Tag: lagos

  • Lagos bars Liberia, others from trade fair

    Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industry (LCCI) on Tuesday said they will not allow participants from some West African countries currently devastated by the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) such as Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone at this year’s International Trade Fair slated for between the 7th and 16th of next month,

    Briefing the media on the forth coming trade fair, Chairman, Trade Promotion Board of LCCI, Dr Micheal Olawale-Cole said the fair is intended to provide economic and commercial bridges between local and international investors, as the chamber is committed to provide a platform to broaden the horizon and scope of investment opportunities for both  exhibitors and visitors.

    Reiterating the commitment of the chamber to sustain and intensify their role as catalysts for business promotion, Olawale-Cole said the theme is “Promoting the Nigerian Economy as a Preferred Investment Destination”. He argued that with the latest rebasing of the economy, it has become imperative to further expose the potentials of the nation’s economy to both indigenous and international business people.

    The fair, he said, is billed to hold in three interconnected grounds at the main bowl of  Tafawa Balewa Square, the cricket pitch and the club arcade car park with a total available space  of over 40,000 square meters. He also stated that to counter the challenge of the absence of permanent indoor exhibition hall, the chamber has acquired two large marquee tents, measuring a total of 4,500 square metres to provide high quality and standard  exhibition halls for exhibitors. These tents will come with new air-conditioners and flooring materials that will ensure a good ambiance for all exhibitors.

    On foreign participation, Olawale-Cole said the fair has enjoyed more popularity and patronage by the day within the international business community. According to him, the recognition of Nigeria as Africa’s largest economy has impacted positively on the fair. In his words: “As at today, we have confirmed registration from China, Japan, Taiwan, Vietnam, Cameroun, Argentina and Egypt. Others are Indonesia, Pakistan, India and the European Union delegation.

    On security, he pledged the provision of good security cover for all visitors and exhibitors alike. He said: “We have engaged reputable security firm, which shall work in close collaboration with the Nigerian Police and the Federal Fire Service. We shall engage the services of anti-bomb and anti-terrorism units of the Nigeria Police in addition to the deployment of closed circuit television (CCTV) camera for surveillance around all locations of the fair arena. This is in addition to working with relevant ministries and agencies to ensure free vehicular movement.

    The Chamber also used the opportunity of the announcement of the fair to unveil her goodwill ambassadors who graced the occasion such as Chief Executives of Main One cable, Ms Funke Opeke, CEO KAYMU, Ms Evangeline Wiles, popular artiste, TU face, Ice Prince, Brymo,  Vector, on –air- personality, Olisa Adibua amongst others.

  • ECOBA Lagos holds ‘Ancients’ Day

    Old students of Edo College, Benin who left school 50 years ago had a swell time last Saturday at the 2014 ‘Ancients Day’ programme organised by the Lagos State branch of the Edo College Old Boys Association ECOBA).

    The ‘ancients’ enjoyed a relaxing time at the Pearl Garden Restaurant, Victoria Island Lagos, reminiscing, interaction, counseling and mentoring younger members of the association.

    In his remark, Chairman of ECOBA Lagos, Mr. Godwin Ize- Iyamu congratulated members of the special group.  He also informed them of the association’s annual dinner coming up December 13, at Ruby’s Place, Lekki.

    The highpoint of the event was the induction of Dr. Osarieme Bazuaye into the well-regarded group. Dr. Bazuaye, a Veterinary Surgeon, who was also a Marketing Manager at Pfizer and a senior president at the former MTS, left Edo College in 1964.

    Other ancients present at the event include Prof Gabriel Osuide, the pioneer Director-General, National Agency for Food, Drug  Administration and Control (NAFDAC),  Mr. Adams Idufueko, Prof. E.S. Akpata, Mr. B. Fadaka, and Air Vice-Marshal Joe Ehigie

    Edo College, one of the model secondary schools in Edo State, is a full-boarding school for boys.

