Tag: lagos

  • Man in court for theft of home appliances

    A Kado Grade 1 Area Court, Abuja, on Monday, arraigned one Nlarian Nlowe, 28, for alleged theft.

    The defendant, who is standing trial on a count charge, resides at Jabi area, Abuja.

    Earlier, the Police Prosecutor, Judith Obatomi, said one Ugomma Rita, of the same address with the defendant, reported the matter at the Life Camp Police Station Abuja on March 9.

    Obatomi said that the complainant alleged that sometimes in August 2016, she left the defendant as her childhood friend in her room and travelled to Lagos.

    On her arrival, she discovered that her LG home theater, stabiliser, DSTV, shoes and her clothes, valued N120, 000 were missing.

    The prosecutor said she called the defendant to confirm what happened but he switched off his phone.

    The defendant, however, pleaded not guilty to the charge brought against him, saying that he was not aware of those items that were stolen.

    However, the prosecutor said that the offence contravened Section 288 of the Penal Code.

    The Judge, Alhaji Ahmed Ado, granted him bail in the sum of N20, 000 and one surety in like sum.

    Ado said that the surety must be a worker in any corporate organisation and must have worked for five years and should reside within​the court jurisdiction.

    He adjourned the case till June 21 for further hearing.

     

  • Lagos: we’re committed to driving investment

    The Lagos State government has restated its commitment to drive investment into the state through the Office of Overseas Affairs and Investment also known as Lagos Global.
    The Special Adviser, Office of Overseas Affairs and Investment, Prof Ademola Abass, dropped the hint during a briefing held in commemoration of the second anniversary of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode at the Bagauda Kaltho Press Centre, Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos, at the weekend.
    Abass said the creation of Lagos Global office was borne out of the desire to enhance the ease of doing business in the state, attract foreign investment, as well as encourage and expend existing investments in the state.
    He said: “By creating the Office, the state has strategically positioned itself as an investment destination of choice for all investors interested in the African and global market. The Office has been successful in reducing the turnaround time of business operations for investors by removing bureaucratic bottlenecks which had hitherto discouraged investors, and streamlining investments related activities.”
    According to him, Lagos has a prominent role to play in the economy of the nation as 65 per cent of the manufacturing take place in the state, contributing 30 per cent to the national gross domestic product (GDP) and accounts for over 90 per cent of the country’s trade flow. Therefore, the state, through the office has put measures and policies in place ensure all investors in the state have a seamless experience in their business operations, so as to create employment opportunities, bringing economic prosperity to Lagosians and Nigerians at large.

    He added that since the inception of Lagos Global, it has encouraged investor’s confidence in the state as a place to conduct business and live in.
    “It is noteworthy that Lagos State has attracted more foreign direct investments in the first two years of this administration than it did in the past fifteen years, even with an economic recession. This points to the fact that Lagos, as an emerging market, is becoming the financial hub and preferred investment destination in Africa.
    “The Office has been able to streamline the time, process and cost associated with investment decision making and operations, this has in turn created employment within and boosted the GDP of the state. This feat has not been achieved only by the office but in collaboration with the other ministries, departments and agencies of the state and federal government,” he said.
    Prof Abass also listed some of the achievements the office since its inception a year ago which includes inauguration of investment champions which was established to ensure effective collaboration with ministries, department and agencies (MDAs) and to create a synergy in the investment activities of the state government across all MDAs who are technical partners and advisors.
    According to him,other remarkable achievements are sensitisation and advocacy, official launch of Lagos Global, Nigeria Ease of doing Business Reform Validation Workshop which was organised by Lagos Global in 2016 among other achievements.
    Other achievements include the consideration of numerous investment proposals that were at various stages in the process of approval and noted that the time taken for proposals to get considered is now greatly reduced to encourage prospective investors.
    ProfAbass was quick to point out that the office of overseas affairs and investment is not related to the ministry of foreign affairs as they don’t grant visas or receive international delegation but is strictly towards making Lagos the most desirable investment destination in the world where investors can guarantee return on their investment and a prosperous citizenry with expanded economic opportunities.

  • Song for Lagos

    Song for Lagos

    There lies Lagos, the city at the edge of the sea and always on edge. And the people are sometimes at sea. There I was almost born but grew up there. I saw it in the 1960’s, when I first understood the identity of things on Ijaoye Street, near Yaba.

