Tag: residents

  • Residents lament violence in Somolu

    Residents and youths in Somolu area of Lagos yesterday lamented the rising wave of violence in the area.

    They alleged that trend was not unconnected with the upcoming local government election.

    It would be recalled that there was sporadic shootings in the area on Thursday during a rally organised by one of the parties participating in the election.

    The violence resulted to the damage of vehicles and many injured.

    Somolu Indigenous Youths spokesperson Shina Abbey, said residents in the area were uncomfortable with the security situation.

    He appealed to political parties not to turn Somolu to a battle ground in the name of election.

    He said: “It appears that the forthcoming election, which we hope will restore normalcy and development to Somolu is turning out to something else.

    “This persistent violence is caused by members of the same party. We urge their leaders to settle things amicably among them.”

    A resident of the area, who identified himself as Elder Kayode, said: “We have written to the party leaders to inform them of our displeasure and disapproval of their nominated candidates.”

  • Residents petition Ambode over road blockade

    Residents petition Ambode over road blockade

    Occupants of Williams and Market streets and Berlin Market on Lagos Island, have petitioned Governor Akinwumi Ambode over the blockage in the areas.

    The petition signed by their lawyer, Chukwuezuo Nwosu, said the concrete was erected in 2009 by Julius Berger Nigeria Plc while working for Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    The construction firm, he said, barricaded Williams Street at its junction with Market Street with heavy concrete wall and installed iron gates through which it accessed the work site.

    According to him, the construction work lasted till 2014, when the premises were handed over to CBN and the bank has been carrying out its operations at the new complex constructed by Julius Berger.

    He said the construction company had long removed all its equipment from the CBN premises but failed to dismantle the concrete wall and iron gates it used to block the two streets till date.

    Nwosu lamented that the blockage has impacted negatively on businesses being carried out in the area.

    He said: “The revenue profiles of the occupants of the two streets and market have drastically reduced, due to the inaccessibility of the business premises on the streets. This has heightened the unemployment level in the area as many breadwinners on the streets and at Berlin Market can no longer discharge their domestic obligations to their families.

    “The blockage has also negatively affected the businesses of youths in the area. We are also affected by severe traffic dreadlock in the area as Williams Street which is a major link between Broad Street and Marina has been shut down.”

    He urged the government to impress upon the CBN to promptly dismantle the concrete walls and iron gates.

    Berlin Market Association Secretary John Oti described the blockade as unfair.

    According to him, over 8,000 families with 4000 businesses are affected.

    “Bread winners cannot pay house rent, school fees of their children and other sundry expenses. We appeal to Governor Ambode to quickly intervene and save us from this hardship,” Oti said.

    Reacting, Special Adviser to Lagos State Governor on Central Business District (CBD) Mr Agboola Dabiri told The Nation yesterday that government is looking into their petition and would act appropriately after investigation.

    “The governor is looking into their petition. He is a thorough man and not somebody that just act without carrying out a proper investigation. The outcome of the investigation would determine the government next line of action,” Dabiri said.

  • Akure residents alert IGP, others to killings, cultism

    Residents of Akure, the Ondo State capital, yesterday urged the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) and other heads of security agencies to avert further killings and other threats to security of life and property in the town.

    They noted that there had been a rise in the activities of hoodlums in the community in the past few weeks.

    There were reports that suspected members of cult groups had been on killing spree in Akure in the past few weeks, making life unsafe for the residents, visitors and businessmen.

    Rival cult groups had reportedly been fighting each other.

    Addressing reporters yesterday, the Asiwaju of Akure, Prof Olu Agbi, said over 10 persons had been reportedly killed in various parts of the town in the last few days.

    Agbi said: “Apart from the killings by secret cult members, there were reports of kidnapping, attacks and killing of farmers by herdsmen, among other heinous crimes. Some crimes, including armed robbery and ritual killings, have not gone unnoticed by the community.

    “Some national dailies have even written editorials on the incidents and gave the developments in the town a national outlook.

    “We are disturbed by these reports; more so that our community, before the recent events, has been peaceful. We accommodate people, irrespective of their tribes, cultures, social status or creeds. Non-Yoruba speaking people and other ethnic groups living among us will attest to the fact that Akure indigenes are loving and very accommodating.

    “On our farmlands, we welcome non-indigenes to reside without being discriminated against. This made it possible for non-indigenes to get chieftaincy titles in our communities.”

    Agbi regretted that the accommodating posture of the residents had been taken for granted by members of secret cults, most of who he said were non-indigenes.