  • Lagos plans to boost public transportation by 2015

    A plan is underway by the Lagos State government to address traffic congestion in the metropolis by boosting public transportation to discourage private vehicle owners from being on the road in compliance with the UN-Habitat recommendation that traffic headaches in cities can be further addressed through reduction of vehicular movement. ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA reports.

    Most owners of private cars and other vehicles in Lagos State may have no need to put their automobiles on the road towards the end of next year when the state government plans to introduce a system that would encourage more public transportation to further address traffic hiccups especially in urban areas.

    The twilight of 2015, will see the government boosting public transportation system by reducing the number of vehicles heading to the Lagos island axis in line with the 2013 UN Habitat recommendation that private driving needs be further discouraged to address numerous traffic challenges particularly in mega cities.

    Lagos State Commissioner of Transport Kayode Opeifa, said structures are already in place to kick-start the initiative.

    Opeifa spoke in Lagos recently at the launch of the 2013 Global Report on Human Settlement tagged:  ‘Planning and design for sustainable urban mobility; by the United Nations-Habitat UN Habitat.

    The planned move, he explained, is not to discourage operators of commercial Danfo buses plying the route but to encourage them to key into the new initiative which aside facilitating easier movement to various work places, will equally makes business transaction a lot more convenient.

    Said Opeifa: “We are bringing on a system toward the end of 2015 that will discourage driving and encourage public transport system which will automatically reduce traffic that we find on Third Mainland Bridge.  We are going to introduce small buses on that road. And people will not need to drive to Victoria Island. Also towards that end, you see that we are now doing the rail, which is now spurring towards Marina, and it will reduce the congestion as people move into that area.

    “We need to reduce the number of vehicles on the road, and to achieve that you have to do what will make other people not drive and leave the whole of the driving to public transport thereby improving on its capacity.

    Opeifa explained further that the ministry has observed a new trend in the metropolis where companies and other organisations are now seeing the need to acquire big buses to ferry their workers to work in order to discourage them from expending their energy in long-hour drive.

    “Interestingly, you will observe there are more Coasta buses on Lagos roads, ditto for Lagbus buses,” Opeifa noted.  “A lot of companies are now buying buses so as to reduce the need for their workers to drive because companies observe that their workers get to work looking very tired having been trapped in traffic for hours.

    “Government is also increasing the number of LAGBuses to Lagos Island by encouraging more private partnership.

    “You will notice that you don’t see Danfo and Molue and on Third Mainland Bridge, you see more of modern vehicles. It is the same people who own those Danfo and Molue that are still buying into the new initiative, so we are not getting rid of them. We have granted some of them licences and we are encouraging them to migrate by applying for loans and if the funding is right and they able to secure the loans, you will see them changing completely.  We will see more of Danfo plying Agege and other long distance routes and not that will they be off the road.

    “You must also note that those buying into this are private sector-driven. And they are now working to increase their capacity and when they do that they create more jobs. The cost of transportation will come down, and people will be ready not to drive,” Opeifa stressed.

    Addressing the avalanche of complaints by users of the almost completed (Lagos)-Ikorodu expressway, ranging from narrowness of road resulting in attendant traffic snarl, as well as what some considered as its needleess beautification, Opeifa  said the current challenges being faced by motorist  on the road, would soon become a thing of the past when the expressway become fully operational.

    “Let me say no amount of road can solve any traffic problem, “Opeifa said while addressing the Ikorodu traffic problem.

    “I remember when we were doing the BRT lane (on Ikorodu road), many accused us of taking a lane out of three, but we told them we were doubling the lane because that one we did would move more people than the remaining two.

    “I agree the road is narrow, but the way it was constructed is not by the number of lanes but how efficient we want to make them to be.  It is not the number of lanes that determines the ease of traffic but how efficient the lanes are.   So, that road is developed to be extremely efficient.

    (When completed) “We are not putting less that 100 BRT on that road; and they are moving on the dedicated lane, so people will find it unnecessary to drive.”

