Tag: lagos

  • First one-shop breast, gynaecology centre now in Lagos

    First one-shop breast, gynaecology centre now in Lagos

    Women have been told not to ignore any changes in their breasts. Rather, they should quickly call the attention of their doctor to it for thorough medical examination.

    Experts gynaecology, oncology, and wellness including the First Lady of Lagos State, Mrs Bolanle Ambode,  represented by Ogun State Governor’s wife Mrs. Olufunso Amosun; her Oyo State colleague Mrs. Florence Ajimobi and that of Ondo State Mrs. Betty Anyanwu-Akeredolu, a breast cancer survivor, gave the admonition at the opening of the Breast and Gynaecological Centre on Kofo Abayomi Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    The wife of the Senate President, Mrs. Toyin Saraki, was also represented.

    Breast and Gynae Centre  is owned by Reddington Healthcare Group, GE (General Electric) and the UK consortium of specialist gynaecologists, radiologists and breast surgeons.

    It promised to provide a one-stop shop for breast care, gynaecology, wellness care and other speciality care.

    Its Chief Executive Officer, Dr Adeyemi Onabowale, said prayers were good and worked, but early detection of changes in one’s breast could save one from further damage.

    “And that is part of the reasons this centre is put in place. Women, specifically, will be able to have all the medical attention under a roof. There is no one stop shop across the entire nation, and that is part of the reason women’s health is not being handled in Nigeria according to international standard. This centre has high-end technology matched with highly exposed and experienced professionals. It is a team of expatriates.

    “Another reason is that breast tumour and other gynaecological concerns are not restricted to age, as young girls, as young as 20 years were treated of breast tumours. Breast pathology is important for the right, timely detection, which can be  treated through technology,’’ said  Onabowale.

    Wife of the Vice President, Mrs Dolapo Osinbajo said she was happy that Reddington Hospital was inaugurating the state-of-the-art medical centre, dedicated to women health, borne out of a mission to provide advanced, high quality, restorative, wellness and aesthetic care to women at all stages of their life.

    “Doctors are like soldiers who protect and keep us saved from diseases and untimely death. Hospitals should be properly equipped. It is like giving soldiers armoury to go to war. I am told, well-trained doctors are manning the place,” she said.

    Mrs Anyanwu-Akeredolu said the centre would turn the tide of breast and gynaecological care treatment in Nigeria. She said: “As a breast cancer survivor for 20 years, I realised that awareness is essential across all levels of women. We need to make our women listen and know what steps to take when it comes to breast-care; hence they resort to praying mountain. Awareness is very important. I enjoined governments at all levels to please make treatment most available, accessible and affordable.”

    Mrs Amosun enjoined women to visit good centres, adding that the Breast and Gynaecological Centre was the first of its kind in Nigeria.

    Breast and Gynaecological Centre Medical Director, Dr Charles Iwuala said the hospital was built by his organisation with GE Healthcare, the primary supplier of equipment for the centre, and a United Kingdom (UK)-based specialist team of gynaecologists, radiologists and breast surgeons.

    “The Breast and Gynaecological centre will provide a full range of high quality and personalised healthcare services ranging from women’s health, including a Gynaecology Clinic, a Breast Health Clinic to a Women’s Wellness Clinic.

    “Located in the heart of Victoria Island, Lagos, the Centre will offer services covering fibroid, infertility care, menopausal health, pelvic health, hysteroscopy, and simple office procedures.

    ‘’The Breast Health Clinic will offer services on preventive breast care, curative breast care and aesthetic breast care. The Women Wellness Clinic services will include nutrition and general wellness, Hormone Wellness, Skin Wellness, Heart Wellness, Cancer Early detection and Prevention and Optimal-Aging Wellness.”

    Reddington Hospital Group Medical Director,  Dr Olutunde Lalude said in keeping with the Reddington’s tradition of being the front runner in medical breakthroughs in the country, the Breast and Gynaecological Centre boasts of cutting-edge technology never seen before in West Africa.

    ‘’They include a 3D Digital Breast Tomosynthesis (3D Mammography), a 3D Automatic Breast Ultrasound System (3D ABUS), a 3D Digital Breast Streotaxic Biopsy System (3D Stereo), a 3D MRI with 1.5 Tesla GE Explorer Technology.

    “Of note, about the 3D Automatic Breast Ultrasound System (3D ABUS) is its anticipated improved ability to detect tiny cancers that cannot be seen on a mammogram alone in women. It is believed ABUS will become an integral part of medical practice for the detection of breast cancer.

