Tag: lagos

  • School lifts Lagos quiz trophy

    School lifts Lagos quiz trophy

    The hardwork teachers and pupils of State Senior High School, Ikeja, put into their preparation for the Brighter Rewarding Future (BRF) Quiz Competition, Season VI, was rewarded with the star prize last week.

    The duo of 14-year old Habeeb Musa and 16-year old Mariam Lamidi displayed outstanding brilliance and were crowned champions of the senior secondary school category competition after defeating Mubarak Mohammed and Qudus Alabi, both 15 years old of Sanngo Senior Secondary School, Agege, by two points.

    Ismail Quadri and Tunde Olowu of Angus Memorial Senior High School, Somolu, came third in the competition.

    In the Junior Secondary School category, Festac Junior College, Festac Town, represented by 14-year-old Michael Abasi-Ifkere and 13-year-old Jimoh  Iyanu-Oluwa scored 20 points to emerge winners of the competition beating Government  Junior College, Ketu -Epe, represented by 13-year-old Patricia Imarhia  and 11-year-old Adetayo Adefarasin.

    The third place was won by Government Junior College, Ikorodu represented by Elizabeth Adekunle and Oluwatobi Ajetumobi.

    Community Nursery and Primary School, Ojo, represented by Rachael Ayodele  and Stella Ogugua,  emerged winners in the Primary Schools Category beating the pairs of Chisom Anyigor and Samuel Salami, both of Maidan Primary School, Kosofe, while Hussey Military Primary School, Yaba, represented by Khadri Adekanbi and Great Ofotokun, came third.

    In the Best Individual Mathematics Category, Master Mubarak Mohammed of Sango Senior Secondary School, Agege, won, beating Martins Ogundele also of Sango Senior Secondary School, Agege and Master Habeeb Musa of State Senior High School, Ikeja, to the second and third places respectively.

    In the Special School Category, Modupe Cole Memorial Child Care and Treatment Home, Bariga, represented by 17-year-old Jadesola Mogaji and 15-year-old Taiwo Omotosho, beat the duo of Solomon Omere and Eke Aleshi of the Down Syndrome Foundation of Nigeria and Adaobi Nwobi and Raiwi Uche of National Orthopaedic School, Igbobi, to the second and third positions respectively.

    Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Olayinka Oladunjoye, in her remarks, explained that the contest was organised to help develop the minds of the pupils to make them competent, effective, responsible and promote healthy rivalry among them.

     

    “The competition also aim at creating a healthy rivalry among school children in primary, junior and senior secondary schools in both public and private schools across the state and I am happy to report that the competition has indeed gained ground and has become so popular such that the level of awareness among the students and pupil is awesome,” she said.

    Mrs Oladunjoye added that the competition has brought to the fore areas where teachers need to focus on in the curriculum to improve the performance of the pupils.

    She praised Governor Babatunde Fashola for his consistent support for the education sector and the teachers for a job well done in tutoring their students, especially the special needs children who participated in the competition for the first time.

     

  • The Token newsletter debut in Lagos

    The Token newsletter debut in Lagos

    The Token, a quarterly newsletter published   by the law firm of Tayo Oyetibo (SAN) has been launched in Lagos.

    It will serve as a source of useful information on legal practice.

    Oyetibo said such information would be of a general nature and not intended as a substitute for professional or legal consultation or advice in a particular matter.

    He said the contents have been produced by the five practice groups in the law firm including the Dispute Resolution Practice Group; the Commercial Law Practice Group, the Energy, Technology and Infrastructure (ETI) Practice Group; the Legislative and Media Practice Group and the Regulatory Compliance and Business Advisory (RCBA) Practice Group.

    Because February 14 is very important to Nigeria, being the date the Presidential election would hold, the maiden edition of the newsletter examined much debated topic of the educational qualifications required by law for those seeking to be elected as President of Nigeria.

    It also examined the  2015  budget proposals, which is yet to be passed into law while  highlighting some key issues arising from the budget and the possible effects of those issues on daily economic activities.

     

     

     

     

  • Lagos APC condemns attack on candidate’s campaign office

    Lagos APC condemns attack on candidate’s campaign office

    Lagos State All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday condemned an alleged attack on its senatorial candidate for Lagos West, Solomon Olamilekan Adeola (aka Yayi).

    The Ikeja campaign office of Adeola, a member of the House of Representatives seeking election into the Senate, was allegedly attacked at the weekend by suspected Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) hoodlums.

    The thugs shot into the air to scare away people. They were also said to have vandalised the rear windshield of a Toyota Land Cruiser Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV) belonging to the APC candidate.

    The party’s state spokesman, Joe Igbokwe, urged security agencies to stop hoodlums and desperate politicians from throwing the Centre of Excellence into a crisis.

    In a statement yesterday in Lagos, Igbokwe alleged that the attackers damaged other property within the complex.

