Tag: Mushin

  • NPC begins area demarcation

    The National Population Commission (NPC) has begun the Enumeration Area Demarcation (EAD) for Mushin.
    The exercise, which started on Monday at the Mushin Local Government Secretariat Multipurpose hall on Palm Avenue, will last for six weeks.
    NPC Federal Commissioner for Lagos State Mrs Abimbola Salu-Hundeyin described the exercise as a watershed in the history of population and housing census preparation in Lagos.
    She said: “Of course, this will not be the first time NPC will be carrying out demarcation… but the main reason for the fresh exercise is to take advantage of the latest development in information and communication facilities and equipment.”
    According to her, EAD is the division of the whole country into small land areas that can be conveniently covered by two enumerators during the census.
    “EAD is the foundation on which the census enumeration is built and once this assignment is properly and soundly built, then all other censal activities will be on solid foundation,” she said.
    “As you are aware, population census is the enumeration of all persons residing in a country or a well-defined geographic unit at a given time.
    “To us at the commission, getting this EAD exercise right is not an option but an absolute necessity as the commission is determined to deliver to the nation an accurate, reliable and acceptable census. It is in this regard that the commission is leaving no stone unturned in order to ensure that this EAD for the next census is carried out professionally, scientifically and meticulously,” she added.
    Mrs Salu-Hundeyin, however, clarified that EAD is not the enumeration of persons living in the country, adding that its outcome will not determine the population of any community, local government or state.
  • NDLEA recovers 301.2 kg of cannabis in Mushin

    NDLEA recovers 301.2 kg of cannabis in Mushin

    Sequel to the directive by the new Chairman/Chief Executive of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Col. Muhammad Abdallah for the dismantling of drug trafficking organizations, the Lagos State Command Friday carried out a raid on a popular market at Mushin, Lagos.

    At Mushin market operatives of NDLEA recovered twenty-two (22) sacks of dried weeds that tested positive for cannabis weighing 301.2kgs.

    The Agency also discovered that drug barons were using shops in the market for illicit storage of drugs.

    The operation which took place about 3am was part of strategies to reposition the anti-narcotic Agency for optimum performance.

    Investigation revealed that the shop where the cannabis was found was always locked.

    The estimated street value of the seized cannabis is about three million naira and the owner of the drugs had also been apprehended.

    According to Abdallah, “all notorious areas including markets where drugs are sold must be dismantled. I want every notorious drug dealer arrested and prosecuted. We must remain strategic in our offensive and leverage on intelligence planning to overcome drug dealers at all times. Nigeria must be seen to be fighting and winning the war at all fronts. All resources required to successfully raid all enemy camps shall be made available.”

    The NDLEA boss urged traders and members of the public to report suspicious drug cases to the Agency for necessary action.

    NDLEA Lagos State commander, Aliyu Sule said that a notorious cannabis dealer by name Babatunde Mustapha Busari has been arrested.

    “Based on intelligence report, we raided Mushin area of Lagos at about 3am on Friday morning. Our team of officers caught the suspect red handed while preparing to distribute cannabis for the day.

    “The suspect who has been under surveillance for some weeks was immediately arrested and the recovered sacks of cannabis impounded as exhibits. The operation which lasted for about an hour was very successful as there was no resistance,” Aliyu stated.

    The suspect who hails from Ibadan, Oyo State has owned up to the crime. “I started selling hemp two years ago but this is my first arrest. I used to work in a car wash until a friend introduced me to cannabis trade.

    “At that time, my daily average sale was five thousand naira. I took over the business when my friend travelled out of the State few months ago. It is so painful to be arrested when I am beginning to enjoy the fruit of my labour,” he lamented.

    The suspect will soon be charged to court.

  • Alimosho, Mushin top HIV table in Lagos

    Alimosho, Mushin top HIV table in Lagos

    Alimosho, Mushin, Ifako-Ijaiye and Mosan-Okunola are councils with highest prevalence of People Living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) in Lagos, the Aids Prevention Initiative Nigeria (APIN) said yesterday.

    APIN urged the people to know their individual and family statuses, in order to control the spread of the disease.