    Other novel equipment of the Breast and Gynae Centre is the Vascular Embolisation Suite for Uterine Artery Embolisation, Digital Colposcopy, Optical Imaging Technology for Cervical Cancer Screening, Digital Bone Densitometry, and a 4D Gynaecology Ultrasound System (with 4D transvaginal ultrasound capability).

    Also, there is a state-of-the-art theatre for day surgery and other mini- gynaecological and breast surgeries.”

    Dr Iwuala said the centre serves as a model for the future of women’s health care, by weaving all-round women’s health services, robust client education and innovative technologies.

    “With our philosophy of providing compassionate and respectful care, the Breast and Gynaecological Centre will journey with our women through every stage of life – from puberty through menopause and golden years, as we strive to give them the best comprehensive healthcare available,” he explained.

    The guest speaker Dr. Paul Crowe, is a Consultant Interventional Radiologist based in Birmingham, United Kingdom (UK), with special interests in vascular and urological radiology and uterine artery embolisation for fibroids.

    He undertakes ultrasound, CT and MRI scanning and interventional radiology procedures. He is a Specialist Consultant with the Breast and Gynae Centre.

  • Lagos boosts farming with input

    Lagos State is living up to its mandate of modernising its agricultural and agribusiness base, boost employment and lay the groundwork for improved productivity for export and import substitution of a select range of crops.

    The Commissioner for Agriculture, Mr Oluwatoyin Suarau,  said this in Lagos.

    He said the government aimed at boosting farm growth and improving the lives of the rural poor.

    He said the ministry has supported farmers and fishers in the Lagos State Agricultural Input Supply Company (LAISA) with input at affordable prices.

    These include the distribution of over 6,500 bags of fertiliser, hybrid maize and agro-chemicals to vegetable farmers.

    Over 45,705 bags of  fish feeds were made available to farmers. Also inputs such as knapsack sprayers, water pumps and feed ingredients were supplied to them, too.

    Over 3,000 farmers and fishing folk were serviced last year. According to him, cage culture for fishing is being implemented to empower youths. The project is located along the lagoon network at Ikosi Beach, Ikosi-Ejirin Local Council Development Area.

    Sixty youths from the community were selected as beneficiaries and trained in fish cage construction and fish production and fish farm management activities.

  • Lagos is my success story and I am a journalist (2)

    It is not ‘just a billboard’ if it suggests subliminal bias to impressionable minors. It is not ‘a harmless campaign’ if it corrupts the thinking of the youth. Thus every element of the ‘Lagos is my success story’ media campaign manifests as a ritual of provocation; a rite of mediocrity, scorched by prejudice and shackled to ignorance.

    The grandeur of the campaign subsists in its classification of role models; Lagos names its finest and celebrates them. But role models, like mentors, should be exemplars of excellence, ethics and unimpeachable character.

    Thus of hip hop crooner, Olamide Adedeji a.k.a Baado and Sunday Punch Editor, Toyosi Ogunseye, who would Governor Ambode request to mentor his teenage child? Of Fuji maestro, Wasiu Alabi a.k.a Pasuma Wonder and Prof. Sophie Oluwole, the UNILAG academic working with various African countries to have indigenous African knowledge systems included in schools’ curriculum, who would Ambode suggest as mentor to his daughter?

    Of hip hop singer, Banky W and Ajanaku Babatunde, a staff of Ojota Senior Secondary School, who won the Best Teacher Award in the Lagos Secondary Schools Category recently, who would Ambode suggest as mentor to his son?

    As Lagos celebrates its 50th anniversary, it excludes teachers and journalists from its narrative out of spite – latent spite perhaps. The spiteful dialectic of the incumbent State government is sweepingly comprehensive and accurately projects the fallacies and notions of the ruling class about the worth and contributions of educators and journalists to the statehood.

    Beneath this curious malice, an uglier message resonates: “Journalists and teachers are worthless in Lagos.” Thus Governor Akinwumi Ambode and his team once again, amplify his predecessor’s barbed love and veiled loathing for teachers and journalists.

    True, Lagos announces the best teacher in the State and awards a prize to the recipient often in a drab ceremony. But the latter’s exploits are deliberately underplayed and hidden in plain sight.

    While Lagos celebrates marketers of filth, sex scandals, violence and corruption – alongside very few remarkable citizens – as the State’s pride, at its 50th anniversary, the State deliberately ignores the achievements of the moral, devoted, sterling men and women by whose exploits and contributions the likes of Governor Ambode and his team became the ‘titans’ they claim to be today.