    The statement reads: “We have witnessed this awful display of impunity and lawlessness when PDP thugs and supporters attacked APC faithful in Agege and shot dead a member of our party.

    “The other day at Mosan Okunola Local Council Development Area (LCDA), grassroots supporters of our governorship candidate, Akinwunmi Ambode, who were on a door-to-door campaigns, were attacked; over 10 vehicles were damaged and many people were injured.

    “The latest attack on our candidate, Yayi and his supporters in his office is yet another assault that needs to be investigated and the culprits brought to justice.”

    Igbokwe urged the police to investigate PDP’s senatorial candidate, Segun Adewale’s role in the alleged attack because he had reportedly admitted visiting Adeola’s campaign office to complain about the removal of his campaign materials.

    Igbokwe said: “The questions we are asking are: What on earth is driving this frightening impunity being exhibited by the PDP in Lagos? What on earth would make Adewale to muster the temerity and audacity to lead gunmen, including the police, to Yayi’s office without caring a hoot? Who is beating the drums for the PDP in Lagos? What are the police doing? Is it only the PDP that has a monopoly of violence here in Lagos? What does PDP want in Lagos?

    “APC may be compelled to defend and protect its teeming supporters, if the police and other security agencies cannot guarantee the security of life and property at a time as this.

    “The party is asking smart and courageous Lagosians to use their phones and cameras to record such open blatant display of lawlessness and brigandage to track down these horrible offenders.

    “We appeal to Lagosians, especially our teeming supporters, to remain calm and courageous in the face of the provocation. Crushing defeat is staring the PDP in the face all over Nigeria and Lagos. This desperation is understandable. The PDP cannot go down without a fight; they may decide to pull down the house. We must not allow them to do so.”

  • ‘Ambode is best man for Lagos job’

    ‘Ambode is best man for Lagos job’

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, has been described as the best man for the Lagos governorship seat.

    Spokesman for Akinwunmi Ambode Kommittee of Friends (AA’KOF), Elder Kayode Olopade, who spoke at the weekend at the presidential rally of the party at Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere, Lagos, said Ambode is the best candidate among those vying for the Lagos House, Ikeja, seat.

    He said Lagosians needed a competent person to continue the good legacies started by the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola and Ambode was the person.

    Added he: “I urge Lagosians to vote for continuity. I enjoin them to vote Ambode as the next governor. He is the best man for the Lagos governorship job.”

    Ambode said Lagosians should vote for him and other APC candidates for the continuity of the dividends of democracy.

    He said they would not regret trusting APC with their mandate, noting that their votes for the party’s candidates would not be a loss.

    His words: “We will protect Lagosians’ votes. We will ensure that there is no rigging. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) should, however, live up to expectation.”

  • ‘Lagos ‘ll give 85 per cent of votes to Buhari’

    ‘Lagos ‘ll give 85 per cent of votes to Buhari’

    All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate Gen. Muhammadu Buhari has promised to fight the infrastructure battle in Lagos, if elected as the president. Lagos State All Progressives Congress (APC) Chairman Otunba Oladele Ajomale said at the mega rally in Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere, that the state will give Buhari 85 per cent of the votes. Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU revisits the carnival-like rally.

    Lagos, the former Federal Capital Territory (FCT), is perceived as the stronghold of the All Progressives Congress (APC). The state lived to expectation at the weekend when the campaign train of its presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, rolled into the Centre of Excellence.

    The crowd was huge. But, the crowd outside the Teslim Balogun Stadium, the venue of the rally, was more than the crowd inside the main bowl. It was not a rented crowd. The army of supporters were not wooed with foods and drinks. But, they came from the 20 Local Government Areas and the 37 Local Council Development Councils (LCDAs), waving their brooms, singing and dancing. They defiled the early morning downpour as they waited patiently for the man they perceived as the symbol of change, Gen. Buhari. Even, those who left the stadium for the Friday Jumat service, returned to capture a glimpse of the General, who had served as the military Head of State 30 years ago.

    Gen. Buhari walked freely among the people, who are eager to vote for him on February 14. He was the tallest in the crowd. When he waved the broom, the symbol of the party, the crowd went into an ecstasy. The master of ceremony, Mrs. Abike Dabiri, aroused the crowd when she said: “Baba, oyoyo.” The people chorused the slogan. Then, the ace musician, Alhaji Wasiu Ayinde, sung the familiar tune: Sai Baba, Sai Buhari. Brooms filled the air as youths decked in customised t-shirts with fez caps to match, were locked in celebrations.

    The APC National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, who was impressed by the turn-out, challenged the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to a duel. Basking in the euphoria of an imminent victory for the Buhari/Osinbajo ticket, he said: “I have seen people sweat for change. The youths want change. My prayer is that nobody should be foolish enough to ignore this momentum for change.”

