Tag: LASPOTECH

  • INVESTIGATION: Poison on parade (2)

    INVESTIGATION: Poison on parade (2)

    • Why contaminated ‘Pure Water’ abounds in Lagos

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

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

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

    Read also: This is Lagos…City of aquatic splendour, dry taps

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

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

    Prof. Osibogun

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

    Acidic Sachet Water in Lagos; long time coming

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

    Read also: INVESTIGATION: Poison on parade (1)

    Human cost of sketchy sachet water

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

    A woman smiles as she gulps down a sachet water; oblivious to the potential contaminants therein

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

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

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

    Again, in March 2017 this year, there was another ‘water tragedy’ at Queens College, a government secondary school in the Yaba area of Lagos where three students died and scores of others were hospitalised as a result of a gastroenteritis epidemic contracted through contaminated water sources within the school environment.

    Unenviable romance with wastes, effluents

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

    A sachet water treatment plant in Lagos

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

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

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

    Eyewitness accounts

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

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

    The Gravel Truck

    Another response came from Mr Femi Salawu, a communications specialist who photographed an image where a gravel truck was loaded with bags of sachet water with a man lying over them.

    The water did not only stand the risk of being contaminated through exposure to the sun but also from the body fluids of the person who made a bed space on top of the pile.

    Mr Salawu, who captured the image, tweeted at the reporter’s handle with the caption: “From earth moving vehicle to a sachet water carrying “motor”.

    Is water still life?” The image was captured at 8:51 am on 22 August with the twitter handle @citizen_gavel.


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

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

    Mr Oluwole Toye explaining how sachet water is produced

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

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

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

    Safety valves

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

    Our stories, by faulted sachet water producers, ATWAP President

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

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

    When his reaction was sought on the acidic content of his sachet water, the producer of Two Ways Water, Mr Gafaru Wahud, said that no one had complained about the brand.

    NAFDAC inspected our factory before we got registered and we have been maintaining the standards. We always back-flush our cylinder and change the filters from time to time.

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

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

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

    Also, Mr Afolabi Oluwaseyi, the producer of Jim Dee Water, which recorded a pH level of 5.65 against the WHO’s minimum standard of 6.50, discountenanced the test result obtained by The Nation.
    “We are doing our renewal with NAFDAC. We have taken samples to the lab, though we have not collected the result. If there is any issue with the pH, we would have been alerted.”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • Govt wades into LASPOTECH crises, management begs workers to call off strike

    The Lagos State Government has initiated steps to find a lasting solution to the crisis rocking the Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH) so as to enable resumption of academic activities.

    It will be recalled that the three Staff Unions of the Lagos State Polytechnic, Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Polytechnics (SSANIP) and Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU) embarked on an Industrial Action basically on the issue of CONTISS 15 Migration for Staff on CONTISS 11 and below through a Circular from the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE).

    Deputy Registrar (Information and Public Relations), of the institution, Mr. Olanrewaju Kuye said the issues was being handled by the state government, appealing to the unions to call off their strike to enable amicable resolution of their grievances.

    According to Kuye, the polytechnic commenced the implementation of the scheme in October 2016 as directed by the Office of the Special Adviser on Education (OSAE) in order to ensure industrial peace and harmony in the Institution during the strike action embarked upon by the Staff Unions of the Polytechnic on October 20, 2016.

    “The issue at hand now is the Unions’ request for the payment of 87 months’ arrears (July 2009 to September 2016) which the State Government is looking into with the involvement of all the relevant Ministries, Departments and Agencies.

    “The position of the state government as contained in a letter dated 31st May, 2017 was communicated to the Unions through the Governing Council of the Polytechnic where the Government appealed for more time to be able to address the issue holistically. Unfortunately, the government’s position did not go down well with the Unions as they wanted the issue resolved on or before Monday 5th June, 2017. As a result of these conflicting positions the Unions decided to embark on a fresh indefinite strike action,” Kuye said.