    Opeifa continued: “Instead of you now driving from Ikorodu to Alausa, you only need to board BRT from Ikorodu to Ojota which will only spend 15 minutes and from there you pick another vehicle to Alausa. So it is better to move that way than when you have a big road and all of you are crammed in traffic.  In Chicago for example, they are now turning their three lanes into two; and guess what, they are putting on the third lane-parking.  So if you can drive to a place, park and do business, it is more convenient that way than when you are now stuck on the same road with nowhere to park.

    “People say they want Okada (commercial motorcycle). Okada from where to where? The focus is on non-motorised-that is your legs. So when you trek 100 or 200 metres from the bus stop, you pick a bus, you have exercised yourself. People take Okada from Agege to VI when they are supposed to trek few kilometers from their houses, take a bus, and you know Okada is more expensive to travel in than a bus.

  • Lagos APC to PDP: you can’t say Fashola’s govt is bad democratic model

    Lagos APC to PDP: you can’t say Fashola’s govt is bad democratic model

    Lagos State All Progressives Congress (APC) has described the allegation that Governor Raji Fashola-led government was a bad model of democratic governance as baseless and the biggest joke of the 21st century.

    The Lagos PDP, in a recent statement, accused Fashola-led administration of not showing signs that it was willing to conduct local governments’ election as the tenures of the office-holders end in October 29, 2014.

    But the APC, in a statement by its Director of  Publicity, Joe igbokwe, said: “Now, contrary to this bedtime stories of Lagos PDP, we want to make it clear that Lagos State government is prepared to conduct local government areas (LGA) elections as it has been doing in the past, when INEC concludes its delineation exercise in some states.

    “INEC is creating new wards and new polling units in some states, including Lagos and until it finalises that very important exercise, it may not be feasible to conduct LGA elections because we need to know the new wards and the new polling units before going to the polls”.

    It added:  “If the new voter cards and the new voters register are yet to be seen, please tell us how you can conduct elections. Once these structures are put in place, LASIEC will move into action.

    “Some PDP-controlled states have not conducted local government elections in the last eight years, but we are not PDP. We do the right thing, we follow the rules and we get results. However, if these issues are not resolved before the October deadline, Lagos State government may appoint caretaker committees to replace the outgoing LGA Chairmen.”

    On the allegation that the government officials are provoking PDP members by removing and destroying PDP signs, the APC said it must “be known that Lagos State has a Signage Agency called LAASA and if Lagos PDP wants its services, they know what to do. Advert agencies in Lagos know that it is not business as usual as LAASA has cleared the mess in Lagos and set up new standards for Outdoor Advertising.

    “Lagos State government has not provoked anybody or any group, but sometimes decisions are taken in the overall interest of 25 million Lagosians. Rather it is Lagos PDP that has been provoking Lagos APC.

    “We saw the provocation when a junior Minister in the Ministry of Defence, Senator Obanikoro, went with armed soldiers to Ilubirin Housing Estate to harass contractors building homes for Lagosians. We see this provocation when one of our leader on the island, Alhaji Azeez Asake, was brutally murdered by PDP thugs after their rallies at TBS. We see these provocations on a daily basis at old toll gate Lagos where Lagos PDP is training thugs for 2015 elections in the name of SURE-P. PDP is on the wrong side of history in Nigeria and the same history will remain our witness.”

  • Shopping in Lagos traffic stream

    Shopping in Lagos traffic stream

    Though the state government has been trying to stop hawking of wares in traffic for very obvious reasons, buying and selling in Lagos traffic have come to stay. To some people, it is a delightful experience;  to others, it is repulsive. They see the practice as a sort of social menace, TONIA ‘DIYAN reports.

    Though traffic snarls abound in many other urban centres across the country, that of Lagos appears intractable. In spite of concerted efforts by the Federal and state governments to address the daily agonies of both motorists and commuters, there appears to be no respite in sight.

    This is understandable. Lagos is a city most sought after for the listless opportunities that abound  in it for skilled and unskilled, literate and illiterate labourers. It is estimated that about 20 million people from different walks of life live and work in Lagos.