    But it was a city where I first found my tongue and feet. Where I kicked my first ball, wrote my first sentence, ran to safety with my father Moses during the civil war, made my first friend, loosed my tongue into its first song, crippled a toe in my first wound, knew the limpid sky above and learned about God and the devil, duelled a classmate, conquered a class test, inhaled the chemical anxiety of a hospital air where I went with my mother over a non-existent ailment.

    It was that very afternoon when the doctor said I was fine and that my frequent bouts of malaria were not because of any blood disease. I recall that afternoon my first encounter with amala, and my taste bud cringed gratefully to the meal with ewedu. Because I loved it, it became a home staple.

    Since then Lagos has been for me what it has been for Nigeria. It has known war and peace, the ragged and the brilliant, the elegant and brutal, the lover and predator, the quick and the dead, the tyrant and olive branch.

    Baba Sala made me thrill to the laugh as organised entertainment. The Bar Beach Show was a joy in literal language but barbaric in metaphor. It entertained until we saw armed robbers’ heads drop on stakes from gunshots.

    Lagos has been the cult of success. Everyone knew he or she would visit Lagos. In spirit. In their fantasies, they were singers, football stars, CEOs, heads of state. They gobbled the city’s delicacies and swaddled the tony arms of the rich.

    They came with their all, hoping to love and grow, make money and subdue it, own a big home, coddle a wife or man, breed a family, travel on its fabled highways and watch its televisions, encounter its celebrities from Julie Coker to D’Banj, from Ray Ekpu to Segun Odegbami, from Victor Uwaifo to Haruna Ilerika. Achebe wrote on how unwilling he was to depart the place when the Igbo fled the pogrom. Soyinka dedicated works to it. Ekwensi’s Jaguar Nana and other works roiled there. Ebenezer Obey, Sunny Ade found muse there. And Nigeria’s best ever, Rex Lawson, warmed his tongue in its entrails. Asa soared there first.

    It is the melting pot. The tribes come, whether Afemai or Ogoni, whether from a backwoods hut in Abia or an illiterate mother near Sambisa, Lagos has not only been a destination. It has been a destiny. The poor came to Lagos and rose to become a rose. The same city that birthed Olajumoke into a star also embraced a skinny lad like Nwankwo Kanu whose feet wrote Nigerian soccer into lore. Scientists like Awojobi and Chike Obi, social scientists like Claude Ake, or lawyers like Gani Fawehinmi and Falana. They all boomed there. Dele Giwa was letter-bombed into martyrdom. Even breakaway Ojukwu daydreamed about it in Biafra.

    The man born in Damaturu found traction in Isale Eko. The trader who could not bloom in Benin had a boost of clients in Alausa. At one time, Lagos swarmed with soldiers. As the nation’s capital, the youth did not want to be democrats. They loved the ostentatious impunity of the khaki men. Murtala Mohammed’s voice and its ability to conjure action did not vitiate the army’s glory in the senses after Dimka snuffed it out. It was almost like the Stockholm syndrome, the victim bonded with its kidnapper.

    Fela’s “Soldier go, soldier come,” became less of a republican query than a sonorous surrender in an age when to be a messiah was to be a bully. Even avatars like Soyinka and Solarin were almost beguiled when the gap-toothed one gave us a meretricious cake of a system. Boys fantasised about “good morning, fellow Nigerians…”

    Lagos saw it and ran weary. The jackboot ran its course. In the city, Zik, Awo, et al, duelled to free us from the white man’s fang. In the 1990’s, the big city was agog with fury again. “On June 12 we stand,” a slogan reigned about Abiola. The man started as a dirt-poor kid who sang for bowls of amala. He became the nation’s richest man and unparalleled philanthropist. Once on the side of the soldier, he waxed into a traitor to his past, morphing into the neon sign of democracy. His foes fell and rallied behind him. His fellow oppressors were aghast at his new incarnation.

    We all became democrats, including even peacock soldiers. They joined in the cauldron, including businessmen. In Lagos people dared and risked their lives. Rewane, Bagauda Kaltho, Kudirat Abiola, etc bubbled out of sight. Some almost died; Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Soyinka, Bayo Onanuga, Nosa Igiebor, etc had limbs and zeal to fight on.

