.

    His views were corroborated by a medical practitioner, Dr Shola Oguntona, who explained that when the pH of water is less than 7, it can be considered acidic, adding that a range of 6.5-8.5 is considered safe.

    Oguntona, formerly of the Department of Medical Biochemistry, Lagos State University College of Medicine, averred that although there are not enough scientific data to conclude that acidic water has a direct impact on health, he affirmed that there might be indirect effects causing kidney and cardiovascular diseases.

    “Accumulation of lead in children can occur faster and this can affect their growth and memory. Other effects of water contaminated by metals can be stomach upset, vomiting, dehydration from vomiting and kidney diseases,” he told The Nation.

     

    Acidic sachet water; long time coming

    The prevalence of acidic contents in some Lagos sachet water appears not to have been a sudden occurrence. Five years ago, a team of researchers at the Lagos State University College of Medicine carried out a study on contamination of sachet water produced within the industrial area of Ikeja in Lagos. Six sachet water samples were selected. The study, led by Dr Shola Ogunbona, showed that all the sachet water samples were acidic. It also showed high level of heavy metals (chromium, lead and zinc), which would accumulate in the body after long term consumption. Two other samples showed high level of chloride which was traced to industrial activities in the region where the water was produced.

     

    Human cost of sketchy sachet water

    In July 23 this year, a cholera outbreak was announced in the city of Lagos. At least two persons were reported dead, while 25 others were said to be quarantined. Another report recorded six casualties in Shomolu among whom was a five-year-old Hannah Obi, an 18-year-old simply identified as Clement and a 66-year-old woman, Risikat Okubena Majolagbe. In a space of one month, there were 26 cases and six deaths, according to records obtained from a government official, who pleaded anonymity.

    Also, data The Nation exclusively obtained from the Lagos State Ministry of Health revealed places like Epe, Ijede, Harvey Road (Yaba) and Shomolu as hotspots for cholera between 2014 and 2015. However, there are usually many unreported cases of deaths and illnesses arising from water-borne diseases as majority of Lagos residents are cut off from potable water supply.

    The Lagos State Water Corporation only produces 215 million gallons of water per day for a population of 24 million people, leaving a deficit of over 500 million gallons per day (MGD).

    The sketchy alternative citizens are faced with in the quest for potable water has resulted in the death of children. Most grievous was the death of 25 children from Otodo Gbame, a slum in Ikate Eti Osa Local Government Area in February 2016. The children died after drinking the community’s pathogen-infected water.

    Again, in March this year, there was another ‘water tragedy’ at Queens College, a government secondary school in the Yaba area of Lagos where three students died and scores of others were hospitalised as a result of a gastroenteritis epidemic contracted through contaminated water sources within the school environment.

     

    Unenviable romance with waste, effluents

    With 13, 000 metric tonnes of waste generated in the state per day, Lagos has always had an unenviable romance with waste. Sadly, there are also many industries who flout environment rules by discharging untreated effluents into waste water. This invariably has affected the quality of water aquifers in the state, leading to contamination from source in most cases.

    A geologist, Mr Olawale Alo, stated that while earth materials on the surface of water are supposed to act as filters, that may not be the case with Lagos, going by its high population density and the amount of generated waste which may infiltrate the sub-surface.

    He counselled: “With Lagos being a coastal city, toxic materials produced from waste can easily infiltrate down, thereby polluting the water aquifers. The shallower water is more susceptible to pollution. Even the deep aquifers can have the issue of marine incursion such that the water would be salty. What that means is that if people must drill boreholes, it is better to do a geo-physical survey so that the deeper aquifers are targeted.”

    The Lagos State Water Corporation is responsible for water supply across the state. Bedevilled by continuous population increase, failed public-private partnerships, inadequate budgetry allocation, poor labour practices and unstable power supply, the corporation falls short, hence leading to indiscriminate drilling of boreholes in the state. The indiscriminate drilling can send vibrations down into the soft surface of the earth, thereby paving way for environmental disasters.

     

    Eyewitness accounts

    Following the publication of the first part of this report two weeks ago, two Lagos residents reached out to the reporter to report cases of faulty water sachet samples and indiscreet packaging sighted in Lagos. Seye Joseph had no iota of doubt on August 21 when he gulped down the content of a sachet of pure water he bought from a location in Ikeja.

