Tag: Task force

  • Task Force seizes truck with stolen economic trees

    The men of the Ekiti State General Marshal Task Force on Anti-Grazing yesterday intercepted a truck carrying economic trees, suspected to have been stolen from the forest reserves.

    The truck, carrying the timber worth millions of Naira, was seized by the task force men on Ikole-Osin Road.

    The task force Coordinator, Mr. Sola Durodola, said it would not be business as usual for individuals engaged in illegal activities, which

    he said was denying the government revenue.

    Read also: Well dislodge railway line traders Task Force

    Durodola, who disclosed that the truck has been handed over to the police, warned those violating forestry laws to desist or be prosecuted.

    He lamented that the laws guiding forestry were being flouted, leading to depletion in forests and exposure to ecological disaster.

    Durodola, who visited Ado and Gbonyin local governments, warned timber contractors against illegal felling of trees.

    He urged them to obey the laws guiding forestry, to boost the economy.

  • Task Force arrests 23 miscreants, eight suspected cultists

    Operatives of the Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences (Enforcement) Unit (Task Force) at the weekend arrested 23 notorious miscreants during an overnight raid around Shitta in Surulere.

    They confiscated bags of substances suspected to be Indian hemp and other outlawed illicit drugs such as ‘Novalyn with Codeine cough syrup’.

    The agency also nabbed eight members of the notorious ‘Awawa Boys’ during an enforcement operations near Capitol, Isale-Oja and Agege.

    It ordered traders along railway tracks to leave the area, as its operatives are set to clamp down on illegal traders on railway tracks.

    The agency warned officials of the local governments and market associations “to desist from collecting fees from these illegal traders on railway lines around Oshodi, Mushin, Ikeja-Along, Yaba, Oyingbo and Agege, as anyone caught will be severely dealt with in accordance with the law.”

    These were contained in a statement signed yesterday by its Public Relation Officer, Mr. Toafiq Adebayo.

    Agency Chairman Mr. Olayinka Egbeyemi, a Chief Superintendent of Police, (CSP), said heavy convergence of illegal traders around railway tracks was suicidal and an eyesore.

    He said “Strategically, this unusual and very risky trading practice has led to the death of some people, especially those who were not fast enough to leave the area for an oncoming train.”

    Egbeyemi said in accordance with the Lagos State Environmental Sanitation Law, it was unlawful for anyone to hawk or buy/sell goods on railway tracks, including all road setbacks and walkways across the state.

    “The primary duty of any responsible and responsive government is to protect lives and properties.”

    The statement said Police Commissioner Mr. Edgal Imohimi has directed the task force chairman to carry out raid on criminals’ hideouts in line with the state’s policy of eradicating hoodlums.

    Egbeyemi regretted that most parents have abdicated their responsibility toward their children.

    He said the agency would raid areas inhabited by undesirable elements, adding that those arrested would be arraigned.

  • Group mulls task force on pesticides use

    The National President of Agricultural Commodity Associations of Nigeria (FACAN), Dr. Victor Iyama, said the organisation had set up a task force to ensure safe and responsible use of pesticides.

    He said this is to prevent more accidents, protect farmers’ health, and improve efforts in the field.

    A considerable number of accidents occur each year as a result of pesticide mistakes, causing eye, skin, and respiratory infections.

    Iyama said the move has become necessary with the reported abuse of the use of Spiner in beans preservation. The task force, according to him, is targeting farmers and producers.

    The task force, he added, aims at reducing the risks and consequences of the use of pesticides, including a reduction of the use and placement in the market of the products.

    At farm, he said the association will ensure balanced information will be available to farmers about the risks of the use of plant protection products, proper storage conditions, as well as about alternative solutions that entail a smaller risk.

    According to him, it has become clear that farmers were relying on chemical pesticides too much and using any pesticides they could buy without proper guidance.

    Although most farmers use agricultural chemicals to control pest and disease attacks these days, he said many haven’t been properly trained on application practices.

    As a result, the chemicals have a high chance of contaminating crops.   He said the association is determined to teach farmers about pesticide safety.