    In the end, Lagos survived for Nigeria. The city after Abacha was an opportunity. Democracy was nothing if not how Lagos did it. Without oil, Lagos became the country’s richest state. Lucky always, it had good men at the helm. First, it was Jakande, an austere leader, who combined discipline with a frontiers man’s vision, dreaming free education, and infrastructure work. No colour, no finesse, but a lot to deliver to the people.

    Tinubu came after Marwa. He laid a foundation for what is modern Lagos. Not the Jakande austere worldview, he came with a fecund vision, blending grassroots flair with fertility of commerce. A soldier and refiner of democracy. Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) took over and built assiduously on the vision and earned on this page the epaulette of the governor of example.

    The Jonathan years impacted Lagos. Nowhere was it more potent than the election that brought alpha Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to the throne. At the polls, ethnic hate halved the city as no time in the past 50 years. The vote tilted for peace. With a “one Lagos” vision of ground-breaking infrastructure work, Ambode has soothed wounds and subdued tribe or faith, emphasising one people, and levitated the city to its cultural vitality.

    Our embraces are more important than our races. Our kind places second when we are kind. As Lagos marks 50, it looks with faith to another 50 without fifth columnists, but a single march of one people. Poet Lord Alfred Tennyson calls it, “one equal temper of heroic hearts.”

  • Lagos@50: Eko Club seeks focus on informal sector

    •Plans international colloquium on state’s economy

    A foremost indigenous social club in Lagos State, Eko Club, yesterday solicited the assistance of key players to harness the potential of the informal sector.

    It said this would grow the state’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and reduce unemployment.

    The club, one of the centres designated for the Lagos@50 celebrations, said steps must be taken to organise the informal sector, which it described as the engine to drive growth in any economy.

    Its President, Chief Tunde Fanimokun, who spoke at the inaugural annual budget presentation of the club, said judging by the success recorded in the formal sector in the last five decades, focus should be on how the informal sector would be organised for people’s benefit.

    He said: “Fifty years is worth celebrating in the life of any organisation or individual. Lagos is the oldest state in Nigeria in the sense that since its creation, it has not been divided. Other states created alongside the state have had their parts divided to form other states.

    “Also, Lagos economy is a tiger economy. It is an ideal economy in the sense that it is not a mono cultural one. It is a model that other states can follow. It started from the scratch and building up. Even while it was doing well, it was still pursuing oil and now it is an oil producing state. Despite the recession, Lagos is doing well.

    “With the successes, what we the indigenes believe is that we should not rest on our oars. We have done very well and concentrated on the formal sector. The organised private sector is well organised, but the informal sector is not yet fully organised. I’m talking about the entertainment industry; I’m talking about tourism; I’m talking about the distributive trade and so on.”

    Recalling how 25 years ago five members of Eko Club started the process that culminated in the emergence of Lagos as an oil producing state, Fanimokun said the golden jubilee celebration was also that of the club, adding that an international colloquium will be organised on August 9, to coincide with the International Day for the World Indigenous Peoples (WIP) to discuss the way forward for the Lagos economy.

    He said on May 12, which is officially designated as Social Club Day for the Lagos@50 celebration, members of Eko Club, besides the state’s programme, will visit the Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu, to introduce the club’s new leadership.

    Fanimokun hailed Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for his sterling performance, especially in the N25billion Employment Trust Fund (ETF), infrastructural development, building of five old people’s homes, among other laudable projects, urging that more efforts should be geared towards building smaller link bridges to connect communities.

  • Lagos to partner ICPC on corrupt-free society

    Lagos to partner ICPC on corrupt-free society

    Secretary to the Lagos State Government Tunji Bello over the weekend expressed the readiness of the state government to collaborate with the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) to engender a corrupt-free society.

    Tunji Bello, who spoke when a delegation from the ICPC,  Lagos Zonal Office visited him at the Secretariat, Ikeja, stressed that Governor Akinwunmi Ambode is always ready to support all the law enforcement agencies saddled with anti-graft responsibility.

    He added that part of measures to be adopted was engagement in advocacy and enlightenment of the citizenry and government officials on the evils of corruption.

    Bello urged the ICPC to avail the state of some of its corruption risk assessment training programmes for public officials, promising a favourable consideration from the state government.