    The Chairman of the APC in Lagos State, Otunba Dele Ajomale, and the governorship candidate, Mr. Akinwumi Ambode, promised to deliver 85 per cent of the votes to Gen. Buhari. Assuring that the progressive beat will continue in Lagos, Ajomale said: “Lagos will deliver 85 percent of the votes to you (Buhari). Jonathan will not get 25 per cent of the votes.” Also, members of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), led by Alhaji Agbede, and National Road Transport Employment Association, led by Ahmed Musa, endorsed the flag bearer.

    Smiles lit up the face of Buhari, who was accompanied by his wife, Hajia Aishat, and running mate, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, and wife, Dolapo. But, other matters also agitated him as he saw the sea of heads, including the jobless youths and artisans, who needed regular power supply for uninterrupted economic life. Owing to lack of electricity, the organisers had arranged for an alternative source of power. He took cognizance of the stand-by generator emitting fume, a sign of power outage and failure of infrastructure battle by the inept Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led Federal Government. As he listened to other leaders as they addressed the rally, he was in a sober reflection.

    Not given to frivolities, he addressed the crowd as a father and leader that he is. The people also nodded affirmatively to a leader that has been tested and can be trusted. Buhari promised a new lease of life, promising to resolve pressing national challenges, including corruption, insecurity and unemployment, if elected as the President.

    Between 1976 and 1979, the APC flag bearer was the Federal Commissioner for Petroleum and Chairman of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). Between January 1984 and August 1985, he was also living in Lagos as the Commander-In-Chief. Thus, he is conversant with the problems affecting the metropolis. Thus, Buhari promised to fight the infrastructure battle in Lagos State, as part of moves to restore the glory of the former Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    The former military leader said the state will be given a special attention as the economic hub and commercial nerve centre. “For Lagos, in particular, they have allowed infrastructure decay to become the lots of Lagos. Infrastructure maintenance ought to be the responsibilities of the government being a former federal capital. I assure you APC will do that, he said.“

    In his view, the PDP-led Federal Government has failed the test of leadership. The proofs, he said, are  insecurity, economic depression, bribery and corruption and unemployment. He said: “Whatever we are going to do will help restore Nigeria back.”

    Buhari offered hope to the jubilating crowd. He said: “ After all what we have gone through in the past 15 years of the PDP, the APC has identified three fundamental programmes that have to be taken immediately. One of them is to tackle insecurity. Two, returning back the economy on track, and tackling bribery and corruption. But, whatever we are going to do, we must secure Nigeria first. Most importantly, is the Northeast where hundreds of school children are still missing. We are confident that our military can perform, but what they need now is leadership.”

    The former Head of State also promised to tackle corruption, which he identified as an obstacle. He said, if bribery and corruption, gave way, all will be well with Nigeria. “We have more than 60 percent of youths in this country, whether they went to school or not, it is the responsibility of government to provide jobs. Whichever way we look at it, corruption still remains the bane of the country.”

    Buhari urged Nigerians to “vote out the PDP from the top to the bottom,” adding that it is in the national interest. “Where is the Nigerian Airways? Where is the Nigerian National Shipping Line? Where are they now? Go and find out how much money they had made from 1999 till now. And where is NEPA? he queried.

    The APC flag bearer added: “”After spending about $20 billion on power, what we are getting is still very insignificant. This is because of the incompetence of the PDP from top to bottom. Nigerians have suffered enough and must ensure that PDP is voted out.”

    It was a special home-coming for Osinbajo, who had served the state as the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice. He urged Lagosians to vote for change, adding: “It is time for God to rescue Nigeria from corruption, poverty, joblessness and insecurity. Our time of deliverance has come. The train of freedom has arrived. On February 14, with your PVC, you will cause a change, a fundamental change in this country. That change is what we have been waiting for since 1960. It shall arrive February 14 when you vote General Muhammadu Buhari as the President of Nigeria.”

    The legal scholar acknowledged that some people are afraid of Buhari, adding that these people are fueling the rumour that he will “islamise” Nigeria. The former university don said it is because they fear that  Buhari will end. Osinbajo added: “If corruption does not end, poverty cannot end. If corruption does not end, job cannot appear from anywhere. If corruption does not end, education cannot survive. With corruption, you cannot build hospitals when some people are keeping all the money in their pockets. Don’t let them deceive you. Some people are saying there is an Islamization agenda. Tell them it is not true. General Buhari is an honest man, he is a straight forward man. He will fight corruption. He wants this country to be better and, by the grace of the Almighty God, on May 29, he will be the President of Nigeria.”

    The APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, described Buhari as the best candidate to salvage the country during the crisis period, noting that when developed countries were in similar situation, they beckoned on their retired Generals for good governance. He said: “In the last 70 years of nationhood, you have seen series of political crises. But, one man has been very consistent, steadfast, brilliant, courageous, resolute, and an advocate of the poor. That is Buhari.”

    Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi, and his Lagos, Osun, Edo and Imo state counterparts; Mr. Babatunde Fashola (SAN), Chief Rauf Aregbesola, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, and Owelle Rochas Okorocha; and the National Deputy Chairman, Mr. Segun Oni, told the crowd that Buhari is the answer. Other APC chieftains, including the National Vice Chairman (Southwest), Chief Pius Akinyelure, former Ekiti State Governors Niyi Adebayo and Kayode Fayemi, Senator Bukola Saraki,  former Osun State Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola, were in the same frame of mind.

    Fashola, the host governor, urged Lagosians to collect their voter’s cards, ahead of the poll, stressing that they can only change the government by voting wisely.

    Amaechi observed that the PDP is jittery because change is imminent. He warned against rigging, saying that Nigerians will resist fraud.

    Oshiomhole said: “The challenge for Nigeria today is about creating jobs. They will not be created through token policies. It is time to bring a trusted and trusted leader. Gen. Buhari has no money, yet, he was governor, minister of petroleum and Head of State. You need a man who will not steal to curb corruption.”

    Aregbesola said: “The issue involved in this election is the sustenance of poverty and abolition of poverty. If you are interested in poverty, misery and hardship, vote for the PDP. If you believe there must be an end to poverty, misery and hardship, vote for the APC.”

    Senator Oluremi Tinubu said: “Today, we are witnessing the beginning of the restoration of Nigeria.”

  • Lagos defends fees

    The Lagos State Ministry of Education has defended the N10,000 fee charged for screening test into its model colleges and upgraded secondary schools.

    A statement signed by the Public Relations Officer of the ministry, Mr Jide Lawal, stated that the fee has not been increased.

    The statement reads: “Our attention has been drawn to the objections of both the Education Rights Campaign (ERC) and the Muslim Students Society of Nigeria (MSSN) to the payment of the sum of ten thousand naira only for the sales of forms for the screening test for admission of primary six pupils into Model Colleges/Upgraded Junior Secondary Schools for the 2015/2016 academic session.

    “We wish to state categorically that the payment of the sum of N10,000 for the screening tests is not a new thing as that has always been the practice for the past years hence one begins to question the motive behind the objections of the two groups.”

    The statement added that computer based test (C.B.T) being introduced for the entrance examination this year is not mandatory for all candidates and did not influence the cost of the examination.

     

  • Harvest of fire in Lagos

    Harvest of fire in Lagos

    For about two months in Lagos, there have been incidents of fire—an average of 10 per day.   Lives have been lost and properties that represented so many years of toiling and suffering have been consumed by the infernos. SEUN AKIOYE returns to some of the scenes and documents the harsh realities the victims face.

    ABOUT 8:am, every morning,  Mrs. Kemi Olorunwa would resume at the site of what was formerly her thriving shoe and bag store at the Global Plaza, Gbajumo Street, Balogun on Lagos Island.  This is not strange as she has been working at the same site every day for several years. This time, however,  her schedule has tragically changed.

    On arrival, she found a spot in front of Global Plaza and sat with several other traders who had gathered at the site. The traders are united in their sorrow.and anguish. The subject of discussion centered mainly on how to resuscitate their business.

    Intermittently, smoke erupts from the third floor of Global Plaza, sending the women momentarily in search of safer spots to sit.  From the third floor, one could still hear the cringing of metals. Besides, there is the odour of fresh burning. Many times during the day, the traders remarked that the fire may still cause the building to collapse.

    On Monday January 12th, 2015, Olorunwa was part of the crowd that watched helplessly as a raging midnight inferno consumed Global, OKK, Rich and Plaza 16 buildings. Despite the early arrival of the Lagos State Fire Servicemen and several other fire fighting trucks from construction giant, Julius Berger, the fire razed  the buildings along with hundreds of millions of naira worth of goods.

    Since then, life seems to have stopped for many of the traders. The women who had gathered in front of Global Plaza went through different emotions, ranging from laughter to sorrow; sometimes they spoke excitedly— of hope for the future, of starting afresh and of unpaid bills. But most of the time they were quiet, each one of them lost in her own thoughts.

    “This is how we keep ourselves alive, we come here every day as we used to do before our shops got burnt and close at 6: pm. If we don’t do that and find comfort in the company of each other, some of us would have died,” Olorunwa said.

     An ill wind

    Many Lagos residents agreed that the harmattan that descended on Nigeria from December 2014 to January 2015 was an ill wind that brought with it disaster of monumental proportion.   In Lagos, fire outbreaks assisted by the harmattan left in its wake hundreds of houses burnt down, businesses destroyed and hopes vanished. Because of the extremely dry and hazy weather, fire incidents which ordinarily would have been easily put out became monumental, destroying houses and businesses. The incessant fire outbreaks also stretched to the limit the resources and personel of the Lagos State Fire Service.