    Its Chief Executive Officer, Dr Prosper Okonkwo, at the first day of the series of programmes tagged: Scaling Up HIV Care and Treatment in Lagos State yesterday, said the meeting’s objective was to scale up services and interact with stakeholders to seeks ways of curtailing the spread of HIV/AIDS.

    Okonkwo said APIN was looking for a way to provide a testing arena for patients.

    A representative of the United States Centres for Disease Control, Dr Dennis Onotu, said the aforementioned local governments have been selected to intensify treatment and prevention.

    Onotu, who added that the initiative hopes to treat up to 10,000 PLWHA, said that the programme’s goal was to mitigate HIV and ensure that 90 per cent of those tested get treatment so that the virus is not multiplied.

    The event featured free counselling and testing and the distribution of contraceptives.

     

     

  • Fire razes building in Mushin

    Fire razes building in Mushin

    Residents of 14 Anipele Street, Olorunsogo in Mushin, Lagos, yesterday, were thrown into chaos as their house went in flames.

    It was gathered that most of the occupants of the one-storey building had gone for their daily activities when the incident happened.

    The fire, The Nation learnt, was caused by electric sparks.

    An eyewitness, simply called Kola, said there was a loud noise when the Ikeja Electric Distribution Company (IKEDC) brought light.

    “It was around 4pm they brought the light; the next thing we saw was fire on the roof. We called the fire fighters but before they got to the scene, the building was gone. I am glad the first floor were not occupied by tenants if not they would have been counting their loss,” he said.

    An occupant, Bisola Alabi, said since the demise of the landlord, they haven’t put the place on rent, adding: “The landlord’s children just have their monthly meeting on the first floor. They don’t live here. Just few occupants downstairs will need to worry over new accommodation.”

    A resident, who pleaded anonymity, disclosed that no property was lost to the fire.

    He said: “I did not lose any property, but can’t stay here again because it may collapse any moment from now. My children just returned from school to meet this. We don’t know where to move to”.

  • Fish out Mushin gang war sponsors, Alado tells police

    Fish out Mushin gang war sponsors, Alado tells police

    • I don’t breed hoodlums  

    • My children are abroad

    A Lagos socialite, Alhaji Taoheed Faronbi, popularly known as Alado, has urged the police to fish out those behind last Wednesday’s gang war in Mushin.

    Six persons injured and many vehicles were burnt in the fracas.

    In a radio interview monitored by The Nation yesterday, Faronbi said the mayhem would cease once the sponsors are arrested.

    He said: “Any time some of these hoodlums were arrested, within three months, you will see them back on the streets. Who are the people bailing them? Why do the police not charged them to court to get conviction? Why do their godfathers or sponsors not arrested? Nobody should mention my name whenever there is crisis in Mushin because I have always called on police to get the hoodlums arrested.”

    Faronbi, the Babaloja of Isolo Market said none of his children was involved in the crisis.

    “My children are in United Kingdom, United States, South Africa among others. Whoever says my children are involved in the mayhem is lying. They should check their record well,” he said.

    According to him, those who usually create chaos in Mushin are not from the area, saying that they come from far places to torment the people and run back.

    “I was born and raised in Mushin; I will allow anybody to create unnecessary tension here (Mushin). Whenever those hoodlums came attacking the people, I called the police immediately,” he said.

    Faronbi said the last fracas was not about National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) leadership fighting for park as reported, rather hoodlums coming to unleash mayhem on the people.

    The Akeem ‘No Case’ and Ilesanmi boys were said to be fighting over the control of Isolo bus stop last Wednesday.

    Both groups have always claimed to be the ‘landlords’, of the area, at the expense of commercial motorists.

    Dangerous weapons were freely used in the fight that lasted almost an hour, with motorists scampering for safety.

    Some road users took to social media to warn others about the fight, calling on the police to act immediately.

    Residents and traders urged police to come to their aid.

    They also urged the police to prosecute four members of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), Rasheed Adeshina (a.k.a Action), Salami Rauf, Waheed Oseni and Azeez Gbadamosi, who were allegedly arrested with the service rifle of a dead policeman, and their sponsors.

    The suspects were arrested during the raid of a bakery that they used as their armoury.