    The International Labour Organisation (ILO) and other global bodies have decried rising youth unemployment rate in the country. This unemployment crisis and the punitive cost of renting a shop in the city may have forced many youths to take advantage of the daily traffic gridlock across the city to eke a living.

    Traffic gridlock is a daily occurrence in Lagos. On the mainland, from the long stretch of Ikorodu road down to the Third Mainland Bridge and on the notorious Agege Motor Road stretching from Mushin to Oshodi then to the Lagos/Abeokuta Road, the story is the same. From  Oshodi Mile-2/Apapa/Orile/Maza-Maza down to LASU Iyana Oba Road it is traffic snarls all the way.The same goes for  Oshodi to Obalende ,Lekki,Ajah and Epe. It has more often than not, made life miserable for both motorists and commuters.

    Akin Adelaja leaves home every morning through the horrendous traffic, faces same rigour when returning home from his work place, yet he is comfortable buying in such a harsh environment. Akin’s wife, Feyisara, finds it more convenient to buy food items by the road side.

    Feyisara, who was sighted buying a big sized croaker fish and other soup ingredients along Ikorodu Road (Ketu area on the outskirts of the city) told The Nation Shopping that though the unusual market compounds the traffic situation, it is a trend that Lagosians have become used to.

    She said: “When I am trapped in traffic longer than usual, I become exhausted and lack the strength and time to visit the regular market. Again, things are cheaper here than in the conventional markets. If I can get everything I need to prepare a meal on the road, why stress myself even on weekends to go shopping in a conventional market?”

    However, traders who sell in traffic are smart; they readily move their wares from the markets to the roadside, especially during the evenings when workers are expected to have closed from their various work places.

    They hawk and shove their wares in the faces of people as they are held up in traffic persuading them to patronise them, shouting the common refrain: ‘Buy, Buy, Na small money’.. They even hang on vehicles, sometimes tapping on car windows and asking people to roll down to check their displayed wares.

    A road side trader at Onipanu, Mr Ugo Amechi said:  “We want to cater for people’s needs and also make more money. This is what we traders call night market; it is an opportunity for us to make sales if we didn’t make much during the day inside our shops. It is also an opportunity for people patronising us to save time and avoid stress of visiting the market aside the stress faced in the traffic.”

    It is difficult to find a society that does not have its own peculiar problems. No matter where a person lives, social problems are inevitable. One of the social problems that is peculiar to Lagos is traffic. It didn’t just begin; it has become a regular feature of Lagos from time immemorial.

    Yes, we all buy one thing or the other in traffic. Items such as newspapers, magazines, bottled drinks, water, rechargeable lamps, top-up cards for mobile phones, loaves of bread, fruits, plantain chips and the popular gala that many can’t do without when caught in traffic.  Even petrol is sold in gallons for motorists who burn fuel during traffic, especially during fuel scarcity.

    Most often, traders who are involved in this act use it as a means of survival to provide the basic necessities of life for their family. They could also have resorted to it as a last resort because many of them feel neglected and often accuse the government of failing to provide them with any form of amenities. The high cost of rent charged on shops is another reason why some of these traders find themselves on the highway. Traders have claimed that officials of the government allocate shops to civil servants who are not traders who in turn sublet these shops at very high prices. High unemployment rate is also a contributing factor.

    However, experts have described the act as a phenomenon causing obstruction to public access to footprints, reducing the beauty and orderliness in the states, causing more congestion on roads also limiting sustainable economic tourist development.

    They say most times, it generates solid waste which when not properly managed results in hygiene problems, especially for traders dealing with food items. A law which makes it illegal to purchase or sell on the street was recently enacted and illegal shops pulled down warning that anyone caught in such act would face the wrath of the law.

    In reaction to the law, traders involved through their trade unions organised protest marches and demonstration several times.