    Rasak Fadipe has been at his job for over two decades as a fireman. It was a job his mother didn’t approve of but years after he “disobeyed” her to join the “Panapana”, he has risen to the top as Director Lagos State Fire Service. But Fadipe was the first to admit that the fire occurrences in Lagos have stretched the capacity of his men.

    When The Nation met him on January 15th, he has had just a few hours of sleep in three days. His men too have been stretched as they battle one fire incident after the other. Fadipe admitted that the large number of fire incidents was helped by the harmattan.

    The number of fire incidents recorded daily in Lagos have broken the records of recorded fire incidents so far. According to Fadipe, there is between 10 to 15 fire emergencies recorded daily while the highest number recorded in a day between December and January stood at 18.

    “My men are hardworking guys who give their best to fight the fire emergencies in Lagos state, but it’s taking a toll on them. Many times, I had to cheer them up, for instance when we were responding to the Balogun fire, we responded to another 15 emergencies,” he said.

    “We are living like animals”

    Orinarilly, nobody would envy the living conditions of the inhabitants of Oko Baba sawmill extension, in Yaba Local Council Development Area (LCDA).  Apart from living in plank houses erected on stilts which kept them away from the filthy ground by the Lagos lagoon, the residents are some of the poorest in Lagos state.

    On the night of January 11, 2015, the fate of about 5,000 inhabitants was to be determined, not by the government, but by a fire which no one was sure of its origin.  According to many of the residents, the fire began around 9:pm on the northern fringes of the settlement and in a twinkle of an eye, over 500  plank houses had been burnt  to the ground.

    Four days after the fire, the people of Oko Baba began to rebuild their shattered lives and homes. The land on which they were reconstructing their houses was a reclaimed part of the Lagoon, owned by Saw Mill owners who sublet it to tenants for at least N7,000 per annum.

    Suleiman Babatunde, an Islamic cleric who has lived at the settlement for many years had just finished the roofing of his plank house. The spot on which the house was being built used to be his Koranic school which also doubled as his office. In the days of his prosperity, he had about 20 students in his school, the  patronage was good. By the side, he had a deep freezer which his wife used for business, a big generator and many other electronics appliances.

    After the fire, all that was left for Suleiman were his wife and two children.” What can we do, in everything we should give thanks to God at least we are alive,” he said and opened his palms towards heaven.

    Suleiman had borrowed N60, 000 to rebuild his burnt office where he hoped his family would move into while he looked for money to rebuild the main house.  The inner of the hut had been padded with used cardboards and cartons which would give the house warmth and also protect it against the rough edges of the plank.

    Inside the house, his two children played endlessly; soon one of them went out and returned with about N50 worth of cooked rice wrapped in a small plastic bag. The two children sat down on the bare floor and devoured the meal. It would be their first meal of the day; time was 2:30pm.

    “I do not have any money left, I honestly do not,” Suleiman said. The tale of poverty rang hollow in Oko Baba. After the fire, some of the victims could not get back on their feet. Many of them are petty traders whose tool of trade also got burnt in the inferno, starting afresh was almost  impossible.

     

    The victims of Oko Baba fire appeared to be at their wits end, but their problems were compounded four days after the fire when a chief from the Oloto of Otto Ilogbo called Buhari Oloto visited the community in company of about 10 policemen. The chief ordered the victims to immediately stop the construction of the houses and ordered everyone out of the settlement.

    “Buhari Oloto came today. He said the land belongs to the Oloto of Otto and we are to move out. He said we should not rebuild this place and he has arrested all our carpenters. We borrowed money to buy the planks so that our children can find somewhere to stay away from the weather,” Suleiman told The Nation.

    Samson Babatunde was angry at the interruption to the rebuilding of Oko Baba. He has just paid N45,000 for some planks and roofing sheets and work has been forced to a halt. That day, many of the victims stood in groups to discuss the development, there were unconfirmed reports that those arrested have been taken to Area C police command and thrown in jail.  “What are we going to do now?, I have told my wives that as soon as we have some money, we will return to Ilorin where we came from, whatever we find there we will do,” Suleiman said.

    But those who suffer the most are the over 500 children of the community, because most families have nothing to fall back on, they sleep either on the bare ground or at the saw mill, very close to the water front which also used to be the refuse dump. Those who are able to find a space at the latter are the fortunate, a small cramp place, families find a space under the shed or in between the saw milling machines.

    This “prime” spot came at a cost. In the afternoon, flies are the adversaries and in the night, the breeze from the lagoon and mosquitoes. As a consequence of this unwholesome living, many of the children fell sick.  Those who had relatives outside the community sent their children away while those who don’t continued to live in horror and fear. One of them is Saidat Olayiwola.