    According to a resident, the police were aware of the hoodlums’sponsors.

    He urged the police to go after the “big fish”, who provide the hoodlums with guns and weapons.

    “These boys have given the police the names of the boys and the police know them very well.

    “One of the persons, whom they said bought the AK-47 rifle and the Pump Action gun for them, is walking freely in Mushin and I wonder why he has not been arrested to explain how a police rifle was found in possession of his boys.

  • Behind the Boom

    Behind the Boom

    …Why patronage soars for low-cost schools

    Housed in cubicles and dilapidated structures, the number of low-cost schools in Lagos is soaring. HANNAH OJO writes on how parents, in their craze for private schools, are shunning well structured public schools to patronize the low-cost ones that now pimple the city.

    It is break time at Ishaga Close Primary School, Mushin. The pupils are out on the field playing with a kind of excitement that would make an adult long wistfully for the good old days in early school.   The expansive compound which boasts newly refurbished blocks, also houses the Islamic Model Mission Primary School.  The two public schools are owned by the Lagos State Government. Although their uniforms were different, the pupils were all playing together, oblivious of the difference in their schools’ names.

     

    In a part of the compound, an irked gateman whips some erring children with a cane. “They are mischievous little things”, he told the reporter without being asked. Well manicured flower beds adorn parts of the expansive compound. But the beautiful sight is neutralized by a heap of refuse that blocks the entrance to the long lines of toilets. It is obvious that the waste managers have not been showing up in a long while. To urinate, most of the pupils make use of a gutter at a corner of the compound and only manoeuvre their ways through the garbage to the long line of toilets if they need to pooh.

     

    “Many people did not know we have nursery a section here,” said one of the teachers who asked not to be named because civil servants are not allowed to speak to journalists.

     

    “When it was discovered that these jeleosimi (low-cost schools) were springing up everywhere, the state government set up a nursery section where parents can register their children from age three. But I don’t know why parents till patronize these schools that are opening everywhere because of unemployment.

     

    “We have enough classrooms, toilets and the facilities are okay. The only problem is lack of sufficient furniture for the pupils to sit on. But the local government has helped us with some,” the teacher said.

    If there is a place where a stubborn sense of hope defies the logic of reality, it is Adenike Memorial Nursery/Primary School, Bariga, a private school.  The vision of the school contained in a cardboard that was pasted on the wall in the drab looking office of the head teacher’s reads: “To ensure that our pupils are best in school academic throughout Lagos state. Also, to prepare our pupils for future.”   When our correspondent visited the school’s vicinity on a Thursday, sight that confronted her did not seem to synchronise with the school’s avowed vision.  The infrastructure needed for the implementation of such lofty ideals was simply nowhere in sight.

     

    The classrooms were partitioned with planks. The fans were not working and there was little space for children to play. The environment notwithstanding; the head teacher, a middle aged woman who did not want to be quoted, reluctantly explained how the school was helping to provide education for the children of the poor.

     

    She said: “We have 109 pupils manned by a staff of 10, two of whom are non-teaching. If parents are not happy with what we are teaching their children, they would have stopped coming. There are many schools like this in this area.”

     

    Investigation revealed that tuition at the school ranges between N6, 000 and N7, 000 per term. Children in Adenike memorial school

     

    Newly painted with a colourful banner displayed at its gate, it is not hard to notice Best Future Nursery and Primary School in Aborishade Street, another private school in a suburb of Idi-Araba community, which harbours a high number of low income earners.  The school occupies a compartment on the floor of a one-storey ‘room and parlour’ building.

     

    Youthful Yusuf Ayuba, the headmaster and son of the proprietress, says his teaching experience spans eight years.

    “Our parents don’t earn much, so the fees have to be affordable,” he said. “Once they see the performance of their children, they don’t like to withdraw them from school.

     

    “We charge N6000 for nursery and N6, 500 for primary.  It will surprise you to know that some parents elsewhere pay three or more times of that amount.”

    Although Ayuba would not give the actual number of pupils and teachers in the school, a keen observation suggest that the school may be short-staffed as Ayuba was seen manning two classes at a time. But the children seemed happy.