    Those who see the measure of the government to curb the menace as unfair have also argued that it does not only have its negative side but also its positive side. Its positive side includes serving as a means of employment to those that are unemployed as it engages people in doing something useful. Goods can be purchased anytime because the traders do not have a definite closing hour, cheap services are made available to members of the public making sure their location is accessible and goods are provided at cheap prices since they do not have the expense of overhead cost such as rent unlike other retail stores.

    Findings have shown that traders found on the highway during traffic are not displaced traders who have no shops to stay and sell but rather, they are traders that prefer to come out of their hiding places as they often would call their rented shops inside the markets.

    “It pays us more to be here, especially at this time”, said Mr Uchena Kalu, who owns a bakery at Oshodi but goes to various bus stops around to supply bread sellers on the highway fresh and hot.

    Buying and selling in the middle of the ocean of Lagos traffic is different strokes to different folks!

  • Lagos mall on a public holiday

    Shoppers in the Lagos metropolis spent their public holidays visiting various malls within the city. Many who were seen at the Adeniran Ogunsanya mall and its neighbouring mall Leisure mall were there mainly for sightseeing and window shopping. Full of smiles, families took group photographs as they wine and dine together in the comfort of eateries situated within the mall. Children who were engrossed in train ride or car racing games were chanting and cheering.

    As expected, the mall was filled as many shoppers brought their children to shop and at the same time have fun. Children were more, most visited with their parents to catch the fun in the air of the ongoing Muslim celebration. Parents did the shopping while they left their children to take the train ride and play around and car race.

    The Nation Shopping decided to find out why busy workers would rather visit the mall on a public holiday when they should be in the comfort of their houses resting. A man simply called, Mr. Gabriel  was at the mall with his three kids, he said: ‘’ I am supposed to rest today being a public holiday but this is the only time I have for my kids to enjoy this Muslim season’’.

    He further explained that he likes patronising the malls on such holidays because the mall comes with full package of fun, entertainment and luxury. For Mrs. Enitan, holidays are not necessarily meant for resting. ‘’ Holiday is a time when you can do things that are not very urgent or necessary’’. She added that apart from holidays, she also visits the mall during the weekends because during weekdays she is always busy at her workplace.

    Mrs. Michelle visits Lagos malls regularly, but she said public holidays are unique because she has the opportunity of going to the mall with her kids when they return home from their hostel.

    For Mrs. Amaka, the road is usually free on public holidays, so it’s her best time to visit the malls. ‘’I don’t go out on public holidays but today, I am here because my son is resuming school and I have to shop for his resumption items’’ she said

  • Security operatives recover over five trucks of vandalised fuel in Lagos

    Security operatives recover over five trucks of vandalised fuel in Lagos

    •Arrests 50

    No fewer than five trucks loaded with petroleum products were recovered at vandals hideout in Majidun, Ikorodu an outskirts of the city at the weekend.

    The stolen petroleum products were recovered in a joint operation which comprised operatives of Nigerian Army, naval officials and Nigeria Security Service and Civil Defence Corps.

    It was gathered that the operatives also arrested 50 of the suspected vandals, arrested 100 canoes and 3,000 jerricans filled with fuel at their hideout.

    Sources said fear gripped residents when the armed security officials stormed the creeks around the community, impounding several ferries loaded with petroleum products.

    Most youths in the area fled the community in fear of being mistakenly arrested as vandals.

    The operation, which was still on as of 1pm yesterday, was said to have started at about 2am in the morning.

    A helicopter painted in the uniform usually worn by naval officers was sighted hovering around the area.

    The helicopter had travelled the waters in the area on Thursday to monitor the activities of the vandals.

    The operation also caused gridlock from Agric to Majidun as the gun-wielding men ransacked motorists.

    They also accosted some commercial operators and passersby were also to the creeks to evacuate the fuel.

    At the creeks, armed men were seen directing civilians to offload the fuel from ferries into the trucks.

    A bus conductor who shuttles between Ketu and Ikorodu, condemned the forcing of civilians to evacuate the fuel, adding that he was exhausted by the task.