    Saidat and her two children sleep every night under the tiny shed at one of the saw mills with about seven other families. There is no privacy here and the adults performed their toilets  before dawn. “This is where we sleep, not just us here but in all the saw mills. Those who cannot find a space here sleep on the bare ground. We are suffering here and living like animals, all of us are sick, our children are sick, the government should help us,” she cried.

    Mrs. Kuburat Yusuf and her husband found a space in between the machines where they sleep every night.  She said she had just come out of a sickness and had spent all her money on medication. “This is my two bedroom apartment,” she said jocularly showing The Nation her bed. “Can you imagine it is human beings living like this? They said living in the plank houses was bad, if we had money won’t we have rented a better house?”

    Among those who sleep under the shed at night is two –month-old Balikis. Her mother who declined to give her name said she had been having a tough time with the baby especially in the night. But in their misery and impoverishment, they found a communal spirit tending to each other’s needs and children. Saidat’s three-year-old daughter returned from school crying and the women swooped on her. One removed her uniform, while others tried to soothe her. Soon she found a space on one of the beds flung on the floor while her mother helped her out with her homework with flies buzz over her head mercilessly.

    In another part of the settlement, Prince Ogunlana Tajudeen had just finished building a shed where his workshop used to be, unable to afford the charges of the artisans; he did the heavy works himself.  “We are helpless, the harmattan helped the fire and burnt everything like paper,” he said.

    But Tajudeen is still grateful, even though his loss is estimated at N5 million (including  the cost of his heavy equipments), many others lost several millions.  “Many others lost so much, I have to thank God, I still have my family,” he said.

    Tajudeen’s wife has also resumed her trading under the shed built by her husband, it was not like it used to be but it was a place to start. “I built this so that my wife can start her business and when my children come from school they can find somewhere to stay,” he said.

    But the victims have also learnt a lesson. According to the Secretary of Oko Baba Ward D, Seun Awodiya, the community has learnt bitter lessons from the fire: “We saw that the houses were interwoven, now we have demarcated them, we now have roads and spaces so next time we have another fire it will be limited,” he said.

    “My brother, I am completely naked”

    But there are others who do not have a “next time”.  On the same day fire raged in Oko Baba, another tragedy was unfolding at Raimi Ajibowo Street Igando.  The residents of house numbers 40 to 45 have gone to church when they received the sad news. Their houses, which perched at the edge of the Igando dumpsite, had caught fire. By the time the owners returned, nothing remained of their homes.

    The victims blamed the tragedy on the activities inside the ‘bowler’ where the Lagos State Waste Management Board (LAWMA) had dumped thousands of used vehicle tyres.  Some scavengers were said to have been in the habit of putting fire to the tyres so as to make use of the inner ring of copper which they claim is valuable. The residents of Ajibowo Street claimed they had complained to Lawma officials to desist from dumping the tyres without success, until the fire incident.

    A resident gave an eye witness account: “The fire that caused this started from the dumpsite, but because of the harmattan season which helped the fire travel faster, it entered the bowler and as soon as the tyres caught fire it burned endlessly until these houses were consumed.”

    The bowler where the tyres were dumped is a large gulf measuring almost 200 meters wide and over 500 feet deep.  It sits parallel to Ajibowo Street which divided it from Igando General Hospital. The victims claimed they had built their houses before the bowler was dug by the operators of the dumpsite to accommodate more wastes. They said their complaints about an impending tragedy had gone unheeded.

    But what surprised many people was that immediately the fire started, some Hausa scavengers entered the bowler and began to pack the burnt tyres. Five days after when The Nation visited, activities inside the gulf were still intense. Salimonu Dauda, the owner of the three bedroom flat on number 45, had been fighting the scavengers, The Nation found him in the midst of the deadly bowler in a fierce struggle with the determined scavengers.

    “I suffered to build this house, I am a bricklayer, see my hands. Where will I start from, we do not have money but we live in our house, now my brother I am completely naked, please help me,” he said. Dauda took The Nation to his house and opened the iron door. Nothing remained of the home which housed the family of six, Dauda said, they did not take anything out.

    “I was working when the fire started and they called me, we lost everything, there is no hope. Even this clothe I am wearing was given to me. My eldest children are sleeping around while they younger ones are in a church. My wife has almost killed herself over this, she is with some neighbours.”

    The Nation met Dauda’s wife Tawa in the house where she was being kept a few meters from her now destroyed home.  She was about 40 years old and it was obvious she had not had a shower in some days. She wore a blue blouse and a dirty purple oversized coat. She was crying and throwing herself on the floor, a woman apparently tired of consoling her sat beside her and watched.

    “Everything I worked for in my youth has been destroyed. I said it and shouted that these people will burn my house, now they have done it. My life is destroyed.”  As she spoke, she would throw herself off the bench and unto the ground; her husband carried her up and reprimanded her. She stopped for a while and then began a much louder lamentation.