    Explaining the recent clash between soldiers and students of the institution, Kuye said that the fresh strike infuriated the students who also mobilised themselves to demand for immediate continuation of lectures.

    He said the management of the institution has appealed to all the staff unions to be patient and call off the on-going strike so as to allow government to fully address the issue as requested.

  • Speaker condemns assault on LASPOTECH workers

    Speaker condemns assault on LASPOTECH workers

    •ASUP, NASU insist ‘rector must go’

    Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Mudasiru Obasa yesterday spoke on Wednesday’s disturbance at the state-owned polytechnic in Ikorodu, describing soldiers’ assault of some workers as wrong and uncalled for.

    He spoke when members of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnic (ASUP) and Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU) protested at the assembly complex in Alausa, Ikeja.

    The workers carried placards with messages on the non-payment of the 87-month accumulated arrears of the Consolidated Tertiary Institutions Salary Structure (CONTISS) 15 migration.

    Obasa condemned the assault of ASUP’s Welfare Officer Adewunmi Olorunfemi, his wife Lateefat and some students. Olorunfemi broke his left wrist when soldiers allegedly attacked him. His wife was allegedly assaulted at home.

    Mrs Olorunfemi was rushed back home from work yesterday because of her condition.

    The speaker said: “This is a civil rule and in a civil rule when there is a crisis, it is the police that should be invited and not the military. If there is an issue in any institution, they (authority) should call the police and it has to be done in a civilised manner, not to the extent of beaten people up and vandalising properties. It does not make sense; whoever does that should know that people will react naturally. I apologise to the union, please don’t be offended.

    “I just have to appeal to you. Let’s consider the students. Don’t take laws into your hands, let us maintain peace. Think about others. We are going to take the matter up; it is going to be a quick one. Anybody that will rule that institution must abide by the rules and regulations.”

    The Speaker promised that the assembly would intervene in the dispute between the school and the workers.

    Obasa said since he did not appoint the Rector, he could not grant the protesters’ request to remove him.

    “Sogunro was appointed by the governor, give us opportunity to look into the matter and we will take position without taking sides, that I can assure you,” he said.

    Earlier, spokesman of the unions, Comrade Abdulsalam Adegboyega, who is also ASUP Vice-Chairman, said the management’s refusal to honour agreement with the unions led to the strike.

    Adegboyega told The Nation that said Olorunfemi and his wife were still in trauma.

    The unions, he said, would resist the school’s attempt to proceed with this weekend’s semester examinations.

    He said: ‘’Our position on the strike has not changed. ASUP and NASU have a joint action committee and we are resolute on our demand and that is why we have taken our protest to the state assembly. We have no doubt that the Speaker will treat the matter with urgency as promised.

    ‘’However, we shall resist every attempt by the Rector and his management team to go ahead with part-time examinations earlier scheduled for this weekend.’’

    Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Polytechnics (SSANIP) Chairman, Mr Awoyemi Abiodun told Obasa that Rector, Mr Oluyinka Sogunro, sacked because of his alleged high-handedness.

    Abiodun said: “Sogunro does things without recourse to the governing council or to the executive management that are on the campus. As we speak, we used to conduct elections for the offices of the Deans but as soon as he got to power, deans are either selected or appointed because elections into the offices have been put to rest.

    “He has incited the students and cultists against the staff union in the polytechnic. Sogunro has taken away the peace we once enjoyed on the campus within two years. We now have crises regularly”, he said.

     

  • LASPOTECH students protest school closure

    LASPOTECH students protest school closure

    Lagos State Polytechnic, (LASPOTECH) students yesterday stormed Governor Akinwumi Ambode’s office to protest their school’s closure because of the strike by academic and non-academic staff.

    The protesters led by their Student Union Government (SUG) president Daudu Lawal arrived at Alausa in five buses, chanting solidarity songs.

    They displayed placards with inscriptions such as “Save LASPOTECH”; “Order that LASPOTECH be reopened”; “We are tired of staying at home”.