     

    Pasted at the gate was a vacancy notice on cardboard asking experienced teachers to apply within. The required qualification was not stated.

    Vision of Adenike memorial school

     

    Parents do have a say

    Given the rate at which low income schools are springing up and the level of patronage they enjoy from low income earners, it appears that parents are not particular about the structures in those school but the academic performances of their children and wards.  This is in spite of the efforts the state government has made in recent years to improve the standard of education in its public schools.

     

    Ruth Alhausa, a secondary school teacher with a child in a low-cost nursery school, said parents are shunning public primary schools because they want the best for their children.

    She said: “Most of the public schools are overcrowded while parents want schools where their children can get individual attention.  The issue of protection is also key, because teachers in private schools wait for parents to pick up their wards while in public schools, teachers don’t have the patience. The children are just too vulnerable.”

     

    Another parent, Adenike Aderogba, a petty trader whose children attend Canaanland Nursery and Primary School in Bariga, affirmed that despite the meager income she makes from trading, she would not consider sending her children to a public school.

    She queries: “How many of the big men have their children in public schools? Not even the government officials.  As for me, I will starve to pay the fees. My children are my only hope.  It is because of them that I am fasting and depriving myself to see that they become important persons in the future.” Individual attention, a plusfor low income schools

     

    Felicia Folorunsho, a single mother with a four- year-old daughter, also told The Nation that although she would not mind sending her daughter to a public secondary school, she would rather patronize a low income school with a manageable environment at the elementary stage.

     

    “Primary education is the foundation.  I don’t want to take chances. I doubt if children often get individual attention in public schools because of the large class. I desire a better life for my child”.

     

    The total number of private schools in Lagos stands at about   12, 093, according to DEEPEN (Developing Effective Private Education in Nigeria), an NGO funded by the UK Department for International Development. Data from the Lagos State Bureau of statistics in 2009 indicate the number of public primary school to be 1, 081. Public junior secondary schools are 323, while public secondary school stands at 303.  This brings the number of public schools to a total of 1, 707.  The term ‘low income’ is used to refer to schools that charge between N1, 000 and N25, 000 school fees per year. Mr Aiyesetemi

     

    With the staggering statistics,   the reality is beginning to set in that the ‘low-cost’ schools are playing a complementary role in the provision of education in the state.  Some of them are members of an association known as Association of Formidable Education for Development (AFED). AFED, which has been in existence for 16 years, works with the state government and NGOS to ensure better standard in those schools.

     

    AFED’s president, Ifejola Dada, in a chat with The Nation, confirmed that their schools use the same curriculum as public schools. She added that the over 12, 000 schools registered with the association also participates in a unified AFED examination used in grading students.

     

    On the possibility of extracurricular activities since most of the schools have the challenge of space which tend to limit the scope of activities pupils can participate in, she said:  “We are trying to organize joint sports activities which will take place from time to time. We are looking forward to one at the zonal level by November and another one at the national level by February next year.”

     

    She also said that AFED was working with government to ease the burden of multiple taxations by getting exemption from some of the levies payable to government because of the low-cost education they are providing.

     

    Pupils lunch pack in Ken Ade“The AFED schools have also been given the inclusion to write common entrance exam, and they record 80-90 percent pass,” she added.

     

    Incidentally, some of the schools from the slums are getting attention from the international community. Ken Ade Private School in Apollo Street, Makoko is one of such.

    Bawo Ayeseteminikan,  a trained quantity surveyor, who had gone ahead to acquire an  educational degrees from the University of Lagos  founded the school in 1990 shortly after finishing youth service. The school had benefited from a hole-in-the- wall learning station for children, courtesy of the William Family Charitable Trust Association in conjunction with Newcastle University. However,  at the time the reporter visited, the gadgets powered by solar energy were no longer working.

     

    Ayeseteminikan prides himself as offering a school where any person who thinks education is important can benefit from. “The international community has been interested in me. From a CNN exposure of what I was doing, I was invited to the United kingdom and other places of the world to explain how I am able to manage the school with the peanuts I charge parents”, he enthused.

     

    Although Makoko reels with poverty-stricken slum dwellers, parents hardly withdraw their children from Ken Ade because the school operates a flexible system where records are opened for parents to pay the fees by installment.