    Teachers moulded Ambode and his team into the men and women they have become today. And I am sure the incumbent government remembers how it used journalists to achieve its dream of emerging as Lagos’ new ruling class – a sad reality this writer continually objects to.

    Yet Lagos violently silences the excellent achievements of exceptional teachers in the State, the same way it stifles the attainments and value of journalists to Lagos. This is the juncture at which the governor’s lackeys would scoff and exhume ‘revelations’ and ‘realities’ of the media’s dirty secrets. Thus it won’t be surprising to hear them prattle about the level of corruption and incompetence of journalists and the Nigerian media. It’s sadder to note that their argument could be true, in most part.

    This doesn’t mean that all journalists are corrupt. Not every journalist can be tarred with the brush of incompetence and corruption. Perhaps the Lagos government has suffered unsavourable experiences by journalists thus its undisguised disdain for them.

    But shall we as journalists cum citizenry of the State also condemn the Lagos government as a coven of brutes and looters of public fund simply because of tragic experiences with previous governments?

    Would it be appropriate to label Governor Ambode as irredeemably corrupt, incompetent and vicious, simply because most incumbent and past public officers have been established so? Would it be logical to infer that his ongoing development drive is a ruse, a coordinated scheme to con the electorate and earn their mandate for a second term simply because most governors are known to do that? Would it be alright to tar the ‘indefatigable governor’ with the brush of the pseudo progressive and performer simply because his predecessor and peers have established themselves so? If it would be wrong to imagine such of Governor Ambode, it is likewise unforgivable to consider all journalists corrupt and ‘lap dogs’ of the ruling class, simply because of a few or many ‘bad eggs.’

    I do not care what manner of relationship the State nurtures and sustains with its ‘friendly journalists’ and ‘media managers’ in the State; I speak for the youth. I speak for the diligent men and women pulling all stops to foster development by engaging the citizenry and ruling class via progressive, honest, public service journalism.

    It is unclear what manner of due process birthed the ‘Lagos is my success story’ media contract/jamboree but the manner of execution of the campaign, from the trashy bill boards used to its horrid subliminal messages, establish the mediocrity, shallowness and prejudice of the team in charge.

    Lagos emphatically markets hip hop artistes to the youth as role models, irrespective of their true nature. Olamide for instance, is a very talented and brilliant artiste – no doubt – but he continually preens about people wanting to kill him in almost every music track. He celebrates promiscuity, consequence-free violence and sex in lewd lyrics and expressive beats. And you could really dance to it.

    Toyosi on the other hand, is an investigative journalist whose work has enriched the human condition in Lagos teaching hospitals, industrial complexes, socioeconomic and security sectors. It is only in Lagos government’s middling and misshapen universe that a character like Olamide would command greater recognition and respect than Sunday Punch Editor, Toyosi Ogunseye, and The Cable’s former Editor, Fisayo Soyombo, among others.

    Sunday Punch’s Toyosi has won the CNN/Multichoice African Journalist of the Year Award, back to back, among several local and international media excellence awards. Her stories, like celebrated investigative journalists, Emmanuel Maya’s and Fisayo Soyombo’s depict and shed light on the corruption of the human condition and likely solutions to societal maladies.

    These are men and women of uncommon valour and devotion to the pursuit of public good and they are celebrated world over for their exploits.  Lest we forget the very few but rare breed of honourable senior editors, journalists and multiple merit award-winners at Nigeria’s major newspapers.

    These journalists and their ilk expose the shamelessness, incompetence and greed of public officers and so-called ‘corporate titans.’ They are serial award winners for public service journalism that any nation would be proud of. But the Lagos government scorns their achievements.

    Perhaps if Toyosi, Soyombo and colleagues were children of a governor, corporate titan or friend of the incumbent government, they would be celebrated as great role models and ambassadors of Lagos.

    Welcome to Lagos, the State that gleefully hosted Kim Kardashian in celebration of perverse celebrity in curious circumstances. This is Lagos, where foreign footballers, artistes and politicians with expiry dates are canonised while the timeless contributions, citizenship and excellence of journalists and teachers are ignored, simply because they have got no ‘swagger.’

    Yeah, Lagos values ‘swagger’ over merit. It celebrates brilliance only when it is garnished with the base and corrupt, atrocious ego and strut.

    However, some of  the persons celebrated in  the ‘Lagos at 50’ media campaign are indeed deserving of recognition. They are men and women of merit and remarkable citizenship. You  could identify them as your politics and personal ethics dictate.

