Tag: Tejuoso

  • NASS appropriates special fund for cervical, breast, prostate cancers, says Tejuoso

    The 8th National Assembly has appropriated money for the support and financing of treatment by people suffering from cervical, breast and prostate cancers.

    The special fund would come under Catastrophic Health Fund to support the financing of the three top range of cancers in Nigeria.

    The fund will be available only for those deemed poor and vulnerable.

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on Health, Senator Lanre Tejuoso, made this known to reporters during free medical fair in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital yesterday.

    Tejuoso, who is the Senator representing Ogun Central Senatorial District, added that the Senate passed the remarkable laws for the very first time in the history of Nigeria.

    The senator, who was represented by his media aide, Toba Ogunremi, said the impactful laws were passed under his leadership of Health Committee of the 8th National Assembly.

    He noted that he is also responsible for the law passage of the Pharmacy Act and Non Communicable Diseases.

    He maintained that the Eighth Assembly of which he has been part of, appropriated for the first time the BHCPF in the 2018 appropriation

    He said: “It is important to emphasize that this was not included in the appropriation estimates submitted to the National Assembly in 2018.

    ”I want to tell you that the National Assembly is in the final process of passing the legislative framework that will make Health Insurance mandatory in Nigeria.”

    He noted that the Federal Capital Territory, health insurance and SPHCDA are also included.

    According to him, the National Assembly revised the PCN Act to support task shifting endeavors and also to promote private investments in the pharma sector.

    He said: “Sustained financing for immunization and nutrition, for the first time in the history of Nigeria, has a USD250M financing to address stunting and counterpart funding for UNICEF for RUTF fully paid.”

    He lamented the inadequate physicians employed in both public and private health facilities, saying that according to ”the World Health Organisation (WHO), the ideal requirement in doctor-patient ratio should be one doctor to 600 patients; but it is pathetic that one doctor presently attends to more than 6,000 patients in this country”.

     

  • Church to honour Diya, Balogun, Tejuoso, others

    Church to honour Diya, Balogun, Tejuoso, others

    Former Chief of General Staff Lt. Gen Oladipo Diya, renowned banker Otunba Subomi Balogun and Osile Oke-Ona Egbaland Oba Adewale Adedapo Tejuoso, among others, will be honoured when the African Church Cathedral Salem holds its N250 million fundraise and awards ceremony in Lagos on Sunday..

    The event will hold at the Little Theatre Hall of the Lagos Country Club  at noon.

    A statement by the Church’s spokesman, Chief Gboyega Okegbenro, said the event is being held to appreciate those who contributed to the building of church’s ultra-modern cathedral between 1998 and this year.

    Others to be honoured are Chief Ayodele Odufuwa, Chairman/CEO, Modern Designs Limited and Chief Ayodapo Soderu, Chairman, Man Mountain Insurance Brokers and immediate past president, Chartered Institute of Insurance Brokers of Nigeria (CIBN).

    A documentary titled “The Journey So Far” will be launched on the occasion.

  • Why I’m best for Lagos Assembly speakership -Tejuoso

    Why I’m best for Lagos Assembly speakership -Tejuoso

    Mrs. Funmilayo Tejuoso, lawyer and four term member of the Lagos State House of Assembly, is in the race to lead the Assembly when it is inaugurated in June. She told reporters in Lagos  that her experience in the 12 years she has spent already in the House; her exposure as Deputy Speaker, her close rapport    with her fellow legislators and their backing, as well as loyalty to her party -All Progressives Congress – should  weigh in her favour for the position of Speaker. Excerpts