    He said: “I took the water in my mouth but could not swallow it. The liquid had an abhorrent taste and I quickly spat it out. I later called the number on the sachet water and all they offered were apologies. I shuddered on the ills that would have caused people because this same company also produces bottled water.”

    Another response came from Mr Femi Salawu, a communications specialist who photographed an image where a gravel truck was loaded with bags of sachet water with a man lying over them. The water did not only stand the risk of being contaminated through exposure to the sun but also from the body fluids of the person who made a bed space on top of the pile.

    Mr Salawu, who captured the image, tweeted at the reporter’s handle with the caption: “From earth moving vehicle to a sachet water carrying “motor”. Is water still life?” The image was captured at 8:51 am on 22 August tweet with the angle @citizen_gavel.

    It has been said that when sachet water is exposed to the sun and other harsh elements from the environment, they stand the risk of exposure to carcinogenic agents. According to Prof Oluwole Adedeji, a consultant with the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, this happens when the polythene bag used to package the water is of low quality whilst being exposed to sunlight or stored under an unwholesome condition.

    “Most of these bags have pores. They have holes which may not be visible to the human eye, which allow some elements in the environment to diffuse gradually into the water. The chemicals can be very carcinogenic,” Prof Adedeji intoned as he connects poorly packaged sachet water with cancer and other terminal illnesses associated with the lungs, liver and the heart.

    Advising on best practices, Mr Oluwole Toye , the Vice President of the Nigerian Institute of Food Science and Technology, who took the reporter through  various purifying process of producing potable sachet water, said citizens have a responsibility to report sachet water producers that are not doing the right thing.

    He said: “Some people are actually just using water from the well, while others use public water system without purification. I am sure NAFDAC is also worried about the proliferation of sachet water companies.

    What NAFDAC needs to do is to ensure effective control. NAFDAC is a corporate member of our institute, so we are always engaging them on how we can be of assistance.”

     

    Safety valves

    As a safety measure, citizens can boil their water and allow it to cool before drinking, The Nation learnt.

    “Whenever one is unsure of one’s water source, it is better to boil. However, this takes care of only the biological agents that could cause disease. If you have also sunk a borehole in your premises, it will be useful to subject samples of the water to biological and chemical analysis. There are different types of filters in the market to address different iron pollutants,” Osibogun advised.

     

    Our stories, by faulted sachet water producers, ATWAP President

    Aminat Akanji, the manager of Fizco Water, one of the water samples indicted by the laboratory report, told The Nation that executive members of the Association of Table Water Producers (ATWAP) actually came to the factory to take samples of its water for laboratory test and it was certified okay, wondering what could have gone wrong while she was away on maternity leave.

    She said: “Our water is okay. I called for treatment and the pH level was checked as well. I don’t know what happened with the samples reported in the newspaper. I was away on maternity leave. But things are okay now. We have called in a chemist to maintain the treatment and things have been certified okay,” she said.

    When his reaction was sought on the acidic content of his sachet water, the producer of Two Ways Water, Mr Gafaru Wahud, said that people had not been complaining about the brand. He said: “NAFDAC inspected our factory before we got registered and we have been maintaining the standards. We always back-flush our cylinder and we change the filters from time to time.”

    Asked how often public analysts get to test the water, Wahud said the water factory, which sources its water from a borehole, had just opened. So, tests had not yet been conducted.

    On his part, the Public Relations Officer of the Lagos State Polytechnic, the producers of LASPOTECH Water, Mr. Lanrewaju Kuye, said the school would not produce substandard water, considering that it produces for the consumption of both the students of the institution and members of the public.

    “We cannot produce bad water and we always follow the standard,” he said. “We are a tertiary institution and we are also producing for the public.

    “Regarding the issue (low pH), I will ask the consultant in charge of our water factory to cross-check. If the result is true, it will be corrected immediately.”

    Also, Mr Afolabi Oluwaseyi, the producer of Jim Dee Water, which recorded a pH level of 5.65 against the W.H.O’s minimum standard of 6.50, discountenanced the test result obtained by The Nation.

    “We are doing our renewal with NAFDAC. We have taken our samples to the lab, though we have not collected the result. If there is any issue with the pH, we would have been alerted.”

    Oluwaseyi, however, promised that the water treatment plant would be recharged to boast its pH if per chance the hydrolyte has stopped working.

    Sem-Sem Water, produced in Epe, also recorded a case of low pH pegged at  6.21. Mariam Morafa, the production manager of the water factory, said a water engineer would be called to access the treatment plant.