    Ambode’s ‘Lagos is my success story’ for all its glamour and ingenuity, symbolises the cultural shift of Lagos from disciplined enterprise, humaneness and morality to unbridled hedonism. It markets celebrity to the youth as the zenith of ambition and human endeavour. It is the stuff dreams are maimed by.

     

  • Lagos approves N1.7b for SMEs

    The Lagos State Employment Trust Fund (LSETF)  has approved loans totaling N1.76 billion  for 1,401 beneficiaries, the Commissioner, Wealth Creation  and Employment,Babatunde Durosimi-Etti has said.

    The creation of the N25billion Lagos State Employment Trust Fund is the most daring moves by any state government in the country to address unemployment, he added.

    Giving the breakdown in Lagos yesterday, Durosimi-Etti said  the fund received 3,758 applications (2,304 Micro Enterprises (MEs) and  1,454 Small and Medium Enterprises(SMEs) in the first batch of the pilot project.

    According to him, the board approved 705 applicants (517 MEs and 188 SMEs totaling N900,137,078.The first beneficiaries were presented their letters.

  • Malaria: Lagos records 1.2m cases in 2016 – Commissioner

    The Lagos State Government on Thursday said it was committed to ensuring the control of malaria, as it was endemic in the state and affected human development.

    The Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Dr Jide Idris, who made the assertion at the 5th “Doctors Discuss Malaria’’ Progamme, in Lagos, said the state recorded 1, 199, 002 cases in 2016.

    According to Idris, represented by Dr Rebecca Ayorinde, Assistant Programme Coordinator, Lagos State Malaria Elimination Prevention, the cases of malaria were documented through routine data collection processes.

    The event, which has the theme, “Maternal Health and Malaria Priority Access for Women’’, was to commemorate the 2017 World Malaria Day 2017.

    Idris said: “Malaria is endemic in Lagos State.

    “It poses major challenges to the state as it impedes human development.

    “It is both a cause and consequence of under-development and remains one of the leading causes of morbidity in the state.

    “The cosmopolitan nature of the state, coupled with people’s behaviour and the abundant distribution of coastal areas, encourage the availability of stagnant water for the breeding of anopheles mosquitoes.

    “This is responsible for the stable pattern and continuous transmission of malaria all year round.

    “Malaria therefore remains a priority disease and the state government will continue to demonstrate its commitment to its control’’.

    Idris said the government was tackling the scourge of malaria through some preventive measures that included environmental management and integrated vector control.

    “Others are monitoring and evaluation with emphasis on operational research and the use of its results for evidence-based programming.

    “Lagos State Ministry of Health provides Long Lasting Insecticidal Nets to pregnant women at antenatal clinic booking and children under the age of five years.

    “It also provides Sulpahdoxine Pyrimethamine for the Intermittent Prevention of Malaria in Pregnancy (IPTp) in antenatal clinics.

    “Also, the state conducts Indoor Residual Spraying and Larviciding in selected local governments in the state,’’ he said.

    Idris said that the routine data collected from the private health sector in 2016 showed that 56 per cent of pregnant women received at least one dose of IPTp.

    “About 93 per cent of confirmed cases received appropriate treatment for malaria and 74 per cent of persons with fever received a parasitological test.

    “These statistics show there is still a lot to be done to increase access to malaria prevention, diagnosis and treatment services in the state,’’ he said.

    The commissioner advised that all fever cases be tested for malaria before treatment.

    “It is important to test before treatment, a policy by the Federal Ministry of Health, which states that all fever cases should be tested and confirmed before treatment,’’ he said.

    Contributing, Prof. Akin Osibogun said that in spite of the progress and improvement in malaria prevention globally, it still remained a major concern to public health.

    Osibogun, a former Chief Medical Director of the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi-Araba, said that 92 per cent of deaths in Africa were as a result of malaria.

    On the effects of malaria on maternal health, he said: “Most times, pregnant women and children are at higher risk of malaria, particularly pregnant woman because of their weak immunity.

    “Malaria in pregnant woman can lead to preterm babies or even still birth babies.

    “The foetus gets most of the nutrition through the placenta but once the placenta is affected by malaria parasites it leads to reduction of the foetus; this causes low birth weight in the babies.’’

    On some prevention strategies, Osibogun said: “According to WHO, the new guidelines says that pregnant women should have IPtp till delivery.

    “The usage of Long Lasting Insecticidal Net (LLIN) must be used regularly by pregnant women and children.