    The SSG said the Governor Akinwunmi Ambode administration runs a transparent government, which is built on fiscal discipline.

    The Zonal Commissioner, ICPC Lagos Office, Mr. Shintama .P. Binga, congratulated the state on its attainment of 50 years of statehood and Governor Ambode for being the golden governor.

  • Nigerian Army, private investors inaugurate semi-automated abattoir

    The Nigerian Army on Sunday inaugurated a semi-automated Abattoir at its Mami Market, Ashanti Barracks, Apapa in Lagos.

    Brig.-Gen. Erema Akerejola, the outgoing Commandant, Supply and Transport Unit, Apapa, who inaugurated the market, said that the project was with the collaboration of a private investor.

    According to Akerejola, the provision of a modern Abattoir at the barracks was his major achievement as the Unit’s Commandant.

    “Nothing can be compared to processing the meat we eat in a clean and hygienic environment.

    “I am humbled and honoured for this project to be undertaken and completed during my tenure in this unit.

    “I know that meat produced in this facility will enrich the citizenry and also compare very well with international best practices.

    “Beef consumers in and outside Lagos are assured of the health and safety of the meat they will be consuming,’’ he said.

    Mr Aminu Gwadabe, the General Manager of Ashanti Barracks Modern Abattoir Operators, said that the investors’ dream was to scale up beef production to the level that would bring in foreign exchange.

    “The vision of the operators is to provide the public with the safest beef possible, processed in the most hygienic environment that will compete favourably with international best practices.

    “We will drive this through technology and public enlightenment on the importance of the consumption of a healthy meat that is free from bacterial contamination.

    “At full operation, the abattoir has the capacity to employ over 3,000 workers,’’ he said.

    Gwadabe said that the management of the abattoir had made arrangement for the processing of the by products like carcasses, offal, horns, animal skins and blood from the abattoir.

    He said that it had made arrangements also with the Lagos Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) for the evacuation of animal dung and other wastes produced at the abattoir

    One of the investors, Mr Gbadamosi Mohammed, said that meat would be exported from the abattoir to other countries.

    Mohammed said that the abattoir would satisfy local consumption before embarking on beef export.

    He said that the investors had plans to establish a cattle market where cattle from all parts of the country would be kept before being sold for slaughter.

    A chieftain of Lagos State Butchers Association, Mr Audu Lawal, said the modern abattoir would further boost processing of slaughtered meat in Lagos.

    NAN reports that the semi-automated abattoir boasts of modern slaughtering facilities such as hoisting machines, cradle tables, loading bay with stainless tables, lair-age with running water.

    The lair-age has the capacity of holding 300 cows.

    It also has 34 toilets, offal processing units equipped with gas cylinders, burners and stainless steel tables and two boreholes.

    NAN also reports that the abattoir seats on one and half hectares of land near the old abattoir at the barrack.

  • Deaf footballers depart for WADFU tournament in Mali

    A 24-man contingent of the of Nigeria Deaf Football Association (NDFA) on Sunday departed the country for the West Africa Deaf Football tournament holding in Bamako, Mali.

    The one week competition will begin on Monday and end on May 15.

    The NDFA National Coach, Banjo Kamiludeen, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the contingent made up of 19 players and five officials jetted out aboard Air Côte d’Ivoire from the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos.

    The Team Leader, Kamiludeen, named some of the officials as Luke Agbabiaka, Secretary of NDFA, Kabiru Umar, Acting Chairman, Emma Audu, and Assistant Coach, Patrick, who is also a tournament referee.

    He said that the footballers were confirmed to be medically fit and technically sound to take their place in various stages of the event organised by West Africa Deaf Football Union.

    “Every arrangement concerning this trip was successful and it is on that note that we are boarding now so our participation in the event is sure.

    “We had our normal camp in Teslim Balogun Stadium, where the players underwent rigorous training and necessary medical fitness test and certified okay before departure.

    “The footballers are very happy and in high spirit to face and trash participating teams in this competition because they are experienced and familiar with match technicalities,’’ he said.

    NAN reports that the NDFA national team have had five appearances in the tournament which began in 2010 and did not feature in the 2016 tournament for lack of funds.