     

  • Outcry as robbers lay siege to Lagos neighbourhood

    • Culprits were hoodlums dislodged from rail line axis —Task Force chair

    Residents of New Oko Oba, a Lagos suburb, have cried out following incessant robbery attacks in the night and wee hours, reports KUNLE AKINRINADE.

    EVERYDAY, Michael Olowa, a young marketer with a leading insurance firm in Lagos Mainland usually passes through the railway line area of Fagba along Iju Ishaga road. From there, he would trek to his residence at New Oko Oba into the warm embrace of his wife and two children. But last week, he collapsed into prolonged moments of sadness, following a robbery attack on him while returning home. On that day, Olowa had barely crossed the railway line into an adjoining street leading to his home, when he was accosted by three boys who wasted no time in dispossessing him of his valuables, including an HP laptop, undisclosed cash, and two android phones, at gunpoint.

    “It was like a scene from the movies when the boys swooped on me laughing and pointing a pistol at me to surrender my valuables. They initially pretended to have missed their way by asking me for direction to a strange street. It was while I stopped to answer them that they robbed me of my money, phones and laptop.

    “The value of my loss to the robbery was huge because some of the assignments I was handling for my company were stored as files on the laptop computer snatched from me by the heartless boys.”

    It was the same experience for Mrs Ayishat Adebayo, a trader at the Ogba area of Ikeja, who tasted the bile of robbers on October 3 this year on Jonathan Coker Road that stretches from Fagba Bus Stop toward another adjoining road leading to Abule Egba.

    The woman was returning home on the said day at about 7:30 pm when some boys emerged from the dark and slapped her to submission before fleeing with the proceed of her day’s sales and handset.

    She explained that bystanders thought she had a fight with the boys until she yelled out after the boys had left, that she had just been robbed.

    “I was just dazed beyond words after the incident. I was given some money to transport myself home by sympathisers. Since then, I have stopped trekking home on the road at night.”

    Other areas/victims

    Adelani Jacob had no inkling that danger was lurking after he cashed some money at a nearby ATM machine of a new generation bank and headed home on a commercial tricycle and alighted at Olaniyi junction, from where he hoped to walk down home. He had barely paid his fare when two men accosted him and demanded he surrender the money and bag on him or risk death.

    “I thought they were joking until one of them pulled a pistol on me, while his accomplice removed my bag, phone and the money in my pocket. I was just too shocked to offer any form of resistance. When I narrated my ordeal to my neighbours at home, they urged me to thank God that the robbers did not brutalise me. They cited the case of a man who died from injuries sustained from a similar robbery attack a few months back.”

    A petrol attendant in the Abule Egba, who lives in Puposola area of New Oko Oba, Raheem Sanusi, said he lost his salary to a three-man gang while he was returning home at night last month.

    “As a filling station supervisor, I usually close late. So, on September 30, I left my place of work in Abule Egba on an okada at about 10: 20pm. I was walking down the road to my house when four boys rushed at me and wanted to take a small bag that I was holding in my hand from me. I asked them not to worry, thinking they were boys in the neighbourhood who knew me and were being courteous. But I was wrong. When I asked them not to bother helping me carry my bag home, they slapped me and threatened to kill me if I did not hand over the bag and other valuables. They robbed me at gunpoint and fled in different directions. They took away the bag containing a sum of N15,000, which was my salary, and a Samsung android phone.”

    Other victims

    While the two victims were robbed at night, other victims were attacked in the wee hours while leaving home for work. Some of the roads commonly used by the robbers include Agric Road, Puposola, Olaniyi and Jonathan Coker Close, Pipeline Way, Olaofe Road and Mofoladayo Drives, among others.

    In some instances, robbers posed as commercial motorcycle operators, popularly called okada, to rob residents early in the morning. One of such cases was that of Emmanuel Robert, a worker in a metal factory in Ikeja, who was rushing to resume work around 6 am and was brutalised by okada robbers on Agric Road. He lost his phone and a sum of N5,000 to the fiendish men who fled on their motorbike.