    “This is the first complaint we have received. We would do something about it. We are supposed to do the water treatment every three months”, Morafa said, adding that the factory started production less than a year ago.

    Med Oaeses sachet water sample produced in Ikeja Military Cantonment also tested positive to high acidic content at 4.64. When The Nation visited the premises on Friday, workers at the plant declined to comment as the manager was said not to be available.

    Explaining why there is proliferation of substandard sachet water brands in Lagos and other parts of the country, the President of the Association of Table Water Producers of Nigeria (ATWAP), Dame Clementina Ativie, attributed the problem to the increasingly high cost of doing business on account of which some producers are trying to cut cost by using substandard products.

    One of the problems, she said, is excess taxation. “Too much of taxes on the industry by various government agencies results in the use of cheap production materials by some producers to meet up with government tax demands,” she said.

    She also fingered loopholes in the regulatory and supervisory mechanisms of government as part of the problem.

    Dame Ativie said: “If the industry is currently being supervised by NAFDAC, SON, Ministry of Health and Environment, Lagos State Water Regulatory Council (LSWRC), and these problems of contamination still manifest, then it means there is a missing gap somewhere. ATWAP should therefore be authorised by government to regulate and supervise the industry in conjunction with NAFDAC”.

    She also tasked government to put an end to the indiscriminate siting of water factories. “A number of factories should be determined in each geographical location. Boreholes in high density areas should be regulated due to waste water, soak-aways and the volume of contaminants in groundwater in such locations,” she said.

    “Our members are law-abiding. Most of our members in Lagos had paid for the LSWRC (Lagos State Water Regulatory Commission) borehole permit and licence.

    “We have well above 2,000 water producers in Lagos alone. We checkmate our members to make sure they adhere to the standard of operation set out by NAFDAC and other regulatory agencies.

    “We insist on our members having mini-testing kits for water to check for some basic parameters before, during and after production.

    “We from time to time organise training for our members on safety standards of production, storage and distribution of our products, considering their sensitivity to human life.”

    On measures the association is taking to combat counterfeited brands of sachet water, she said: “We are presently working on coded symbol and number to differentiate our water from any sachet or bottled water in circulation. That will be launched very soon.”

    As Nigeria joins the rest of the world to pursue availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all, it appears dry tapes and unwholesome production of alternative source of potable water are prime factors exposing citizens to water-borne diseases.

    Log onto www.staging.thenationonlineng.net to watch video.

    Reporting for this story was supported by Code for Africa’s impactAFRICA fund and the Bill & Melinda Gate Foundation

  • Our battles with reptiles, rodents, mosquitoes, harsh weather

    Our battles with reptiles, rodents, mosquitoes, harsh weather

    In spite of successive governments’ promises and programmes aimed at providing mass and affordable houses for Nigerians, the Bureau of Public Service Reform (BPSR) early in the year said that out of the 170 million people in the country, 108 million are technically homeless. This ugly development is no doubt responsible for the self- help the poor masses seem to have adopted to provide shelter for themselves. The result is the proliferation of ramshackle buildings in many parts of the country. INNOCENT DURU, who visited some suburbs of Lagos and Ogun states, examines the health, environmental and security risks that owners and occupants of these makeshift structures are exposed to.

    SHELTER is conventionally regarded as one of the basic necessities of life. But for several landlords in the suburbs of Lagos and Ogun states, living in their own houses comes with enormous pains. Many of the houses are without doors, windows, toilets or bathrooms. Some others are tucked inside bushes where they are forced to mix with reptiles, rodents and other dangerous animals invading their homes on a daily basis.

    A landlord at Odogunyan area of Ikorodu, Lagos, who identified himself simply as Samuel, said: “Life for most of us who live in this kind of structure is an emergency. We became landlords by emergency and also turned into emergency hunters because of the unsolicited visitors we have to entertain from time to time, especially reptiles and rodents. Soldier ants are our doctors and nurses because they come from time to time to inject us. In fact, we do emergency defecation and bathing because you don’t want people to catch you doing it openly, but it is the norm here.

    “Many of us are living the kind of lifestyles we never lived as tenants because we had everything in the rented houses. We are only consoled by the fact that we own the buildings. But how long would one continue to live in the Stone Age because the money is not there to perfect the building? That is the problem,”

    Investigation conducted by our correspondent showed that a good number of the landlords were forced into building shanty one- room houses because they couldn’t cope with rent in the cities.