    He said, “We were coming from Ikorodu Garage when they stopped our bus. I was forced to carry several jerricans of fuel; 50 litres for that matter. It is very annoying. You can see how they are leading innocent passersby to watersides to offload fuel.”

    A resident, Kabiru Kola, said the activity of the security agents had created panic in the residents, adding that some of them had fled the community.

    “We have been holding our breath since 2am when the operation started. Most people, especially boys have left the community for the fear of being taken as suspects. The perpetrators have run away while some of them have been arrested. Two days ago, I noticed that a helicopter hovered around here for five hours. Since then, I have been heralding something like this,” he said.

    The spokesperson of Lagos State Command of NSCDC, Mr. Mefor Chibuzor, confirmed the operation.

    He said the corps was alerted to it on Sunday morning.

    Chibuzor added that the security agencies would continue oppressing vandals until they desist from tampering with the pipes.

    “A joint operation involving our men, naval and army officials are ongoing now around Agric and Majidun in the Ikorodu area. Some vandals have been arrested while thousands of kegs loaded with petroleum products were recovered from the scene of crime. The creeks were busted following an intelligence report. We will continue to run after the vandals until they stop destroying the government property across the waters,” he said.

  • Citibank trains journalists in Lagos

    Citibank trains journalists in Lagos

    Citibank Nigeria Limited last week, hosted the annual Citi Financial Journalists Training in Lagos. The event covered topics on financial markets and macroeconomics. It was facilitated by the bank’s Nigeria’s Chief Operating Officer (COO), Akin Dawodu; Country Treasurer,  Bayo Adeyemo; Managing Director of SDI/Ruyi Communications, Soni Irabor and Managing Director of Teambuilding Nigeria, Yinka Olugbodi.

    The training provided an in-depth analysis of the financial markets and highlighted how economic trends and indicators should be interpreted.

    The forum also provided opportunity for interactive discussions among key media operators in the local market. The Citi Financial Journalists Training aligns with Citi’s commitment towards capacity building among various stakeholders in the Nigerian economic space.

    “The Citi Financial Journalists Training speaks to one of the bank’s core strengths in the market. Over the last 30 years, we have been at the forefront of providing financial markets training to industry colleagues, including our competitors, as well as regulators such as the Central Bank of Nigeria,” Dawodu said.

  • ‘I’ll reposition Lagos to realise its potential’

    ‘I’ll reposition Lagos to realise its potential’

    Akintoye Branco-Rhodes is a Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) aspirant in Lagos. In this interview with Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI, he speaks on his mission in politics and chances at the primaries. 

    Why do you want to serve as the governor?

    I am trying to free Lagos to release its potential and to reposition Lagos for its very great potentials in Nigeria and the West African sub-region. This is the reason why I’ve come forward to bring out the best of Lagos and Lagosians.

    If you are given the opportunity, what would you do differently from what Governor Fashola has been doing?

    The credentials that I have is that I am an energy expert and I know that Lagos State requires electricity for transformation; it requires patriotic service to the people. Lagos State requires clarity of vision and purpose. These are the things I would be bringing on the table.

    Why are you running under the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)?

    Even the best has to give way for others to push the frontiers forward. The APC has overstayed its welcome in Lagos. They’ve been here in the last 16 years and as you know, absolute power corrupts absolutely.  By their total dominance of the space for the 16 years, they have become anti-people in the kind of policies they’ve been implementing. That is why I feel very strongly that the PDP holds the potentials to dislodge the APC and reposition Lagos for the next phase of development.

    What are some of the anti-people policies you are talking about?

    Everybody that lives in Lagos is under one oppressive law or the other. One, multiple taxation; two, multiple levies; three, they’ve turned all agencies of government into revenue generators. It’s not bad, if they are just mere revenue generators, but they go to the extreme of taking this revenue from the people and that has left a sour taste in the mouth of the people. It is that yearning for freedom that I am bringing to the table.

    Lagos is not an oil-producing state yet and it derives much of its revenue from taxation. If you become governor and you do away with taxation, how would you get the money to run the state?