    Robert said he was hospitalised for one week as a result of the severe beatings meted to him by the robbers. That was in the course of struggling with them for his wallet and the mobile telephone he bought three days to the incident.

    “I had heard stories about how people were robbed on the road, but it did not occur to me that I would become a victim one day. On the day of the unfortunate incident, I set out at about 5:30 am in order to meet up with my resumption time –7 am.

    “I was walking fast along the road when some boys, who rode on a motorcycle, pulled up by my side and started raining blows on me, yelling at me that I should surrender my phone and money. I resisted them because I had just bought the Nokia phone after I lost the one I was using before. They were infuriated and subjected me to several blows on my face. It was God that saved me; otherwise, I would have lost my sight to the incident.

    “I was hospitalised for one week and doctors said that I was lucky that vital areas of my eyes escaped my assailants’ blows. I have not been taking the road since then for fear of being attacked again”.

    Another victim, Ishola Taiwo, a building contractor, said he was robbed while passing through The Fagba railway line area in the early hours of October 3, 2018.

    “I was on my way to meet up with one of my clients and I decided to pass through a close just after the railway line at about 6 am on the day when three men rushed at me and dispossessed me of my two phonbes, wristwatch and a sum of N6000.

    When I raised alarm, passers-by gave them a hot chase but they escaped through an opening of a wire barricade erected by the state government to restrict access to the railway line area.”

    Criminals’ hideout

    The Nation gathered that the robbers had been operating from shanties and illegal structures erected around the Fagba railway junction, until they moved into the streets and communities to unleash terror on innocent residents, especially passers-by.

    It will be recalled that in June this year, the Lagos States Government served seven days removal notice to all owners and occupiers of illegal structures, shanties, and containarised shops around Abattoir and New Oko-Oba, Agege.

    At the expiration of the ultimatum, the Chairman of the Lagos State Task Force on Environmental and Special Offences, Mr Olayinka Egbeyemi, led the enforcement team of the agency and demolished over 2,500 illegal structures, shanties and containerised shops around Fagba railway side and Abbatoir. It was learnt that dangerous weapons were recovered from the scene of the demolition exercise.

    Egbeyemi said the illegal shanties served as haven for miscreants and hoodlums who terrorised innocent residents in the community by dispossessing them of their valuables, including phones, cash and jewellery at night and in the wee hours.

    He said: “It was an eyesore with miscreants and hoodlums freely smoking and selling Indian hemp. Underage boys and girls also engaged in prostitution around the area.”

    Also, in a similar raid on Iludun area of New Oko Oba in August, operatives of the Lagos State Task Force arrested 210 miscreants and impounded 125 motorcycles.

    The Nation gathered that the operation was carried out based on complaints by residents of the community. Egbeyemi said that the miscreants were those recently dislodged by the agency along railway line axis of New Oko Oba.

    “It was an eye-sore as these dislodged miscreants and street urchins were freely smoking and selling Indian hemp around residential premises where you have under age school girls and boys.

    “The demolished illegal shanties and containarised shops within abattoir and adjourning streets, aside from being on the landscape and harbouring criminals, are contributing to the under growth of health, environment and safety issues.”

    While Egbeyemi and his men might have succeeded in pulling down the unlawful structures, the situation has not really changed as the miscreants are still thriving in the area.

    When The Nation visited the area on Wednesday, hemp smoking boys were seen having a free day in and around a stretch adjoining Agric Road and another stretch of road leading to Abattoir.

    A source, who asked not to be named, said: “Initially, crime rate went down in this area after the demolition exercise, but the boys have since returned to unleash terror on innocent residents. They now sleep inside some stationery trailers and trucks on the road and have become serious security threat to the peace of this neighbourhood.”

    A trader at Daddy Savage Mini Market, Kingsley Attah, attributed the rising cases of robbery in the area to lack of proactive security measures to keep the perpetrators in check.