     

    “Asking them to pay in full at once scares parents.  I try to let them understand they can come per day and pay what they have. I have a register where parents can make payment bit by bit”.

     

    On sourcing qualified teachers, he admitted that teachers with higher degrees in education are expensive to keep.   However, he was quick to allude to the success stories of education in the slum. “Majority of my teachers passed through this place. Some have HND, NCE and we have those who did not go beyond primary 6 but they are now managers in their various fields. We also have those who are in universities. My son is a medical doctor and he is a product of this school”.   Mrs Dada, Afed president

     

    Different stroke for secondary schools

    While some parents favour low-income schools for primary education, it is a different case for secondary school education in the state where more pupils are enrolled in public schools.

    When The Nation visited Obele Community Grammar school in Surulere, the place was alive with learning activities as cane wielding teachers took turns to teach students.

    A principal officer of the school, who spoke off records, bemoaned the fact that low-income earners strain themselves to send their wards to private schools as a result of lack of information.

     

    The officer said: “Teachers in public schools are far more qualified than those in private schools, but parents think that sending their children to private school is a kind of status symbol.  The only advantage I’ll say they have over public schools is that their uniforms are beautiful. And I think some public schools also have very beautiful uniforms. Apart from that, the public school teachers are better.”

     

    On external examinations such as WASCCE and NECO where private schools outdo their counterparts in private schools, the officer said such grounds should not be used in judging the quality of the schools.

     

    “We all know what happens during those exams. Most of the examinations done are not based on true performance of the children. And unless we get that right, most of the problems we have in the educational sector will continue. Thank God for the high fees in private schools, a lot of parents are bringing their children to public schools and they are realizing that there is really no difference,” She stated.

     

    Although public secondary schools in Lagos attract more patronage, there is also the challenge of crowdedness, owing to the growing population.

     

    Dr. Modupe Adefeso-Olateju, an education policy consultant, is of the opinion that not all unapproved schools are wholly illegal entities. Some, she said, are simply in the process of applying for state approval.

    She said:  “As a concerned citizen, I can fully appreciate the position of the state ministries of education, and if I was a government official, I would probably want to shut these schools down immediately save for one ugly reality: parents continue to opt for these schools despite their knowledge that public schools (which in a state like Lagos are tuition free) are available!

    “It is not that the parents who patronise these schools hate their children. On the contrary, they love their children and value education, wanting their offspring to have better life chances than they had,” she admitted in a recent publication.

     

    With the rising population and the need for education, it could be debated if Lagos ‘low-cost’ schools have come to complement or supplant government’s effort in providing education. Nigeria with 10.5 million children without access to education is said to have the highest number of out of school children in the world, according to the 2015 Global Monitoring Report (GMR).

     

    Nigeria recently joined the rest of the world to adopt the Sustainable Development Goals in New York. With goal four of the SDGs seeking to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all, it is glaring that government alone may not be able to deliver on actualizing the goal.  In a situation where the state of the economy discourages parents from patronising standard private schools, low cost schools tend to bridge the gap in catering to the educational need of low income earners.

  • Two die as hoodlums clash in Mushin

    Two die as hoodlums clash in Mushin

    Two persons were killed yesterday when hoodlums clashed in Mushin, Lagos.

    Wale Musa, an Islamic cleric, and a food vendor, identified as Rukayat (Mama Islamiyat),were killed by stray bullets on Ike Olu Street.

    It was gathered that the reprisal attack was carried out by seven armed men, at 10 pm on Tuesday.

    The attack followed the murder of Lateef Abiola on Sunday at Agbe Kolade Street, Idi-Oro.

    But they unleashed mayhem on defenceless citizens  when they could not get members of the rival gang.

    Wale, who was a customer at the food vendor’s place, was said to have finished eating the noodles prepared for him.

    A resident, who gave his name as Kolawole Ajibade, said the gunshots lasted about 20 minutes.

    He explained that they did not know there were casualties until the assailants left.

    “I strongly believe that it was the late Lateef’s friends, who carried out the operation in our area, because they threatened to kill 10 persons to avenge their colleague, who was hacked to death.