    Why do you want to be Speaker of the Lagos House Assembly?
    I want to serve, not only my constituents but also Lagos people. I believe I am experienced. I have the qualification to lead the House. My colleagues have approached me to hold that position and I am very sure that with the various things I have done since 2003 in the House, they (colleagues) are very confident that I will be able to lead them. I am sure that, by the grace of God, I will be able to carry them along as a team player and, together, we will be able to move the House to the next level. In Lagos, we talk about continuity, but continuity has to do with improvement, making sure that you are not static in a particular position; improving our state, continuing the oversight and being effective. Our leader, Asiwaju Tinubu, will tell you power is not served a la carte. You have to work hard to get what is due to you. That is why I am not saying, as a woman, the speakership should not just fall on my laps. I am saying that, as a woman, I should work hard to achieve it, and get what I believe it is that I can do. I am a lawyer by profession. It wasn’t something that was given to me. I had to work hard to become a lawyer. I believe that with my background, the experience that I have already in the House, I will be able to hold that position of speakership with integrity, and with honour, carrying my colleagues along.
    There are five or six of you in the race at the moment, and you are the only woman. What is your cutting edge?
    People always say what a man can do, a woman can do better. But I always say that what a woman cannot do, cannot be done. I feel that in terms of experience, I have gained a lot of that over the years. I was the Deputy Chief Whip in 2003 when I first came into the House. After that, I became Deputy Speaker. Those are two principal offices as compared to my fellow lawmakers also aspiring to become the Speaker. As Deputy Speaker, I served as Speaker several times when Mr. Speaker was not available. Even when I was Deputy Whip, I served as Speaker when Mr. Speaker and the deputy were not around. I have handled my work with diligence. I continue to strive for perfection even though, as human beings, we cannot be perfect. Apart from that, my colleagues who understand how much effort I put into everything about my work in the House have come together to support me.
    So you have been consulting? What has been the response?
    The response has been impressive. Even when I don’t initiate meetings, some of my colleagues in the House do; that we should talk to the fresh people, and so on and so forth. You can see the zeal in my colleagues that I should lead them. I have also spoken to several notable people in the society and the response has been very encouraging.
    What about the party leadership? Are you also reaching out to them?
    I have reached out to them and the response is very good. Being a woman who has been very loyal to the party, being somebody who has been steadfast and always of help to make sure that Lagos continues to be on the world map as a centre of excellence, I have been sufficiently encouraged by the party leadership to become the Speaker of the Lagos House.
    Zoning is a factor in government offices’ allocation. The Deputy Governor is from Lagos-West, your senatorial district. Can the district have the numbers two and three offices with you as Speaker?
    We must appreciate that we have West, Central and East Districts. But Lagos West District is very large. The district is divided into two divisions – Badagry and Ikeja. The Deputy Governor-elect is from Badagry Division. I am from Ikeja Division. That is working in my favour. The senatorial district is very large, and, being that large, that is the only district that is divided into two in Lagos. Being from Ikeja Division, I am entitled to ask for the position of Speaker. However, there is no fast rule to the speakership being zoned to a particular area. We are talking about the competence of the office holder; we are talking about experience, somebody who can provide effective leadership. If some people are favoured in terms of where they are coming from, the rule of the House says as a first timer, you can’t be Speaker. We need somebody who is competent and experienced to lead the House to the next level. And I have these qualities.
    You are in the House for the fourth term consecutively. You must have struck the right chord with your constituents. What is the secret?
    I want to thank God that they (constituents) appreciate what I am doing. It is one thing to work hard; it is another for your constituents to appreciate it. I believe I have been able to bring dividends of democracy to my constituency. We see development in Odi-Olowo/Ojuwoye Local Government, that is Mushin Constituency 1, and we see how Lagos State Government has been able to do a lot of roads, put street lights, ensure water is running in the taps in the constituency. I have been able to provide transformers for several streets in the constituency. I arrange GCE and JAMB forms free to students wanting to write the exams. I pay for their coaching and most of them do well in the exams. I buy school bags for young children. My constituents appreciate it because I was doing it even before I became a legislator in 2003. As a legal practitioner, I give them my services free. I help them to get employment not only in the public service, but also in the private sector. We have a lot of graduates in my constituency and we know how difficult it is to secure jobs. All these have helped to endear me to my constituents who believe I should continue to represent them.
    The name Tejuoso rings a bell. Many Lagosians are itching to know this woman who wants to be their Speaker?
    I started off in politics as Mrs. Tejuoso, but my father, Chief (Dr.) Smith, of blessed memory, was from Lagos. I am married to the Tejuoso family, a royal family in Ogun State. The royal family has achieved so much. I also want to do more. I have four children. Everything you do, you think about your family, you think about where you are coming from. In fact, my father told me to always remember the child of whom I am. That has actually kept me happily married for very many years. Some of my in-laws are also in politics. I have a brother-in-law who is a senator-elect in Ogun State. Obviously, I am portraying the family name in good light. I thank God that I have been able to serve the people of my constituency; I thank God that I am married into a family that is well known. But there is a lot of pressure on you to always do the right thing, but with the right upbringing, it is not difficult for you to do it.
    You are aspiring to break the jinx that has seen men as Speaker of the Lagos House. What do you think the state stands to gain by having a female Speaker?
    We have so much to gain. Any position of authority you put a woman in, she tries to put in extra effort to ensure she does not disappoint. She knows that all eyes are on her.
    First of all, the home has to be intact. The children must be educated. You must set good examples from the home front. From the example of being able to manage the home front, a woman can manage the public office. People say when you train a woman, you train a nation because everything we do, there is a ripple effect on the people around us.
    Giving the office of Lagos House Speaker to a woman will open the doors for other women to excel. If you look at other states, they try to emulate Lagos. But many other states have had women Speaker – Ogun, Oyo, Ondo. For us to be able to highlight the efforts of women, Lagos is where we can actually show what we can do as women if positions of authority are given to us. Definitely, we will make laws that will impact the home, impact the society.
    We have a lot of challenges of young girls growing up in Nigeria today, and when they see a woman in a position of authority, you become some role model. This encourages young girls to aspire. And their focus begins to shift from things that don’t have meaning in their lives. We should focus on things that will make our female children to excel. We still don’t have a woman governor. We were thinking of getting one from Taraba.
    Something like that encourages us, it gives us hope as women that ‘if that woman can do it, I too can’. We need that balance in the society; we call it gender equality. But we should not only talk about it, we should do it.
    I am sure you have a blueprint for the job you are aspiring to get. Can you let us into it?
    This is a blueprint for a House of 40, a blueprint that will not discriminate on the basis of governing party – opposition. We cannot be like the PDP – led government where Lagos State was victimised because we were in the opposition. Every local government is important, and where you have a local government that is not getting attention, you have people migrating to the one that gets attention. That is not pleasant. We must thank Asiwaju Tinubu because when the local government allocation was withheld by the federal authorities, we were able to look inward to generate revenue internally. In the House, we have to work as a unit so that we can move the state forward. We must continue to make laws not only for women and children, but also for the whole society.
    We must recognise those in the minority, the less privileged, the physically challenged, women, children. We need that balance in education, health, commerce and industry so that we can provide for all these people. We need an insurance scheme. At the moment, there is a bill before the House on medical insurance. This, among others, is crucial to the survival of a nation. Medical treatment must be available for all and sundry, not just for children under five and over 60. We must have a social security system in place to cater for the people. We thank God we have the Office of the Public Defender where people can go to for free legal services, but we need to have a system where we can save people money that they can use for other things. We appreciate the fact that the incoming government wants to provide free meals for school children. This is important because if a child is hungry, what he is being taught will not be understood. All these things, as lawmakers, we need to put the machinery in place for the executive to act on. We must look at our laws. The criminal justice system of Lagos State is very good compared to other states, but we are still looking into it to make sure it is even better. We know about rape. We have the Child’s Right Law. We have child marriage and so on and so forth. Despite the Child’s Right Law, we still have female genital mutilation. This is something we should include in the law. I have spoken to our Muslim sisters who told me FGM is not in the Quran. The society should accommodate the needs of the less privileged. Our laws should look at the issues and balance them. This does not mean we cannot accommodate some of our traditions that are not harmful.