    He lamented: “Not a few people have been attacked and robbed by hoodlums lately. We want the state government and police to rescue us from robbers. Although, I am not a victim, but some of my customers and friends have been robbed either on their way home or while going out both at night and in the morning.”

    A community leader, Elder Soji Bolorunduro, urged the state government and law enforcement agents to carry out constant surveillance and patrol of the area at night and in the morning.

    “The miscreants are the ones responsible for the spate of robbery attacks on residents in recent times here. We were happy when they were flushed out by the Lagos Task Force in June, this year, with a corresponding decrease in robbery attacks and other vices.

    “However, they are back and have been operating freely in the community. They have now resorted to sleeping inside trailers and trucks parked on the road and have been terrorising people at nightfall and at dawn.

    “We are urging law enforcement agencies to step up patrol and surveillance of New Oko Oba with a view to preventing these boys from continuing with their terror on innocent people.”

    Another community leader, Alhaji Hajeem Hussain, also called on the police and other security forces to prevent trucks being used to bring cattle to the nearby abattoir from being parked in the area.

    “These trucks are being used by some of these boys as shelter after their shanties have been destroyed by the Lagos State Task Force in June. The trucks should be removed and the entrance from the wire barricade around the railway line should be close to prevent the hoodlums from gaining access to the neighbourhoods.”

  • ‘Land grabbing’: Family petitions police, task force

    The Afariogun Family, which claimed to be owners of Itapara village and a farmland in the Sagamu Local Government Area of Ogun State, has petitioned the state’s Special Task Force on Anti-Land Grabbing and the Area Commander of Sagamu Police Command on the activities of a suspected land grabber in the area.

    The family’s counsel, M. A. Omotayo of Bandele Omotayo & Co, said despite a judgment of the State High Court, Sagamu, in their favour, the family was still being molested by the suspected land grabber.

    Omotayo urged the Area Commander to call Ogijo Divisional Police Officer (DPO) to order and stop him from further harassing the family.

    The DPO, Omotayo said, allegedly led some officers on September 1 to arrest her clients on the land.

    She said: “Our clients’ family, including children, were assaulted, injured and taken to Ogijo Police Station on a trumped-up allegation that they heard that our clients were cultists and that they came to Itapara to foment trouble. The women and elders were later released while they detained nine of their children.

    “Those injured were not allowed to make a statement and refused to be given papers to go to the hospital while their phones and money were ceased. The phones’ memory cards, which contained evidence of the activities of the assault, were removed and destroyed by policemen, all in the presence of the DPO, who later ordered that they be charged to court on Monday (September 3) to cover up the truth and pervert justice.

    “At Ogijo Police Station, the DPO and a Divisional Crime Officer (DCO) brought out a double-barrelled gun and some weapons, falsely alleging that they found the weapons on our clients. Challenged by the elders, who went to seek the release of the detained that the DPO and other policemen in Ogijo were aware that the Afariogun Family does not have cult members but those who had been adjudged as owners of the Itapara village and ought not to be harassed, assaulted, maimed and injured by the DPO and his men, the DPO queried why the Afarioguns went into their land without securing his permission.

    “Realising that the charges of cultism cannot be substantiated against our client with the judgment of court, the police then charged our clients with a conduct likely to cause a breach of public peace and assault to the police.

    “It is in the light of the above that we humbly seek your intervention to use your good offices and trusted ability to investigate this matter and save our clients who have pursued their case diligently from being unjustly punished.”

  • Task Force gives trucks till Monday to quit Lagos roads

    From Monday, articulated vehicles without call-up cards from the ports will be cleared off Lagos roads and bridges, the Presidential Joint Task Force on the Apapa gridlock said yesterday.

    The task force Chairman, Commodore Okon Eyo, said at a stakeholders’ meeting at the Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) BEECROFT in Apapa, that enforcement took this long because the team was waiting for terminal operatorsto buid holding bays.

    He said: “Before now we have been holding meetings to see how these things could be resolved. We are going to return empty containers that are on trucks to the holding bays from Monday. Containers bearing trucks should no longer proceed directly to the port because that is not the best practice.