    “It is also important to control the vector that transmits malaria, which is mosquito, by making sure there is no stagnant water in the environment.

    “The critical strategy to prevent malaria in pregnant woman is to increase the use of Insecticide-Treated Nets and indoor spraying with insecticides,’’ Osibogun said.

    In her remarks, Dr Yetunde Ayo-Oyalowo, the convener of “Doctors Discuss Malaria’’ said that preventing malaria in pregnancy was critical to elevating health and welfare of Nigerian families.

    She said that the training of doctors and nurses was also critical to end the scourge of malaria.

    “A lot of this responsibility is on us as doctors to understand how to break the malaria cycle.

    “We must be able to recognise and treat malaria and propagating testing before treating.

    “Over the past years, we have trained a total of 1,542 doctors on the management of malaria.

    “This is aimed at creating a strong health system of which the human resource is of great importance to offer access to prevent new cases and ensure lifesaving treatment for patients,’’ Ayo-Oyalowo said.

  • Liz Benson, veteran screen goddess back in action

    Liz Benson, veteran screen goddess back in action

    Veteran actress, Liz Benson who mesmerized movie viewers in its early days has staged a comeback in a new movie titled, “Busted’’

    The movie was produced by Lisa Onu and Face Onu would premiere on May 21, at the Oriental Hotel, Lagos

    It tells the love story of a gay couple also featured veterans like Kate Henshaw, Paul Obazele, TV host, IK Ogbonna and other new talented actors in the movie industry.

    Busted is the story of a girl, Queen Edwards who was born into a reputable home that the father’s high handedness and mother’s lackadaisical attitude led her (Queen) to a maid who lured her into lesbianism.

    She continued the act into adulthood dating and breaking up with different ladies.

    In the process, she (Queen) falls in love with a lady called Blessing who got into the act for financial gains.

    When the government signed the anti-gay bill into law, the lovers ignored their biblical beliefs and societal views of lesbianism which challenged their love for each other.

    NAN reports that Benson, one of the  screen divas in the early days of Nollywood, later retired and went into evangelism.

    Similarly, Obazele, who also acted in many soap operas’ on National Television in the 90s, has been off the screen for some years.

     

  • Lagos seeks Fed Govt’s approval to use Aje field’s

    The Lagos State government is in discussion with the Federal Government through the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) – Nigeria’s oil and gas industry regulator, to get approval to take all the gas produced from Aje field located offshore Lagos.

    A source in the Ministry of Petroleum Resources who requested for anonymity told The Nation that the discussion is progressing well but couldn’t confirm whether the state would be able to get the government’s endorsement for its request.

    According to the source, Lagos wants to take all the gas produced from Aje field to generate power for residential, commercial and industrial electricity consumers. However, he didn’t give further details on the transaction

    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode had announced that the state targets 3000 megawatts (Mw) generation capacity to be able to sufficiently meet the power consumption requirements of the state. He said the quest to achieve energy security for the nation can no longer be left to the Federal Government to address alone, adding that his government aspires to give the state 24 hours power supply by 2022.

    He said the reason Lagos embarked on the initiative was that it believes strongly that if the power problem is solved in Lagos, it is technically solved in the whole of the country.

    “The problem of power in Nigeria is the problem of transmission and that is the truth. We have generating companies and we have distributing companies and they say power is in the hands of the private sector but we know technically that that is not totally true. We also know that transmission is hundred per cent owned by government,” he said.

    Besides,  out of the 3000Mw envisaged by 2022, the governor said 350Mw would be delivered by the first quarter of next year, additional 850Mw by the last quarter of 2018, and the balance of 1,800Mw not later than third quarter of 2022. So the state needs a lot of gas to be able to achieve production of such power production, he said.

    Also, the state Commissioner for Energy and Mineral Resources, Olawale Oluwo told The Nation on the sidelines of the inauguration of the National Executive Council members of the Oil and Gas Trainers’ Association of Nigeria (OGTAN) in Lagos, where he represented the governor, that the state government just established an integrated oil and gas firm that will play across the entire oil and gas value chain, which may involve a petrochemical plant that consumes a lot of gas.

    He said Ibile Oil & Gas Corporation, the business arm of the Lagos State oil and gas operations, has concluded the setting up of its structures and has gone into marketing of the new oil firm for operation and partnerships. The oil firm will play in all the oil and gas value chain. They are into the downstream, midstream and upstream. They have been mandated to freely invest anywhere in the world and intervene in any area of business. They have put their structures and strategies in place.