    Lawal said they sought the government’s help because they were tired of sitting at home.

    According to him, final year National Diploma and Higher National Diploma students had a few weeks left before graduation when the strike began.

    He said they thought the strike would not last over one week, but were surprised that it had lingered to over a month.

    “We are here today to get the attention of the governor over this issue and appeal to him to intervene so that we can return to school and complete our studies.”

    Lawal, who said “an idle mind is the devil’s workshop”, stated that it would be in the society’s interest for the students to return to school.

    He begged the governor to pay workers’ outstanding allowances and benefits to end the strike.

    The students stood around for a while after presenting their protest letter to a top government functionary.

  • MSSN honours UNILAG, LASU, LASPOTECH first class graduates

    MSSN honours UNILAG, LASU, LASPOTECH first class graduates

    LAGOS State Area Unit of the Muslim Students’ Society of Nigeria (MSSN) has honoured 35 students that bagged first class and distinction from the University of Lagos (UNILAG), the Lagos State University (LASU) and the Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH).

    The students were given plaques and cash at the ceremony held at Shamsi Adisa Hall at the Old Secretariat, in Ikeja GRA.

    MSSN President Dr Saheed Ashafa said the students were honoured to show that academic excellence deserved more prominence than social activities.

    He deployed what he called the lackadaisical attitude of the Fedral and state governments towards in academic excellence.

    Ashafa criticised the government for not recognising outstanding young scholars during it celebration of Lagos @50.

    He said: “As a student-based organisation, no activity can be better promoted than having a scrupulous interest in celebrating academic excellence. Since the society we found ourselves has been grossly engulfed in frivolities and celebration of mediocrity, we are left with no option than to take up the responsibility of showcasing the brains among us who are not deterred by the apparent denial that has taken over the society.

    “We are all living witnesses to the mouth-watering monetary encouragement, material gifts and accolades given to the winners and participants of the just-concluded Big Brother Nigeria Reality TV Show. This is despite that majority agree that the show does not only corrupt our moral values but also sends a dangerous signal that academic excellence and hardwork are no more prerequisites to success.

    “Painfully, some other shows that promote indecency, laziness and the get-rich mentality among our youths also have sponsorships and endorsements from both local and multinational companies. I need not mention them because we already know them! Yet, academic competitions and excellent performance by students receive peanuts from the society. What an irony!”

    Lagos State Commissioner for Home Affairs Dr Abdulhakeem Abdullateef urged the honorees to get to the peak of their academic career.

    He warned them not to change the winning strategy, adding: “A successful life does not come by chance. If you put a lot of hard work in what you do, you’ll get the result. You must join in taking appropriate steps so as to make the economy sound.”

    The commissioner urged them to mentor other Muslim students and use their knowledge to contribute to the society.

    “Do not forget Allah in whatever you do. You can attain nothing without Allah. You are part of the MSSN Lagos success story. Of what use is first class without contributing positively to the development of the society. You have to make sure your impact is felt,” he added.

    Lagos State Muslim Community Chairman Prof Tajudeen Gbadamosi described the students as worthy representatives of Islam, who are worthy of emulation.

    Prof Gbadamosi, represented by Dr Maruf Animashaun, said: “You have made us proud and do not relent. This is a good feat and you deserve more celebration. I commend the organisers of this event for celebrating excellence”.

    Responding on behalf of the honorees, Azeez Ejire, former Students Union President of LASPOTECH, said the award would encourage them to do more.

  • LASPOTECH academic union begins indefinite strike

    The Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH) chapter of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) yesterday began an indefinite strike.

    The union’s Publicity Secretary, Mr Saheed Olatunde Jaji, announced the strike in a statement yesterday in Lagos.

    The statement reads: “The Chairman of the union, Comrade Akinrinlola Ibitoye, said there won’t be any form of academic activities in the full and part- time programmes of the polytechnic, as the strike is total.