    Ayobami, who owns one of such houses at Mowo on the Lagos/Badagry Expressway, said: “Most of us built these houses on emergency because rent was always rising and landlords would not listen to excuses. Flood, family problems and other forms of crises also force some people to quit their rented apartments.

    “Some of us begin by living in ordinary tents because there is no money to start building immediately. Some others who could not live in tents constructed wooden houses, while some lived in containers (cubicles made with iron and pan) until they are able to get money to start building the one-room apartment you described with contempt.

    “If you look at my building and some others very well, you will find that they have different shades of blocks. This is because the blocks were set at different intervals. In my own case, the foundation blocks stayed for more than two years before I raised the building to some point. After some time, I raised and roofed it, using tarpaulin and old roofing sheets to block some open places.

    “Cold and rain dealt with my family seriously while we were living in the tent. On many occasions, wind would blow part of it away in the night and we would have to stand in the rain to mend it.”

    Afolabi, a proud owner of a shanty one-room building located in Okoafon also on the Lagos-Badagry Expressway, is not bothered about what you think about his derelict house. What is important to him is that he has joined the league of landlords and now attends meetings with other landlords who have the best of houses in the area.

    “I am happy to have this building even though it is still at this level,” he said. “I am now a landlord and eternally delivered from the harassment of shylock house owners. It was a nightmare being a tenant, especially in the last house I lived in. The landlord was a thorn in my flesh. He was always complaining about everything and would seize every opportunity to extort money from his tenants.

    “He has three wives, and the moment any of them got pregnant, he would come and tell you he needed money to pay the hospital bills. After the wife puts to bed, he would come again and ask for money to help him take care of the baby and the mother. He does this not minding whether you owe him or not. If you are not owing, he would tell you to deduct it from the next rent. In short, his tenants were his ATM cards.

    “The annoying thing was that he never bothered to repair anything that got spoilt in the house. We always used our own resources to fix it.”

    But glad as he might be to be called a landlord, Afolabi said he had not been allowing his friends and relations to visit him for fear that they would mock him if they come.

    “How do you want me to bring them to this kind of place?” he queried. “I can’t do that because they will turn me to an object of ridicule. I don’t have a toilet yet. My family members and I do what is popularly called ‘short put’. We defecate in old newspapers or nylon bags and throw it into the bush. Is that what I will ask a friend or relation who visits to do? I will rather not invite them until I have a presentable house.

    A widow, Mrs Mojeed, who owns a room and a parlour in Ogijo, a suburb of Ogun State, savours the joy of being called a landlady. But the condition of the building in which she and her children live is not too different from that of a refugee camp. The rooms, like other hastily built houses, are without doors, causing the poor woman and her children to be exposed to harsh weather conditions.

    Her words: “I was living in Pedro area of Bariga (Lagos) before I moved to this place. I left Bariga after my landlord threw my family out of the house because we could not pay the high rent of N5, 000 per room.

    “When the landlord sent us out, we felt it was unwise to go and pay another rent with agency fee and commission. That was why we hurriedly came and erected a room and parlour here.

    “As you can see, we have no door or window. When rain falls, it comes into the house and messes up the whole place. If it is the type that comes with flood, we would have to stand on the bed for the rain to subside before coming down to drain the flood. The same thing happens during harmattan season. The cold wind comes in unhindered. All we do is to cover ourselves with wrappers.

    “We don’t have any form of security. We are daily exposed to all manner of dangers, but we always rely on God for protection. We didn’t really wish to have it this way but that is what the challenges of life have dropped on our laps.”

    The story of Oyerinde Mudasiru’s movement from Surulere, a highbrow part of Lagos, to Okeoko, a sleepy community in Ogijo, is simply befuddling.

    He said: “I moved from Surulere to Ikorodu because the rent became too much for me. After some time in Ikorodu, the rent also skyrocketed and I felt it was not wise to continue to labour all the year round only to pay a landlord. It was at this point that I decided to build a room on half a plot of land I had already acquired here in Okeoko.

    “I used sack and net to cover my door and window after constructing my one-room building. Mosquitoes, soldier ants and reptiles freely invaded my room. At a point, health officers came and gave us mosquito nets to save us from the menace of mosquitoes.