    “From the holding bays, management of the Nigerian Port Authority (NPA), terminal operators and shipping agencies should work together to generate call-ups from the holding bays. Operatives on the road will start checking the call-ups from Monday and it will be better that these trucks comply.

    “I do not want to think that they will not comply because sanctions will be meted out to them.”

    Eyo said errant truck owners would be sanctioned.

    Ajeromi Ifelodun Local Government Chairman Ayoola Fatai lamented that residents suffered a lot from the gridlock.

    He said he offered 26 hectares for the building of container terminal.

    The NPA, he claimed, rejected the offer because it was not allowed to build such a facility near a existing port.

    His Apapa Local Government counterpart Elijah Owolabi urged the government to work towards easing traffic in the area.

    Many of the truck owners blamed the terminal operators and the shipping companies for the problems. They said terminal operators were not ready to receive trucks as when due.

    Amalgamation of Truck Owners Association Chairman Mr. Olaleye Thompson said truck owners were not being carried along, adding that they requested to be included in the task force, but they were rejected.

    He said: “We the truckers know the problem and how to solve it. The solution is that our people should parley with the task force to tell them how the problems could be solved. Secondly, we should prioritise some days for the containers and see how the truck should be going to the ports on designated days.”

  • Adulterated fuel: task-force to monitor private depots

    Worried by the incidence of adulterated petroleum products flooding the market, the National President of Private Depot of Oil & Gas Marketers Association of Nigeria (PDOGMAN) Chief  Kolawole Adewoyin has hinted of plans by the Association to constitute a taskforce to monitor the activities of private depots operators across the country.

    Adewoyin dropped this hint at the weekend during the formal inaugural ceremony of the executive body of PDOGMAN, Southwest zone in Lagos.

    The PDOGMAN boss, who lamented that its members have been at the receiving end as far as purchase of adulterated petroleum products is concerned, stressed that the Association was determined to curtail such incidences to the barest minimum.

    Specifically, he said, “We are determined to nip this ugly situation in the mud because it is having rippled negative effects on our businesses, especially our members. To achieve this, we will be working hand in hand with members of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC).”

    While reiterating the Association’s commitment towards driving the oil and gas sector, Adewoyin who is the Group Managing Director/Chief Executive of AA Adewoyin Petroleum said: “Our sole objective is to market and distribute petroleum products and gas to the teeming populace of this country. As the name implies, Private Depot of Oil & Gas Marketers Association of Nigeria, we are entrusted with buying and selling/distribution of petroleum products from all private depots across Nigeria as we are working according to the norms of each depot.”

    The membership of the Association, he stressed, is opened to all station owners and dealers as long as they are duly registered with the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR).

    “We are not in contention with any organisation but our primary objectives amongst others, is to work towards alleviating the sufferings of our teaming members across the nation. It is on record that our members do face a lot of challenges before and after loading their products from any private depot.”

    Speaking earlier, the chairman of the Southwest zone, Prince Adekunle Okunade expressed his readiness to move the Association forward with the support of his team members.

    In his acceptance speech, he said, “I promise to work hard to promote and protect the mandate of the Association and be the ideal team player to take PDOGMAN to greater heights. I welcome you all to a new dawn of opportunities, where marketers and product owners engage in seamless operation.”

    Echoing similar sentiments, the Deputy National President, Elias Aminu tasked the newly constituted zone to be committed to the ideals and ideas of trustworthiness, which remains the key to any successful endeavour.

    The National Treasurer, Elder Chief Lawrence Kanu also impressed on the new officers of the western zone the need to be good ambassadors of the Association and not do anything that would put its image in disrepute.

  • Task force releases seized vehicles

    Lagos State Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences (Enforcement) Unit (Task Force) Chairman Olayinka Egbeyemi, a Chief Superintendent of Police  (CSP), has released vehicles kept at the agency’s traffic yard in Ikorodu.

    No fewer than seven motorists collected their vehicles on Tuesday, according to a statement issued by the agency yesterday.

    Other motorists have been asked to report at the unit’s office for proper identification and other processes.