    “He said the strike became necessary due to the insensitive act of the management to respect the agreement it reached with the union on the payment of the CONTISS 15 migration arrears, which has accumulated into 87 months.”

    The statement added that the union had explored peaceful and legal avenues to void the strike but to no avail.

    It said: “The union has shown understanding enough, given supports, where necessary, to allow the management have a successful convocation ceremony, despite the untold hardship being meted out to the workers by the management.”

  • LASPOTECH lecturers begin indefinite strike Friday

    LASPOTECH lecturers begin indefinite strike Friday

    Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH) chapter, will commence an indefinite strike on Friday.

    The union rose from its emergency congress on Thursday and resolved to embark on total industrial action.

    The Chairman of the chapter, Comrade Akinrinlola Ibitoye, said there won’t be any form of academic activities in the full and part time programmes of the institution.

    According to him, this strike was based on the institution management’s failure to honour the agreement earlier reached with the Union on the payment of the CONTISS 15 migration arrears which had accumulated to 87 months.

    “It should be noted, that the Union has explored all peaceful and legal avenues to ensure that the avoidable strike is averted,” Ibitoye said in a statement signed by the Union Publicity Secretary, Saheed Olatunde Jaji.

    “The Union has shown understanding enough, given supports where necessary to allow the management have a successful convocation ceremony despite the untold hardship being meted on workers by the management.

    “The union resorted into emergency congress when it was obvious that the management was not showing any iota of willingness towards the agreement.

    “It should be noted however that, this strike has nothing to do with His Excellency, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode or Lagos State Government, as the state government has graciously increased LASPOTECH’s subvention by 65 per cent with a caveat that the increase should take care of the arrears.

    “The union is still opened to negotiation to ensure that industrial harmony is restored to the Polytechnic of Excellence and the academic calendar is not disrupted.”

     

  • I don’t have timetable, says LASPOTECH’s best

    A 24-year-old Abdulazeez Ejire has emerged the overall best student of Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH).

    Ejire graduated from the Department of Chemistry with a Cumulative Grade Point Average of 3.85 at the 25th convocation of the institution for the 2015/2016 academic session.

    For his feat, the valedictorian received a hug and an automatic employment from the Lagos State Governor Akinwumi Ambode, in addition to several prizes from the school.

    Sharing his story with The Nation, Ejire recalled how he came into his alma mater, arming himself with a vision to be the overall best student or the Student Union President. As fate would have it, he achieved both.

    “My journey to success did not just start here.,” Ejire began. “I have always represented my department right from my National Diploma days. I even emerged the best in my faculty then. To be candid, I really do not have a timetable. I read anytime I feel like because I have been able to understand myself well enough that if I force myself to do something, I will end up not doing it well. If it is only one hour I dedicate to my book, I can get what others couldn’t get in four hours. So I don’t have schedule for reading.

    “I learnt a lot from my boss when I did my internship at an oil company. He made me appreciate chemistry the more. There I put up a target that I will be the overall best student or I become the Student Union President because I wanted to try my hands in school politics. They were my targets but I wasn’t certain if I could accomplish any of them; but thank God that on the long run, I achieved both. In the first semester of my HND I had 3.78, the next was 3.88, 3.81 and the last I wrote 4.0. I couldn’t believe it when I was told that I am the best graduating student. I am indeed grateful to God”

    Ejire, who initially wanted to study Medicine in a university, eventually settled for the polytechnic after making three attempts into the university. Though his second attempt gave him a sheer luck into the Lagos State University (LASU), he was deterred by the sudden rise in the school tuition from N25,000.00 to between N180.000 (for Faculty of Arts) to N350,000.00( for Medicine) and its attendant crisis which saw the school shut some years ago.Theat tuition has since been reversed.

    He thanked his parents and the the school for their relentless efforts and advised his colleges to always stand out in life.

    In response to a plea on upgrade of infrastructur and human resource development by the Rector Samuel Sogunro , Ambode promised a 27,000 students capacity stadium along Ikorodu axis, a new auditorium and recruitment of additional 89 academic staff.