    “My neighbours and I have also been clearing the bush in the surrounding to prevent reptiles from coming into the house. We have been living in darkness all along as there is no electricity supply. We have contributed N60, 000 each for us to get power supply, but it was to no avail.

    “The government does not care about us except it is time for election. The road leading to this place wasn’t passable for vehicles until the Redeemed Christian Church of God headquarters, which is not far from us, took it upon themselves to fix it.”

    It was also a rough beginning for Najeem, who said he was forced out of his rented apartment by incessant flood.

    “When the menace of flood in my rented apartment at Ketu\Ikorodu Road became too much, I tried getting another apartment. But when I checked out the cost, I changed my mind and decided to use it to start something on my land here in Odogunyan.

    “We started with a wooden house and later began to build the house. It has been pretty challenging coping in this kind of condition. We don’t have a toilet. What we do from time to time is to dig holes and dump excreta in them. When that one is full, we dig another one.

    “We wake very early to bathe because we don’t have a bathroom. It is meaningless putting a bathroom in an open place where everybody passing will see us bathing. That is why we prefer to bathe early or late at night.

    “It is unfortunate that the government does not have plans for the poor to get loan to build houses. If they were providing loans, most of us would not suffer this much to have accommodation.”

    Challenging as their conditions are, the story of Mrs. Lateefat Fatai and others who moved from a one-room apartment to completing their houses offers some hope of a better tomorrow for the embattled landlords.

    She said: “My family was living at Ketu Alapere before we moved here. It was the same landlord palaver that drove us here. When our rent was increased to N7, 000 a room, we felt it was not worth it to continue to pay such when there are other bills. We decided to build a room and covered the door and window with sack. We managed like that until we added more rooms. Many people who started like that now have great buildings that one would never believe was like a rehabilitation home at the beginning.”

    In spite of her success story, she said: “Living in a remote area like this comes with a lot of challenges because it is we the residents that use our resources to develop the whole place. As we speak, there is no water supply. We go to long distances on a daily basis to buy water. Apart from that, living in this place has affected my business adversely. I sell soft drinks and sachet water but there is no power supply to make them cold. This makes people not to buy things the way they should.”

    Security, building, environmental experts speak

    In a telephone chat with our correspondent, the First Vice President of the Nigeria Institute of Building and the President of the Building Collapse Prevention Guild, Mr. Kunle Awobodu, expressed concern about the rate at which derelict buildings are mushrooming.

    “This question has been boggling our minds for long,” he said. “When you get to the suburbs of Lagos, you would see how ramshackle buildings are developing. Eventually, they will become a burden and an eyesore in future. So why can’t we get it right from the beginning? We have seen where a family slept in a ramshackle building overnight and the thing collapsed and killed them.

    “It is a complex social problem the government has not been able to find a solution to. When Mr Babatunde Fashola (SAN) was the governor of Lagos State, we advised him that the mortgage system that is operating in advanced countries should be introduced here, but the problem is how do we recover the money?

    “Our system has deficiency in seeing such facilities through. There is this programme by LAPO and Lafarge to help low income earners with money at low interest rate to build their own houses. It is called Ile Irorun. But how those people will pay back is another issue.”

    Awobodu further remarked that it is a contradiction to say that the government cannot build houses for people “when you hear that an individual who happened to be in government owns so many houses.

    “In advanced countries, especially the socialist countries, individuals don’t own houses, it is the government that builds for them. But Nigeria does not even have a data on who is who. So it is very complex to say you want to build for the people.”

    Explaining the security challenges associated with living in such structures, an expert on security matters, Ken Oziegbe, said: “People living in such structures are often soft targets for criminals. If you look critically at the people that were killed by the Badoo cult group in Ikorodu, you will find that the majority were people living in places like the picture you have painted.

    “There was this report published by your paper sometime last year about a community in Ijora where hoodlums were always raping and robbing people living in tents and other places that were not covered. That is what happens when people live in such places.

    “Criminals also like to do their operations with ease. We should also bear it in mind that criminals could use such suburbs as their hideouts. They wouldn’t want to spend so much on such building so that they could easily abandon it when the chips are down.”

    He added: “The government needs to up its game by providing befitting houses for the people. And where they cannot, they should be able to provide an enabling environment for the people to own houses.”