    “On October 18, one of the boys in the area was celebrating his birthday at Agbe Kolade Street when his friends saw their rivals from railway line and they started fighting. Some were injured in the fracas, but Lateef was not that fortunate.

    ‘‘Immediately we heard about the killing, we were directed by Toba Ajiboye to go after the killer. Fortunately, the suspect was arrested in Somolu and handed over to the police at Alakara.”

    Another resident, Mrs.  Iyabo Adekunle, decried the incessant crises in the area.

    She said it was in one of such fights that she lost her father-in-law and her husband became an amputee.

    She said: “Whenever they start fighting, the hoodlums always target innocent residents. The police commissioner should come to our aid.

    Police spokesman Joseph Offor said he was not aware of the situation.

  • ‘Igbo in Mushin will be law-abiding’

    The Eze Ndigbo of Mushin, Chief Peter Umeh, has said Igbos in the council area will remain law-abiding.

    He spoke when he visited the Executive Secretary of Mushin local government area, Jide Bello.

    A statement by the council’s Information Officer, Akinyemi Olusegun, quoted Bello as saying that Igbos were always welcome in Mushin.

    “Mushin is a home for all-the Igbos, Hausas, Ijaws, Tivs and others tribes. We have inter-married, belong to the same political parties, same social groups, cultural groups and other connections,” Bello said.

    He urged Umeh to encourage Igbos living in Mushin to be law abiding and begin to see issues objectively rather than spread rumour of tribal sentiments

    “Mushin council was home to Igbos even before the Western region was created. We have always lived and done our trading here peacefully from time immemorial,” the council chair said.

    Umeh said Igbos, especially traders, will continue to cooperate with the council.

    His words: “We are here to assure you that we the Igbos living in Mushin identify with and support your administration.

    “We voted for the All Progressives Congress (APC) against the instructions of some of our elders. Having taken this risk, we deserve assurance of safety and a place in this government.

    “Initially, we were apprehensive when the issue of demolition of shops at Ladipo market was raised, but on careful analysis, it became crystal clear to us that it was a decision borne out of necessity and not ethnic cleansing.

    “We commend you for the wisdom to undergo extensive dialogue and consultations. This is indeed a dividend of democracy in our land during our time.”

     

     

     

  • Trailer crushes shops in Mushin

    Trailer crushes shops in Mushin

    A trailer on Tuesday morning ran into some shops at Mushin area of Lagos State.

    According to eyewitness, the incident involving a cement truck with registration number XU 896 BDG, happened at the early hours of today, left nobody injured.

    The driver of the trailer, reportedly fled the scene after seeing the degree of damage caused having destroyed a container converted to shop and some other shops.

    All efforts to speak with the affected shop owners were futile.

    Meanwhile, the accident caused traffic Jam and left people wondered.

  • Residents of 14 flats in Mushin  thrown out without notice

    Residents of 14 flats in Mushin thrown out without notice

     •‘This is annoying, illegal’ •Owner: we followed due process

    The twin three-storey buildings stand out on Palm Avenue, Mushin, Lagos. Houses 73/75 are opposite the Mushin Local Government secretariat; they contain 14 flats, a warehouse, offices and shops.

    There is a school – New Vine International Schools – behind the buildings.

    Yesterday, the occupants were thrown out by policemen from Zone D and Olosan Police Station in Mushin, waving a court order.

    The properties of some who were not around were flung out; others still  had theirs locked in their apartments with no access to them.

    The buildings painted in brown and cream, The Nation learnt, has been a subject of litigation for over 60 years.

    Among the occupants are a newly married couple who moved in barely a month ago; a nursing mother whose daughter is about a month old; a warehouse owner, printing press and a school proprietor.

    Also, the buildings house LG Electronics shop, Starcomms, DSTV, Visafone offices, a Cocacola mini depot, a mini-mart and the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) House of Glory parish.

    The sheriff spray-painted the court order number and date of eviction on various parts of the building. It reads: “ID/331/76 POSSESSION TAKEN TODAY 23/06/15 BY COURT ORDER.”

    The occupants were seen struggling to get trucks and vehicles to move their belongings.