    The community leader accused them of unleashing terror on the residents.

    He noted that apart from the killing of hapless people, secret cult members also put the residents in fear of attacks or in ensuing melee.

    The academic urged security agencies to avert further killings and other evil actions of suspected cult groups in the town.

    According to him, the community is disturbed that despite the attacks and killings, law enforcement agents appeared helpless.

    Agbi regretted that no one was sure of who the hoodlums would attack next as they had been moving from one part to another, attacking the residents.

    The community leader urged the IGP, the Director General of Department State Services (DSS) and other security agencies to step up their patrols of Akure streets to prevent further killing of innocent residents and the breakdown of law and order.

    He said: “Reports reaching us indicate that some law enforcement agents are members of these secret cults which have made the fight against cultism difficult for the top hierarchy of the security agencies.

    “Security sources told us that Eiye members in the force would release their members, if brought to the police station while Aiye members among law enforcement agents would do the same for their members.

    “We ask the IGP to purge the police of secret cult members so that the war against cultism and other crimes could be meaningful. We also call on the Ondo State Police Command to monitor its men in Anti-Cultism Squad so that we will not have cultists masquerading as police officers.”

  • Our experience, by affected residents

    Our experience, by affected residents

    Many Lagos residents yesterday lamented after floods at the weekend sacked Lagos Island.

    Many could not attend church service, because they could not leave their houses or were busy scooping water out of the homes.

    Some residents told our reporter should the rain continue, it would render them homeless/many have already lost properties worth millions of naira.

    A resident, Chima, who works in a private firm in Ajah, said he had been trapped in the office since Saturday and could not take the risk of entering the flood for fear of being drowned.

    “I became very apprehensive when the rain persisted yesterday (Saturday). I just realised that the flood had gained ground and the entire place was flooded. So many cars here have been submerged. My major problem is that I am hungry, I can’t even go out to eat and nobody can come to this area to bring food for me, I have been drinking water and tea since yesterday evening. If this rain continues, I don’t know what I would do”.

    Donatus Ezekiel said he was trapped in his car along Lekki Ajah road, adding that he had to abandon his car in the middle of the road after it was taken over by flood water.

    “I have never seen this kind of flood before. I don’t stay in Lekki, I was going to attend a friend’s birthday party on Saturday. If I had known it was like this, I wouldn’t have gone out of my house”, a sober Ezekiel lamented.

    While some residents blamed the government for not being proactive, some attributed the cause to neglect of environmental warnings.

    Another resident, Lawal Bakare, said on his facebook wall, “This continuous rain is not new, we have just neglected its environmental impact…in fact we worsen the prognosis with our bad ecological decisions. #UnSmartCities We can’t be passive about our aspirations.”

    Another resident, Adeseila Adegboyega Henry, said: “Well we don’t have to blame the government for this, Lagos is lower than the sea, that area bordering the ocean is the most vulnerable. So there is nothing the government can do except the Holland method but even in Holland it took hundreds of years to build those dykes and they still fail sometimes.

  • Oyo to get residents’ registration agency

    The Oyo State government has submitted a bill to the House of Assembly to establish an agency that will register and manage residents’ data.

    Speaker Michael Adeyemo broke the news to The Nation in Ibadan the state capital.

    Adeyemo said the bill was on the second stage of consideration, indicating that it will most likely scale through all legislation hurdles.

    The lawmaker said the agency would be responsible for registering residents across the state, adding that it would update the data and manage it for planning purposes.

    He said: “There is a bill that is currently at the second reading stage in the House. It will address the issue of having Oyo State Resident Registration Agency in such a way that we will have an agency that will take care of the registration of all residents for the purpose of planning, expansion and development of facilities across the state.

    “The data will also be useful for security because we must know who and who are residents of the state. So, the government is thinking along that line. I can assure you that the Assembly is going to speed up the work on it and pass the bill into law. I believe the agency will be set up. I think the registration will begin as soon as possible.”

    The project may lead to the introduction of residents’ identification cards, which will also help the government to plan social welfare services and projects across the state.

     

  • APC chieftain to residents: be calm

    A leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ojokoro Local Council Development Area (LCDA), Alhaji Hassan Ajeigbe has appealed to supporters of the chairmanship aspirant Oladipupo Okeyomi to remain calm over the crisis triggered by the removal of  Okeyomi’s name from the list of candidates.

    He addressed more than 400 supporters at his campaign office. They came to express their displeasure over the removal.