    An environmentalist, MrTaiwo Adewole, said people building houses without toilet and bathroom facilities are calling for serious epidemics within the society. “Unhealthy environment can easily lead to outbreaks of diseases,” he said, adding: “The government has a great role to play because they are the ones giving approval for the construction of buildings. Secondly, the local government, through its sanitation and health department, also has vital roles to play.

    “There is a need for massive awareness among people living in such areas. The best remedy from the government is to embark on building more public toilets and bathrooms which should be completely free of charge. The government also needs to start penalising the landlords of such facilities because the epidemic will be a major one which no one can escape from. Henceforth no building approval must be given without adequate toilets and bathrooms.”

    He added: “Some weeks back, I was at a community called Ajowa in Ajeromi/Ifelodun Local Government Area, and it was a real eyesore seeing people going to defecate in an open water body. And it was not even for free. ‘Area boys’ are the ones managing the open defecation place.

    “We can imagine the environmental and health impact because some people drink from the same water (where we have well and boreholes) closer to the water body and at the same time people still fish in the same water.

    “Finally, the owners of such buildings must be penalised for not following the building rules and regulations by erecting structures that lack toilets and bathroom facilities, which are basic sanitation requirements for every building.”

    Government moves to end menace

    The Federal Government during the week initiated the Nigeria Housing Fund Programme (NHFP), which is under the Social Investment Fund of the Federal Government. A sum of N100 billion was said to have been set aside for its take off.

    President of the Mortgage Bankers Association of Nigeria, and Managing Director, Trustbank Mortgage Ltd, Mr. Niyi Akinlusi, said the scheme was a departure from other housing schemes in Nigeria, adding: “The Housing Micro Finance Scheme is meant to stimulate increased lending to low-income earners in the formal and informal sectors in Nigeria through micro finance banks for incremental housing construction or housing improvement, while the technical assistance for the scheme shall ensure the protection of all the parties involved in the scheme.”

  • Lagos Deputy Gov calls for love, compassion, peaceful co-existence

    •…as Fashola, Akiolu, Okunnu, others observe Eid prayers

    Lagos State Deputy Governor, Dr. Idiat Oluranti Adebule, yesterday called on Nigerians to uphold the significance of the Eid-El-Kabir, which is obedience to Allah, caring and sharing with others, showing mercy, compassion and neigbourly love.

    The deputy governor who gave the advice shortly after performing the Eid el Kabir prayer at the Dodan Barracks Praying Ground urged Nigerians to celebrate Sallah peacefully, show mercy and ensure peaceful co-existence.

    She urged Muslims to always remember the lesson embedded in the celebration which, according to her, is the celebration of God’s mercy on mankind as demonstrated with the replacement of a ram for a son by Allah.

    “This shows great love of the Almighty Allah for mankind. We ought to emulate this act and show kindness and love to our brothers and neighbours by ensuring peaceful co-existence and shunning all forms of divisive tendencies that threaten our national unity,” Adebule said.

    ‘’The message for us as Muslims is that we submit ourselves to the will of the Almighty God. We should not just be carried away by today’s celebration but reflect on the significance of today, which is total submission to God.

    ‘’As we also wine and dine, let us care and share with others, especially the underprivileged, irrespective of tribe or religion.

    ‘’This is why Governor Akinwunmi Ambode-led administration is organising Eid celebration in the 20 local government areas of the state to make the celebration an all inclusive one,’’ Adebule said.

    She urged Lagosians to continue to support and pray for the present administration in the state as it strives on a daily basis to bring new reforms that impact on the lives of the common man.

    On his part, the Acting Chief Imam of Lagos Central Mosque, Sheikh Olubodun Gbajabiamila, urged Muslims to be steadfast in remembrance of Allah, saying the essence of Eid-el-Kabir is to encourage selfless sacrifice in promoting societal peace and progress.

    In his sermon after the Eid Nawafil (Sallah prayer), Gbajabiamila enjoined Muslims to have unflinching faith in Allah and work for peace.

    He admonished them against promoting vices that could breach peace and cause suffering to their fellow human beings in their environments, noting that Islam and its prophets did not support any action inflicting pains and violence on humanity.

    Quoting from Qur’an Chapter 68 verse 51, the Imam urged people in leadership positions to be god-fearing and transparent in discharging their duties, reminding them that they would give account of their deeds before Allah on the day of reckoning.

    “As Muslims, we have another opportunity to check our actions and desist from vices that would breach peace in our communities. In line with teachings of Islam, we must support activities that will bring peace and progress in our society.