    No fewer than 10 trucks were seen taken away the properties.

    The distraught occupants wailed and rained abuses on the sheriff.

    They said they were not informed.

    New Vine International Schools’ pupils who were billed to write examinations could not do so. Pupils, who were in school before the eviction, were sent home.

    The Proprietor, Mr Augustine Ekezie, who was informed of the incident by the head teacher quickly sent text messages to the pupils’ parents and guardians. He urged them not to allow their kids to come to school, apologising for the inconvenience.

    Ekezie promised to intimate them of plans to relocate the school.

    He told The Nation that he is making arrangement with a nearby church to take the school there.

    Ekezie described the incident as unfortunate, saying: “It was like a dream because we had our regular school activities yesterday (Monday) and then suddenly on our way here today (Tuesday), the Head Teacher called me that policemen were at the school premises and wanted to lock the premises, saying that everybody should vacate the building because it is going to be occupied by a new owner.

     

    “I hurried down to find everything just as he said. Next thing was to put a call through to the landlady whom I had just paid rent to few days ago, her number was not reachable and I also sent someone to her but she was nowhere to be found. The pupils had to go back home after I sent a text message to their parents informing them about our next step. The next step I am taking now is to beg a church nearby to allow me put my stuff in their building for the moment before I could fix myself up.”

    A parent, who asked not to be named, said she was surprised when she called “to come and carry my children; it is not fair; where do they expect them to go, where do they expect them to carry their load to.”

    The nursing mother told The Nation that her husband was on his way, saying the whole scenario was annoying and shocking.

    “We just moved in not up to two months and we paid six months rent. I just had my baby a month ago. Sincerely, I don’t know what to do now,” the mother of three said.

    The printer, Mr Joseph Ude said the police swooped on them as if they were criminals.

    Ude said: “You should have seen the number of police that came here with guns and asked that everyone should evacuate this place. They said the place, based on a court ruling, has been awarded to a new owner. You can see peoples’ properties scattered everywhere.

    “I have a printing machine that cannot be lifted except you use crane and there are three of them in there and they said I have to renegotiate with the owner as the case may be. The main problem here is how I would move my machine and I personally feel that things ought not to be this way, they should have given us notification either by pasting it on the wall, or creating awareness that a new owner is taking possession and at what time, so that we would know what to do about it.

    “The whole thing is just too embarrassing; in this democratic era when the government is not military, these people (policemen) just came and took the laws into their hands, as if we are not citizens, it is not fair. Even if the court had given an order that the new owner should come and take over, they should have passed the information across, no they did not, they just came to evict us.”

    Another occupant, Mr Fatai Idowu, hurriedly took a flight from Abuja when he learnt that his properties have been thrown out on the road.

    “I am a resident of this house, my landlady is Mrs Olusoga; I have been living in this house for over 10 years.  There was a similar occurrence in 2005 and the landlady was able to settle the issue and she still maintained the ownership; I paid N400,000. I was in Abuja when I was informed that policemen and some boys came to evict people here. They said they came from the court, so the first thing I did was to put a call to the landlady, up till now, she has not shown up.

    “I called my wife who was at the shop to go to the house only to see my things on the street. The Olusoga family said they have handed the house over to the Oteniya family in 2005 and they (Oteniya) authorised us with receipts. We still continued to pay to the new owners.

    “What hurts is that I had to take the next available flight from Abuja to Lagos because I don’t know where to take my belongings to, they are just out here on the streets, this is very annoying because we were not duly notified. I want to implore Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to intervene in this matter. We can’t just allow this lawless action to go unpunished.”

    The plaintiff, Mr Bamgboye, who said the houses are his fathers, claimed that he went through all legal processes before evicting the occupants.

    The case, he said, had been on for years.

    “As law abiding families, we went through all legal processes and you are seeing the effects today. I don’t trust the other families because my father bought this land. If I had giving them notification by 2pm yesterday the other families would have gone to court to get an injunction preventing me from evicting the occupants. That is why it was impossible to give them a notice. I gave them a fair treatment by also asking the supervisors of the church to notify their members that they are occupying the place illegally and if the church were just, they should have pre-informed the other occupants of the court judgement,” he said.