    “This is what I am saying, she had threatened to kill herself, the church where she was sleeping had sent her packing, her shop was destroyed in the fire, I don’t know what to do again,” Dauda said and sat on the bench with his hands covering his face.

    Elizabeth Akinduro had cause to be thankful even though her house was burnt down. “I was in the church and my 75-year-old  mother was alone in the house when the fire started, people helped me to drag her out, she could have been killed in the fire.”

    That was the only thing that came out of the house, everything else was lost. Now, the children are scattered around sleeping wherever they could find. Akinduro’s children haven’t been to school since the incident. She had no hope of rebuilding the house. “There is no way I can rebuild this house, this was my last hope. I have only the clothe I am wearing, where will I start from,” she said.

    Four houses were gutted on Ajibowo Street before the rage of the fire was halted by the Fire Service; some of the lucky residents thanked their stars. But a dangerous dimension has been added, a rumour was flying around that the government would  take over the properties. Dauda called this reporter aside and said: “Please help us beg the government not to send us away, if we leave this place we have nowhere to go and we cannot return to our villages. “

    His wife is still inconsolable and she seemed to have decided on suicide. “This morning, she told me to please help her look after her children, I don’t know what that means,” a neighbour said.

    Meanwhile on Gbajumo Street Balogun market, the traders waited for the fire to finally die out.  Kafila Giwa, who lost her store in Rich Plaza, said they come to the market everyday thinking there would be solution but they found none. She said the traders are eager to start their businesses again.

    “We cannot talk about how much we lost, we want to start again, if the government wants to demolish these buildings let them do it and let us start our work again. Our children are suffering, many of us here are the breadwinners of our families,” Alake Ayinla said.

    While waiting for government’s decision on the buildings, the traders amuse themselves whichever way they can. They live in constant anticipation of government’s intervention; the sight of a stranger brings renewed hope. “Is it you the government sent to help us?  Do you have any money for us, can you buy food for us?” they asked the reporter.

    But despite the façade they put on they are struggling to come to terms with their losses. “I come here so that I will not commit suicide,” Olakunle Idris said. Since the incident, he claimed to have been able to sleep only with the use of medications.  Yussuf Adesina said he has been fighting depression. “I have been depressed that is why I come here every day to find comfort with my fellow traders, I don’t know how long I can hold out again,” he said.

    Meanwhile at 6:pm, the traders whose stores were spared began to pack up for the day. Idris waited until it was dark and he joined the other traders to “close” for the day. He walked slowly to the bus stop to join a bus that will take him home. “If anybody ask me where I was coming from, I would say from work,” he said with a smile.

  • Lagos deserves 1% special fund, says senatorial candidate

    Lagos deserves 1% special fund, says senatorial candidate

    Lagos should get at least one per cent from the Federation Account to take care of its special needs,

    the Chairman House of Representatives Committee on Public Account Solomon Olamilekan Adeola has said.

    Adeola, who is the All Progressives Congress (APC) Lagos West Senatorial candidate urged the electorate to be agents of change with their votes.

    Addressing a Town Hall meeting of traditional rulers, community leaders, groups and various trade bodies at Ojo Local Government in continuation of his campaign, Adeola said on election day, voters should remember the suffering and hardship they had endured in the last 16 years of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) rule, adding that they should use their votes to change Nigeria for the future generation.

    .“My coming here to meet you personally is to assure you that the seat belongs to you and I am going to represent you and not myself. I am here to tell you that I am the most qualified for this position with my 12 years cognate legislative experience at both the state and national legislature” he said.

    The APC senatorial candidate said he would fight for the special status for Lagos state as the commercial capital of Nigeria that should get at least 1% special Fund from the Federal government. He said Abuja , the Federal Capital Territory, is getting 2%.

    Adeola also said he would fight for the listing and recognition of 37 LCDAs as Local Government in Nigeria Constitution.

    He promised to replicate the good representation he is reputed for in Alimosho where he has embarked on numerous community development initiatives, educational development of youth through provision of free GCE and JAMB forms, free healthcare, provision of transformers and boreholes as well as employment opportunities.

    The Ojo Traditional Rulers in Council Chairman, Chief Saliu Balogun, said Adeola’s records in Alimosho is a pointer to the fact that he would perform at the senate if given the chance.

  • Mbu comes to Lagos

    •Against the background of the February polls, his appointment is a bad omen

    Just a few weeks before next month’s general elections, the Inspector-General of Police, Mr Suleiman Abba, has ordered the redeployment of 14 Assistant Inspector-Generals of Police (AIGs) to various departments, zonal commands and formations of the force across the country. It is not surprising that one of these postings in particular, that of Mr Mbu Joseph Mbu, AIG in charge of zone 7 Abuja, to take charge of zone 2 command comprising Lagos and Ogun states, has raised eyebrows.