    They said Okeyomi has a track record, vision, and integrity to be the flagbearer.

    They appealed to Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and other APC stalwarts to intervene.

    Ajeigbe pleaded with them to have faith in God, adding that a solution would come after the intervention of the party leaders. He urged the agitators to be peaceful in obedience to the APC’s watchwords –Peace and unity. He stressed that crisis does not solve problems.

    He said Okeyomi is a loving, caring, religious and respectful, adding he has the qualities to be the chairman of the council.

    He noted that Okeyomi had been in the struggle for over eight years and that Ojokoro residents have confidence in him. He recalled that his ambition had been jettisoned twice.

     

  • Residents hail Ambode’s roads repair

    Residents hail Ambode’s roads repair

    Some residents of Abule Egba yesterday lauded Lagos State Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode for fulfilling his pledge to repair the inner roads used during the construction of Abule Egba Bridge.

    Contractors have moved to site to begin the rehabilitation of the inner roads in Abule Egba including Charity Road.

    The rehabilitation of the roads is expected to further enhance traffic flow in the area, which since the opening of the flyover has improved movement around the axis.

    A resident of Ile-Ogbo in Abule Egba, Mrs Temitope Oyekunle, praised the governor for keeping his words, saying the development has brought relief to people of the area.

    “On the day of the commissioning of the Abule Egba Bridge when Governor Ambode made the pronouncement that our roads would be fixed, personally I expressed doubt judging by the number of projects that have been carried out in our axis by his administration but true to the Governor’s words, contractors moved to site as announced and they are working at a fast pace.

    “I just want to commend the Governor for this and urge him to keep up the good works,” Oyekunle said.

    Another resident, Mr Olakunle Joseph said the quality of work being done on the inner roads was commendable, and it shows the seriousness of the government of the day to truly transform all parts of the State.

    Mrs Tolani Festus, who is a shop owner in the area, said the transformation being witnessed in Abule Egba and its environs was unprecedented in the history of the state.

  • Residents storm Assembly over  forceful ejection by land grabbers

    Residents storm Assembly over forceful ejection by land grabbers

    Scores of Ibeju Lekki residents yesterday stormed the Lagos State House of Assembly to protest the alleged forceful takeover of their land.

    They carried placards with inscriptions, such as, “Folami, bring peace and development, not death and destruction to your fatherland,” and “To defend our land and our people from Folami is a task that must be done,” “Ha, ha, ha, haha, Folami, you want to use us as slaves on our fatherland,”  “If we remain silent, we would be guilty of complicity.  We want peace, nothing more than peace at Oke-Ogun. Governor Ambode take note”.

    In a petition titled: “Complaint against Mufutau Sefiu Olamiji as the purported Baale of ‘Okegun Ladeseso’ and subsequent attempts by the Commissioner for Local Governments and Chieftaincy Affairs to upgrade him to the status of a king.’

    The petition, which is addressed to the speaker of the Assembly states in part that, “We are solicitors to Chief Samsideen Ogunkoya (the Ajagunbiada of Ibeju Land) and the people of Okegun Odofin in the Ibeju Lekki Local Government Area of Lagos State and on their joint instructions write this petition to your Excellency in other to forestall total breakdown of law and order in Ibeju, Lagos,” the solicitor said in the petition.

    “Chief Ismail Ogunkoya was duly nominated and appointed as the substantive Baale of Okegun Odofin in the Ibeju Lekki Local Government Area which position has been held by him with much support from our clients and with dignity till date.

    “We want the Lagos State House of Assembly to set up a panel and look into the matter. We are sitting on a keg of gun powder. The matter is in court and under the Assembly panel headed by Funmilayo Tejuoso. They promised to get back to us but they have not done so since we met with them,” he said.

    Addressing the protesters, Majority Leader Sanai Agunbiade said that a situation, where a wrong person was installed would be investigated.

    Agunbiade urged the protesters to be patient saying that the house receives so many petitions daily and that the matter has to be thoroughly debated at plenary even when the committee handling it has completed its work.

    “All of these would not make the committee dispense with the petition as quickly as the petitioners want. But ultimately the whole house would look at the petitions.

    “We have to painstakingly look at the petition and the outcome is always acceptable to the petitioners,” he said.

    He then appealed to the protesters to go back to their base peacefully.