    “Currently they are moving into business development, they are marketing. They are doing a front end work and sometime later this year they will go into major projects,” he said.

  • Lagos digital library berths

    Lagos digital library berths

    Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode has said the digital library provided by the government will usher speedy development in the education and social sectors.

    Ambode who gave the remark during the launching of the Lagos State Digital Library at the Landmark Event Centre VI Lagos, was represented by the Secretary to the Government (SSG) Mr. Tunji Bello and Special Adviser on Education Mr. Obafela Bank-Olemoh.

    The governor said that the facility would provide 2000 study aids on core subjects from primary to senior secondary school curriculum. He noted that 1600 tutorials, instructional videos, selected e-books for primary to SS3, brief history of Lagos, online forum, podcast and exam-mate test resource would be available in the library.

    He said: “As part of our efforts to build a globally competitive economy and achieve our goal of making Lagos State the next technology hub in Africa, the Code Lagos and Digital Library was initiated.

    “Today, we are unveiling the state digital library, first of its kind in the state and one of the largest learning platform in Africa. Through this platform, we are providing access to learning materials for everyone particularly students and researchers.”

    Ambode said stakeholders would find useful research papers from Lagos State tertiary institutions covering a wide variety of topics on the platform, stressing that vocational training would equally be accessed on the medium.

    “It is aimed at providing unlimited access to knowledge for all through the collective and curation of digital content by online portal. This portal will be accessible via internet connection on a range of devices.

    “Based on available statistics, Africa is expected to reach 500 million internet users by 2020, majority of whom will access internet through a mobile device.

    “This administration is however thinking and working ahead by launching this digital library knowing that technology will play a major role in achieving our dream of becoming Africa’s model megacity and global economic and financial hub.

    “I therefore, use this opportunity to encourage our students, teachers, researchers and everyone that is interested in knowledge acquisition to make use of this platform which can be accessed from any part of the world.”

  • Lagos@50 to host glamorous premiere of Kunle Afolayan’s ‘Roti’

    Lagos@50 to host glamorous premiere of Kunle Afolayan’s ‘Roti’

    As Lagos State continues its celebration of 50 years anniversary, the next entertainment show that will put the commercial nerve of West Africa in the spotlight of the events is Kunle Afolayan‘s new flick, ROTI.

    The film is an Africa Magic and Golden Effects Pictures collaboration, produced timely to celebrate Lagos on the big screen; the Filmhouse IMAX Cinema, Lekki, Lagos on Friday, May 5, 2017.

    The screening which is scheduled for 6pm is an exclusive premiere which will have cast and crew of the movie, celebrity artistes, sponsor companies and Governor Akinwunmi Ambode as Special Guest of Honour.

    ROTI tells the story of a couple battling with the loss of their only son, Roti.

    Years after they lost him to a brief illness, the wife finds a boy called Juwon,  too identical not to be their dead son.

    She initially receives the experience in wonder and hope of a reunited future with her dead son, but, after she discovers roughly that Juwon is entirely not her dead son, she is washed anew by grief, depression and desperation.

    Her desperation spirals for the worst as the decision-making on her future with Juwon becomes rather irrational and reckless.

    The film features Kunle Afolayan, Kate Henshaw, Toyin Oshinaike, Faithia Balogun and Afolayan’s son, Dari in his debut movie role.

  • Lagos saves N2.4b from pilgrimage sponsorship ban

    Lagos saves N2.4b from pilgrimage sponsorship ban

    The Lagos State Government has saved about N2.4billion from the ban on pilgrimage sponsorship, Commissioner for Home Affairs Dr Abdul-Hakeem AbdulLateef said yesterday.
    At a ministerial briefing to commemorate the second year anniversary of the Governor Akinwunmi Ambode administration, the commissioner said: “The government has been able to save about N2.4 billion from being wasted on such expenditure and the money has been deployed into provision of infrastructural facilities in the transformational agenda of the state government”.
    On the enumeration of churches, mosques and religious organizations, AbdulLateef, said his ministry was imputing the information of every place of worship in the state in a centralised database.
    “This is to allow the state government to have a reliable data of churches, mosques and their locations, with a view to carrying them along with government policies. It is expected that the policy, because of effective resource allocation and efficient management inherent in it, will bring and extend benefits to many more churches and mosques in the state,” he said.
    The commissioner said the sale of forms for this year’s pilgrimage to Mecca was still on and urged intending pilgrims to visit the ministry.