    Mr Mbu is one of the most controversial police officers of this dispensation. Given his track record of impunity and hubris, it is inexplicable why Mbu should be entrusted with such a sensitive assignment at a critical period where the police must not only be impartial but must be manifestly seen in that light.

    Under Mr. Mbu’s watch as Commissioner of Police in Rivers State, the state steadily degenerated to a near state of anarchy. It is surprising that the Nigeria Police Force was seemingly oblivious of, and indifferent to, the grave damage done to its credibility and professional integrity by Mbu’s temure as Rivers State Commissioner of Police.

    Mbu’s acts of sheer lawlessness in Rivers State are legion. For instance, on his directive, a caretaker committee lawfully set up for Obi/Akpo Local Government Area was prevented from functioning, as the secretariat was sealed up by the police. Again, when five colleagues of Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State paid a solidarity visit to him (governor) last year, they were molested and harassed at the Port Harcourt Airport, with the police looking on.

    Other acts of temerity recorded in Rivers State during Mbu’s tenure as CP included withdrawal without just cause of security details of principal members of government loyal to Governor Amaechi, blockage by the police of a road leading to the Government House, Port Harcourt, forcing the governor’s convoy to take another route to his official residence, and the forcible prevention of a delegation of people, including traditional rulers from Orashi community from paying a courtesy call on the governor. These are apart from various instances of incendiary rhetoric.

    In normal climes, any officer with evidence of such brazen partisanship would have been long shown the way out of the force. But when the criticisms against Mbu reached a crescendo, the police authorities simply redeployed him to Abuja and even elevated him from the rank of CP to AIG. Not surprisingly, therefore, Mr. Mbu saw no need to depart from his chosen path of impunity. He even had the effrontery to boast on his departure from Rivers State, in a veiled reference to Governor Amaechi, that he was the “lion” who had tamed the “leopard”.

    Thus, in Abuja, Mbu ordered the arrest and detention for almost 24 hours of an AIT reporter, Mr Amaechi Anakwe, who described him as ‘controversial’ on a TV programme.  The reporter was taken to court but no charges were pressed. In the same vein, he sought, without success, to ban the #BringBackOurGirls campaigners from protesting against the plight of the abducted Chibok girls in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). Against the background of a peace pact between the All Progressives Congress (APC) and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)’s presidential candidates, Mbu’s appointment is not a way to implement it.

    Given his unsavoury and unprofessional track record, no one can be blamed for believing that there are sinister motives for Mbu’s deployment to Lagos at this time. All the same, we welcome Mbu to Lagos. Hopefully, he knows that Lagos is on the radar of the local and international media. Furthermore, Lagos is a very conscious and politically sophisticated state that has always been the waterloo of dictators. If Mbu does not change his ways, the same fate of dismal failure awaits him in Lagos.

  • Lagos, NBA push for speedy resolution of judiciary strike

    The Lagos State government and the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) have urged the Federal Government to ensure a speedy resolution of the Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN) crisis as the two parties meet today in Abuja.

    The call for a speedy resolution of the 15-day strike was however without prejudice to the appeal filed by the government against the judgment of Justice Adeniyi Ademola of a Federal High Court, Abuja.

    This was the thrust of a communiqué read by the Attorney General, Ade Ipaye, after a meeting of the government and NBA leaders from the state’s four divisions.

    Other signatories to the communiqué are Yemi Farounbi, Alex Mouka, Adedotun Adetunji and Chris Okoye, who are NBA chairmen in Ikeja, Lagos, Ikorodu and Badagry.

    Ipaye, who said the state supported the autonomy of the judiciary and direct remittance of money to the judiciary from the Consolidated Revenue Fund, however declined to give details of the judgment the state appealed against.

    The attorney-general lamented that the strike of the judiciary workers was a disturbing precedent.

    “Ironically, the courts which are empowered by law to enforce judgment, are being sidelined and shut down by this method of enforcement.”

    According to him, the strike had caused untold hardship to ordinary Nigerians,  depriving them of their freedom without trial and without any opportunity to apply for bail.

    “It has also made fundamental rights enforcement, settlement of disputes (matrimonial, family, landlord/tenant, employee/employer, contractual, taxation, company management among others) impossible , thereby shutting down all justice infrastructures provided by law in Nigeria.”

    Ipaye said in a very disturbing way, “the situation signals the impotence of the Nigerian justice system and constitutes a clear inducement to impunity.

    “We fear that the breakdown of law and order is the logical result, especially when we are within a few days to general elections.

    “We also fear that the consequence of this strike will outlive the strike period. It will be a precedent on record that striking judiciary workers can shut down the justice system. Local and foreign investors who find this on our records will have no reason at all to trust the efficacy of our justice system,” he said.