  • Fuel: Fayose’s order causes hardship for residents

    Fuel: Fayose’s order causes hardship for residents

    A popular adage says when two elephants clash, it is the grass that suffers and this axiom best explains the clash between Governor Ayo Fayose and petrol marketers in Ekiti State who shut their outlets against consumers over their alleged victimisation by the state chief executive. The face-off assumed a violent dimension with the attack on some filling stations by suspected hoodlums. ODUNAYO OGUNMOLA reports.

    The past three weeks have been quite taxing for residents of Ekiti State who had suffered indescribable hardship as a result of scarcity of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), otherwise known as petrol and other petroleum products.

    The development was sparked by a face-off between Governor Ayo Fayose and petrol marketers who closed down their stations in obedience to the order of the national leadership of Independent Petrol Marketers’ Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and Petrol Tanker Drivers (PTD).

    The seed of the discord was sown by the decision of the state government to demolish petrol stations located in residential areas on the heels of a January 8 fire incident that razed a filling station owned by Strive Energy Limited in Ijigbo, Ado-Ekiti which spread to 25 other buildings.

    Petrol stations under construction in areas government believe are illegal and contrary to existing law were demolished and the leadership of the above-named bodies engaged government in a dialogue and it was resolved that work should stop on stations being constructed in unauthorised places while peace process continues.

    But government’s decision to take some marketers to court after the peace meeting was the immediate cause of the latest imbroglio which did not go down well with the national unions of the oil-based bodies.

    A marketer in Igede-Ekiti and six of his supporters who resisted government agents’ attempt to bulldoze a filling station under construction were arraigned in court and are now remanded in prison in Ado-Ekiti.

    The national bodies of the unions ordered stoppage of fuel supply to Ekiti and directed marketers to shut their stations “until further notice.” The unions believe that Fayose’s action was contrary to truce reached at the peace meeting held with him.

    Residents, including civil servants, students, farmers, market women, taxi drivers, commercial motorcycle riders had terrible stories to tell since supplies of fuel to the state were stopped.

    They travelled to neighbouring states such as Ondo, Osun, Kwara and Kogi to purchase petrol. Black marketers cashed in on the situation and sold the commodity at outrageous prices.

    In many towns and villages, economic and social activities were paralysed as prices of goods and services go beyond the reach of the common man.

    The crisis assumed a violent dimension on Tuesday, May 23 when suspected thugs swooped on some filling stations in Ado Ekiti and destroyed property worth several millions of Naira.

    Commercial drivers and artisans also staged public protests warning owners of the petrol stations to open their business offices to the public or “face the consequences of their stubbornness.”

    The attack began at NIPCO Filling Station owned by the Secretary of the Petrol Dealers’ Association of Nigeria (PEDAN) Ekiti State chapter, Alhaji Sulaiman Akinbami, whom the thugs accused of collecting N50 million from a political party. They also accused Akinbami of being the mastermind of ongoing fuel dealers’ strike.

    The thugs overturned refrigerators and smashed bottles of soft drinks and poured engine oil on the floor. They chased away members of staff in the filling station; causing panic in the neighbourhood.

    Two filling stations operated by Tetra Abby Company along Adebayo Road and Dallimore Street were also vandalised by the hoodlums.

    A worker at NIPCO said: “The thugs came in three vehicles. One Hilux van with government’s number plate and two mini buses, popularly called ‘Akoto’. They chanted war songs and chased everybody away; thereby disrupting traffic. They hurled missiles at anything in sight.

    “They were armed with dangerous weapons. We had to escape by scaling the fence at the back of the building because they were determined to kill whoever dared to challenge them.

    “All the six dispensing machines at the filling station were vandalised. Windows and doors of the building housing its supermarket and lubricant were smashed.”

    The governor, on Thursday, May 25, gave the marketers a 24-hour ultimatum to open their filling stations to members of the public or have their Certificates of Occupancy (C of Os) revoked but the marketers defied the order.

    Southwest Report learnt that many of the owners of the petrol stations had gone underground and remained incommunicado following the attack by hoodlums who destroyed property worth millions of Naira on three filling stations on Tuesday.

    An Islamic body, Muslim Rights Congress (MURIC) has called on the Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, to stop those it referred to as “Governor Fayose’s thugs” from carrying out further attacks on homes and business premises of Muslims and other  law-abiding residents of Ekiti State.

    MURIC Director, Prof. Ishaq Akintola, in an online press statement made available to our reporter on penultimate Friday, described the attacks on filling stations of a prominent Muslim businessman, Alhaji Sulaiman Akinbami and other marketers as “flagrant abuse of power to threaten law-abiding and peaceful citizens.”