  • Lagos gets monument for 50th anniversary

    Lagos gets monument for 50th anniversary

    A monument, `Ojuloge’, has been unveiled at the open intersection between the National Theatre Complex and Nigerian Breweries in Iganmu, Lagos.
    It was created to celebrate the Lagos woman as part of the activities to celebrate Lagos at 50. `Ojuloge’ was unveiled on May 4,
    Mr Olorotimi Ajayi, Chief Executive Officer of Modupe Studios, said at the weekend in Lagos that the monument portrayed the grace, style and passion for fashion of the Lagos women.
    “The inspiration for the concept `Ojuloge’ originated from the age long idea where people talk about Lagos women as `Sisi Eko’.
    “When you look closely, there is richness in the face of the average Lagos woman.
    “All over the world, beyond Nigeria, beyond Africa, when you see a lady who is brought up in Lagos anywhere in the world, they are the most gaily dressed.
    “As we are celebrating the Lagos woman, we are indeed actually celebrating the nobility of the Lagos man who thinks it worthy to erect a monument in celebration of the Lagos woman.”
    He said that they were also celebrating the nobility of the state governor, who approved the execution of the project for the state government.
    Ajayi added that the monument was also to project culture and heritage of the people of Lagos.

  • Marketer faces N1.4m fraud charge

    A 28-year-old marketer, Omoaka Oseremen, who allegedly obtained 77 pieces of internet modem and recharge cards, worth N1.4 million, on Friday appeared in an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court.

    Oseremen, who resides at 6, Post road, Mushin, Lagos, is being tried for on charges bothering on obtaining under false pretences and stealing.

    The prosecutor, Insp. Clifford Ogu, told the court that the accused committed the offnce between August, 2014 and July, 2015 at 16, Association Avenue, Ilupeju, Lagos.

    Ogu said that the accused obtained 77 pieces of internet modems and recharge cards from the complainant, Mrs Racheal Bankole, under the pretext of selling the goods.

    “The accused was to sell and remit the proceeds of the sales into the complainant’s account, but he failed to do so.

    “The goods valued at N1.4 million,” he said.

    He said the offences contravened Sections 285 and 313(b) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    The accused, however, entered a “not guilty” plea.

    The Chief Magistrate, Mrs Taiwo Akanni, granted the accused N250, 000 bail with one surety in like sum and adjourned the case until May 15, for mention.

  • Lagos Speaker eulogises departed APC chieftain

    Lagos Speaker eulogises departed APC chieftain

    The Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon. Mudashiru Obasa, has described the late Lagos State All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain, Alhaji Abiodun Sunmola, as a true democrat, who gave every thing to ensure that poor Lagosians were happy.

    Obasa, who spoke during the Eighth day Fidau  prayers at the LTV Blue Roof, Agidingbi, Lagos, said Lagosians and the country would miss the politician’s contributions to the development of democracy.

    The speaker said the politician did not only work towards the growth of the APC, but was a rallying point during the last general elections. He added that Sunmola could not afford to see people suffering, but was ready to bring out all his resources for the benefit of the masses.

    He explained that the departed APC leader was a father to all, whose exemplary conduct was an inspiration to many politicians. He noted that his advice was always sought on many issues that could advance the progress of society.

    He said: “Baba was  of my father’s age, yet he had respect for everybody. I am sure those who came across him held him in high esteem. I think it is very difficult to have a politician of his humble stature. He provided answers to intrigues and matters were very critical.

    “He was sincere and kind; those who live around him can testify about his fatherly conduct. He never discriminated and was always willing to solve peoples problem, irrespective of the gravity.

    “Baba lived a life worthy of emulation and I want every one of us to emulate him, particularly his virtue of patience, tolerance, humility and honesty. The Lagos APC family will definitely miss him. On behalf of members of the Lagos State House of Assembly, we bid this great father goodbye.”

    Lagos APC stalwart, Alhaji Sakiru Seriki Bamu, described the politician as a reliable friend, who stood by him in thick and think. He said they had both traversed rough political terrains and he ensured that they were not carried away by petty political gain.

    He stressed that his late ally would consider public interest in every decision he took,  noting that the late Sunmola was a politician people could count on when the terrain became difficult.

    He said: “He was my friend and brother; the political journey for us has been of good experience. He was such a person who love his people and those from his constituency can testify to that.

    “We pray the Almighty Allah to grant him perfect rest and give his family and his political associates the fortitude to bear his transition.”