    Speaking earlier, Sogunro congratulated the graduating students and admonished them to be change agents in the society.

    He described the convocation as a milestone having an incumbent governor at the occasion for the first time in the last 27years. He thanked the governor for his support to the school.

  • Ambode: we’ll deploy LASPOTECH drone for aerial surveillance

    Ambode: we’ll deploy LASPOTECH drone for aerial surveillance

    Drone, a plane-like object made by Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH) staff and students, is to be used for aerial surveillance, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode said yesterday.

    Speaking at the institution’s 25th convocation in Ikorodu, Ambode hailed the staff and students for being innovative, promising that government would promote and fund the project to encourage them.

    Ambode also approved the construction of a new main auditorium, administrative block, the renovation of the sports complex and the facelift of facilities on the campus. The new School of Technology Building (Block A) will also be equipped and ` furnished.

    The Governor said it was worthy of note that the 40-year-old LASPOTECH occupies a pride of place among state-owned polytechnics in the country.

    He said efforts must be made to build on the school’s successes in order to make it a true centre of excellence in technological education and research.

    He said being an emerging mega city, tertiary institutions and services in the state must be of acceptable global standards, adding that this was important for the state to compete favourably with other mega cities in the world.

    “Lagos State Polytechnic must rise to the challenge of meeting the technical manpower requirement of both the public and private sectors in not just Lagos State but in the whole nation.

    “We must rise above just providing education for the sake of acquiring a certificate to providing knowledge which will empower our youths to become champions of their generation, to chart their own course and establish enterprises that will create jobs and generate wealth for all.

    “Education is high on the priority list of this administration, and a significant portion of the state budget every year is allocated to education. We recognise the fact that a citadel of learning is as good as the quality of its learning environment in terms of infrastructure, academic and administrative faculties. Our government has invested massively in upgrading the infrastructure and other learning tools in all our tertiary institutions, including this institution.

    “The ultimate goal of this investment in tertiary institutions in Lagos State is beyond meeting the requirements for the accreditation of courses; it is to ensure that tertiary education in Lagos State becomes a benchmark in Nigeria, ranking comparatively with global institutions and producing the leaders of tomorrow,” Ambode said.

    Earlier, LASPOTECH Rector Samuel Sogunro hailed Ambode for his passion for education, noting that he is the first governor to participate in the institution’s convocation in the last 27 years.

    He said despite the prevailing economic reality, the governor raised the institution’s monthly subvention from N153.731million to N210million.

    The governor also allocated N750million for the accreditation of courses billed to take place in the institution, among other interventions, the rector added.

    A total of 9,228 students graduated from 32 departments, with 273 of them bagging distinctions.

    Ambode offered the overall best graduating student, Ejire Adedolapo Abdulazeez, from the School of Pure and Applied Science instant employment in the civil service.

     

  • Ambode approves recruitment of 89 lecturers for LASPOTECH

    Lagos State Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode, on Thursday approved the recruitment of additional 89 academic staff into various departments in the Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH), Ikorodu.

    Ambode, who stated this at the 25th Convocation ceremony of the institution, said the approval was in line with the recommendation by the polytechnic Governing Board.

    He also announced the approval for the construction of hostel accommodation for students of the institution.

    The governor said this would enable the students to reside within the campus and ease their stress of coming from long distance to attend lectures.

    Ambode said beyond academics, the state government was determined to promote the institution as a developmental tool to boost employability of students and improve the livelihood of Lagosians.

    He promised to build an auditorium and a standard stadium in the institution.

    “The next time I come here, I will not want to address a convocation congress in an open field,” the governor said.

    Ambode lauded the institution for justifying the 40 years of its existence with its current position as one of the best state-owned polytechnics in Nigeria.

    He charged the institution’s authorities to rise to the challenges of meeting the technical manpower requirement of both the public and private sectors, not only in Lagos, but Nigeria as whole.

    NAN