    Akintola said: “MURIC strongly condemns this impunity; we call on the Inspector-General of Police to quickly intervene and restore law and order. We demand adequate protection for Alhaji Akinbami and his property.

    An All Progressives Congress (APC) governorship aspirant in Ekiti State, Mr. Isola Fapohunda, has also criticised Governor Fayose’s crackdown on petrol marketers which has brought the state to its knees in the past two weeks.

    While addressing a press conference in Ado-Ekiti, Fapohunda condemned destruction of some petrol stations by suspected thugs.

    He said: “We need to advise government at this stage that there are several ways to skin a chicken. Tact and diplomacy in governance are attributes that must be embraced for the peace and prosperity.

    “The marketers have been unjustifiably treated by someone who should know better, but who has chosen to ignore wise counsels. But still, I want to appeal to petrol dealers to kindly consider all these and re-open their stations for the sale of fuel.”

    Meanwhile, the Ekiti Council of Elders has called for the extension of the ultimatum issued by Fayose to oil marketers to allow for intervention in the two-week faceoff.

    The council, at its emergency meeting on May 25 in Ado-Ekiti expressed concern with the development which they described as “worrisome.”

    In a statement issued at the end of the meeting signed by the council’s Chairman, Prof. Joseph Oluwasanmi and General-Secretary, Mr. Niyi Ajibulu appealed to marketers to commence sales of the commodity to the public.

    The statement reads: “The Ekiti Council of Elders, at an emergency meeting on May 25, noted with concern the worrisome development in the fuel crisis in Ekiti State.

    “We appeal for calm from all stakeholders, the government, the petroleum dealers, the drivers and the governor for the extension of the ultimatum in order to give the Council the opportunity to intervene towards an equitable settlement of the impasse.

    But the state government condemned the role of the national leadership of IPMAN, NUPENG and PTD in the hardship unleashed on the citizens by the scarcity of fuel.

    The Chairman of Petroleum Products Consumer Protection Agency (PPCPA), Elder Adeyemi Adebayo, who claimed that only four filling stations had started dispensing the commodity said government’s decision to sanitise the sector was in the overall interest of the masses.

    Adebayo said: “About four of the filling stations have started selling fuel, pulled out of the marketers’ union’s decision.

    “They said the tanker drivers’ union are not allowing their fuel to come into the state, and that those drivers are diverting the petrol trailers to neighbouring states.

    “When I spoke to the chairman of the tanker drivers in Ekiti, he explained that the directive to prevent petroleum tankers from coming to the state was from the national body of the oil marketers. He added that his team in Abuja were having meeting with the oil marketers concerning the development.

    “The genesis of this crisis was the aftermath of a petrol station, Strive Energy in Ijigbo area of Ado-Ekiti which caught fire and destroyed property worth millions of Naira.

    Many shops owners and some landlords whose property were affected had cried to state government to assist them get compensation from the owner of Strive Energy who, at first, was evading them.

    “The incident led to many unhealthy under-dealings that were exposed. The government discovered that the petrol station in particular and many others in the state do not have insurance to cover damage incurred during such fire incidents.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Road construction: Residents laud Ambode

    Residents of Ikuomola Street in Alimosho Local Government Area have praised Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, over the construction of their road.

    They spoke yesterday when the Special Adviser to the Governor and Chief Executive Officer of Lagos State Public Works Corporation (LSPWC), Mr. Ayotunde Sodeinde led officials of the corporation to inspect the construction.

    A resident, Mrs Olawunmi Caroline, said the governor’s intervention would put an end to the age long suffering residents in the area have been going through.

    “This road was in a deplorable state that even okada riders refused to ply once it rains. Our children that go to school have fallen inside the flood, besides no vehicle can come into the street, but everything changed recently when we saw bulldozer coming into the street to commence construction.”

    She said since then, the excitement of residents has known bounds, adding that the road when completed would boost economic activities of the people living there.

    Another resident, Folashade Adeboye, who owns a property on the street, said it was the first time a functional road was being constructed in the street.

    “I have lived here since 1982 and this is the first time that road is being constructed here. I am particularly excited because the values of our properties will appreciate.”

    Sodeinde said work commenced on the road in February adding that the road will be delivered before the end of the month.

    “When we first came to look at the road we could not drive in as the whole street was flooded. But we can see from what the residents are saying that the situation has now changed.

    “I honestly did not know how this road was discovered by the governor, this can tell you that he is a man that has his eyes everywhere in the state and has promised to spread development to all,” he said.