    “Anyone, whether Muslim or not, who is fomenting trouble, engaging in kidnapping and stealing from the poor must know that he would give accounts of all his deed on the day of recompense,” he said.

    Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Mudashiru Obasa, said the significance of the Eid celebration is to make sacrifice for peaceful co-existence and lift the downtrodden. He said the aim of slaughtering ram is to engender selflessness and unity.

    He said: “It is important we learn how to live together and foster peace in the country. I will enjoin the citizens to support and have faith in the government they elected. At the same time, government must reciprocate the gesture by listening to the yearnings of the people.”

    Obasa used the opportunity to lend his voice to the call for restructuring, saying the action was needed to bring down the tempo of agitations and mutual suspicion between ethnic nationalities that make up the country.

    Restructuring, he said, would bring solution to immediate challenges facing the country, including security and infrastructure.

    Other notable personalities at the Eid ground included the Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu; Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola; former Minister for Works, Alhaji Femi Okunnu; former Inspector General of Police, Alhaji Musiliu Smith; outgoing Lagos Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni, and Baba Adinni of Lagos, Sheikh Abdul Hafiz Abou, among others

  • Lagos intervenes in case of woman who slashed son with razor blade

    Lagos intervenes in case of woman who slashed son with razor blade

    The Lagos State Ministry of Youth and Social Development has intervened in the case of a woman, Moji Lawal, who allegedly sliced her son’s hands.

    The ministry warned the woman to desist from the cruel act or be prepared to face the wrath of law.

    The Nation had exclusively reported last Saturday how Lawal subjected her son, Lateef, 14, to cruelty by slashing the boy’s hands for returning home late from church on Monday August 21.

    The woman, who is said to be a typist with Yaba College of Technology and resides at 56 Market Street Shomolu was said to have abandoned Lateef, a student of Morocco High School, shortly after she inflicted deep cuts onnhis hands.

    It was also learnt that bystanders took the boy to Shomolu General Hospital where the Medical Welfare Unit of the hospital took care of his treatment.

    It was learnt that the incident was reported at Alade Police Division.

    Speaking with The Nation on Thursday, Commissioner for Youth and Social Development, Pharm (Mrs) Uzamat Akinbile-Yussuf said the officials of the ministry has stepped into the matter with a view to stopping the woman from subjecting the boy to further cruelty all in the name of discipline.

    She said: ‘’ Officials of the ministry have visited the woman’s residence as well as the hospital where the boy was treated. However, the boy has been released to his mother because he is a teenager and the woman is a first time offender.

    ‘’The woman has been cautioned against the use of inhuman or crude disciplinary measures to rein in her son. However, as a responsible state government, our officials shall continue to monitor the woman and the boy in order to see if she complies with our warning. If she fails to adhere to the warning, the government would take legal actions against her.’’

    The Commissioner urged parents to report their recalcitrant children to the appropriate authorities including her ministry instead of subjecting them to cruelty and deadly disciplinary measures.

    ‘’ The wellbeing of children is of importance to the state government, hence, we will not tolerate any form of degrading or inhuman treatment of children in Lagos State, no matter who the perpetrator is,’’ she added.

  • Photos: Lagos celebrates Eid-el Mubarak

    Photos: Lagos celebrates Eid-el Mubarak

    Moslem faithfuls praying at Oluwanisola Estate praying ground, Ajah, during the Eid-el Mubarak celebration in Lagos on Friday.

    RAMADAN FEVER; Muslim faithful ferry away the traditional Ramadan ran after it was slaughtered at the Oluwanisola Estate Praying Ground, Ajah, lagos. PHOTO; OLUSEGUN RAPHEAL
    Traditional Ramadan ran being carried after it was slaughtered at the Oluwanisola Estate Praying Ground, Ajah, Lagos. PHOTO; OLUSEGUN RAPHEAL
    Moslem faithful praying at Oluwanisola Estate praying ground, Ajah, during the Eid-el Mubarak celebration in Lagos. PHOTO; OLUSEGUN RAPHEAL
    Moslem faithful praying at Oluwanisola Estate praying ground, Ajah, during the Eil-el Mubarak celebration in Lagos. PHOTO; OLUSEGUN RAPHEAL
    Moslem faithful praying at Oluwanisola Estate praying ground, Ajah, during the Eid-el Mubarak celebration in Lagos. PHOTO; OLUSEGUN RAPHEAL