    The chairman gave the order when he visited the traffic yard on Tuesday.

    The visit was prompted by complaints that some operatives were extorting money from the motorists.

    Although they allegedly committed offences ranging from driving against traffic, driving on Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) lane to causing obstructions, among others, the motorists pleaded for mercy.

    Egbeyemi said his action was to prove that the government is not interested in creating hardship for people.

    He warned that any task force member caught extorting money from people would face the law.

    “It is not that we are anti-masses. We fight those people that are adamant and defiant. We are not in a state of anarchy; we are in an orderly society where there must be law and order. We take offenders to court, and once anyone is pronounced guilty, such ends in prison.

    “How can a sane driver drive against another vehicle coming on speed: this is how innocent people are killed.

    “I am appealing to Lagosians to abide by the law and regulations that guide road use. Be a good citizen and don’t offer members of the taskforce bribe and in case any of them demand please kindly report,” he said.

     

  • Task force boss free seized vehicles in Ikorodu

    ***over allegation of touting against his men

     

    Chairman of Lagos State Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences (Enforcement) Unit ( TaskForce ) Mr. Olayinka Egbeyemi, a Chief Superintendent of Police, has ordered immediate release of vehicles impounded at the Agency’s traffic yard in Ikorodu.

    Subsequent to the order, no fewer than seven vehicles were released to their respective owners on Tuesday, while others were informed to report at the unit office for proper identification and other processes.

    The chairman gave the order when he paid an unscheduled working visit to the traffic park yard at Ikorodu on Tuesday.

    The vehicles which were impounded over various traffic offenses were ordered to be released following allegations of touting reported by members of the public against the unit.

    Although they committed various traffic offenses ranging from driving against traffic, driving on BRT Lane to obstructions among others, they all however pleaded for mercy and admitted their wrong doings.

    Egbeyemi said his decision to release the vehicles was to prove that the Lagos State Government is not interested in creating hardship in the state but it would also not tolerate lawlessness from members of the public.

    He explained that the action was also to inform Lagosians that the state government does not encourage touting or bribery and that the Agency would take action against any of its officer found guilty of such crime.

    Egbeyemi reiterated his commitment of ensuring adequate discipline among his men even as he disclosed that any taskforce member caught collecting bribe or extortion from members of the public will face the wrath of the Law.

    He noted that they will continue to adhere to zero tolerance for driving against traffic to make recalcitrant motorists to be law-abiding.

    “It is not that we are anti-mases. We fight those people that are adamant and defiant. We are not in a state of anarchy, we are in an orderly society where there must be law and order. We take offenders to court, and once anyone is pronounced guilty, such ends in prison.

    “How can a sane driver drive against another vehicle coming with speed: this is how innocent people are killed”, the Chairman said.

    Egbeyemi charged members of the taskforce to desist from any act that can dent the image of the unit, pointing out that it would be difficult to enforce law once they engage in corrupt act.

    Read Also: Dismissed Lance Corporals, others held for lorry ‘hijack’

    “Am appealing to Lagosians to abide with the law and regulations that guide road use. Be a good citizen and don’t offer members of the taskforce bribe and in case any of them demand please kindly report.

    Egbeyemi said the unit understands the plight of the masses. But that laws must be respected so as to make the State livable for people. These are things we do but people don’t understand. It is my duty to raid when people are doing illegality”

    One of the vehicle owner blamed his wrong on passengers and vowed not to succumb to pressure in the future.

    Besides, one Segun Olusoga, a private taxi driver, claimed that a passenger he had in his vehicle pleaded with him to manoeuvre traffic that she was late for appointment.

    “I drive Toyota Corolla car with registration number AGL 136 BH, in the process of trying to satisfy my client, I maneuver traffic and was caught but to my surprise the passenger eventually left me with my problem”

    The case of Akinpelu Atanda with plate number KSF 10 FB was similar as he admitted to wrong doing also pleaded not to repeat it again “I don’t know why I was in a hurry, now that I was arrested where i’m rushing to, I can’t go again”, he promised.