    Our plans are to enlarge the economy. If we enlarge the economy, there would be enough income tax to run the state; that’s where they failed. Their approach actually stifles the economy and when the economy is stifled, you will require force to bring in income. We are looking at enlarging the economy to empower more people to participate in the economy. Lagos is a megacity and has the mass of the people in place already. But what needs to be done is to increase the earning power of the people, to bring in the youths, which is a vibrant engine room of any economy. We also intend to reposition existing businesses in Lagos for expansion, to enable them participate in the general welfare of the state.

    What makes you think that the electorate would vote for the PDP this time?

    The PDP has not governed Lagos because, as you know, there is a time for everything under heaven.That is why we believe we would accomplish that goal this time around in 2015.

    What previous experience do you have that qualifies you to govern Lagos?

    I’ve been in politics for the last 23 years. I’ve always stood for the people in my entire political sojourn. I’ve been in business for the last 30 years and during that time, I’ve seen the tremendous potential of Lagos. I have proposed several solutions to Lagos State Government, but they were rejected. We must stamp out corruption. We must build a state that would cater for everybody, from the young to the old.

    There is this perception that the PDP at the centre has neglected Lagos.  What is your own take on it?

    What I know is that we would bring the Transformation Agenda of the President to every Lagosian.

    Do you think it’s a good policy?

    The Transformation Agenda…

    No, trying to discriminate against states that are not governed by the PDP?

    I don’t think there’s been a disconnect between the Presidency and the Lagos State; if there is, I don’t think it is deliberate because I believe the interest of the Presidency is the success of every state in the country. I don’t see any move to negate the state because it is not a PDP state.

    Is the PDP going to consider zoning and religion in picking a candidate for the Lagos governorship election in 2015?

    Well, I don’t know about zoning or religion. I think they are just going to consider the best candidate for the job.

    To what extent do you think stomach infrastructure is going to affect the governorship election in Lagos in 2015?

    It’s sad and very sad that lives of Nigerians meaning well for a better life would be reduced to temporary stomach needs. That is a very sad commentary and a reflection of the state of affairs in Nigeria. I believe that we should have gone beyond stomach infrastructure, by talking about a Nigeria where everybody has a sense of belonging; where patriotic leadership is meted out to the ordinary Nigerian citizens and where the aspirations of the ordinary Nigerians is captured in good governance. I think when we build a democracy where Nigerians can connect with the issues, then we would have built a democracy of our dreams.

    To what extent do you think the PDP is going to use the federal might or the resources available to it from the centre to prosecute the governorship election in Lagos?

    We are working very hard to make it an issue-based contest. We are presenting the issues, we are presenting our score cards and we are saying mark us based on what we say and what we do for the improvement of the lot of the people.

  • Flood sweeps away siblings in Lagos

    Flood sweeps away siblings in Lagos

    Two siblings were swept away by flood during yesterday’s downpour in Lagos.

    The tragedy occurred on Richard Abimbola Street in Ilasamaja, Lagos, when the children, a boy (9) and a girl (5), went out to urinate in a nearby drainage.

    Their mother was said to have left her elder sister whose makeshift home is near the drainage.

    The children had requested to go out and urinate during the rain and their aunt allowed them.

    After urinating, they started playing in the rain and the girl fell into the drainage.

    Her brother rushed to her rescue and both of them were swept away by the surging floor.

    An eyewitness, Tunde James told The Nation that the girl fell into the canal first. “Her brother tried to rescue her when he also fell in. The wave took them to Jimoh Ibrahim Street, Ilasamaja. The girl was dead when they were found but the boy was still alive. He died on his way to the hospital,” he said.

    Their bodies were recovered in a nearby canal after the downpour.

    Sympathisers gathered in their aunty’s home, weeping after the incident.

    Their aunt was inconsolable as she bemoaned her loss.

    Sources said when the news of the children’s death was broken to their mother, she fainted and was revived. It was gathered that when she got to her sister’s house she broke down.