  • Pastors drum up support for Ambode, Tejuoso

    Pastors drum up support for Ambode, Tejuoso

    •Igbo to vote for APC
    •ICAN hails candidate

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Lagos State, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, will win Saturday’s election, Bishop Kayode Williams has said.

    The national coordinator of Pastors for Change, an independent support group, described Ambode as the right leader for Lagos, urging Christians to vote for all APC candidates on Saturday.

    Bishop Williams spoke at a briefing at Ilupeju Recreational Centre, which had several pastors in attendance. The briefing was held to drum support for Ambode and Mrs. Adefunmilayo Tejuoso, who is seeking re-election into the House of Assembly.

    The cleric said Lagos had suffered in the hands of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)-led Federal Government, which he accused of denying the state its needed impetus to self-development.

    He said: “We are mobilising our members for Ambode to ensure continuity in Lagos and we are confident that God, who we serve diligently and faithfully, will hear us again.

    “Nigerians have proven to be resilient, but we have been plagued with bad leadership in the last 16 years.

    “Despite frustration by the PDP-led Federal Government, Lagos, under the leadership of Babatunde Fashola, has achieved tremendous development with its meagre resources.

    “Lagos State, under the management of APC, has been gradually transformed to a better place that most of us can be proud of.

    “Gone are the days when they say pastors should not interfere in politics. Today, when you see that a candidate is good and God has convinced you, speak to your congregation to vote for that candidate.

    “It is not a secret, it is a mandate from God. A truthful person must say the truth and that is why we must mobilise our congregation.”

    Bishop Williams congratulated the president-elect, Gen. Muhammad Buhari and his deputy, Prof Yemi Osinbajo, saying he had long prophesised APC’s victory.

    He said: “They have my letters with them (APC). I told them the revelation I got from God on the general elections.

    “I even advised them not to conduct primaries because Buhari would defeat all his rivals. God has anointed him. Today, the revelation has come to pass and I am also telling you another one on Ambode.”

    Bishop Williams accused the PDP of wasting billions of naira to capture Lagos, noting that such huge amount could have been spent on infrastructure or human capacity development.

    He said Lagos could not afford to be in the opposition, if its potentials must be achieved.

    Buhari, represented by Dr Tunde Ayeye, said Lagos would enjoy all its privileges under his government, promising to work with Ambode after his election.

    Ambode, who spoke through Mrs. Tejuoso, thanked Nigerians for voting APC in the presidential election, urging Lagos residents to vote for continuity in the state.

    Mrs. Tejuoso urged members of the group in Mushin 1 Constituency to vote for the APC. She said for religious leaders to openly support the APC, the party was doing well to lift people out of poverty.

    “I am confident that APC would win by a landslide in Lagos State, because people have seen everything that is going on in the country and now would be more ready to vote the party at the state level. We are happy we won the federal elections, but Lagos will achieve more development, if it remains in the same party with the Federal Government.”

    Igbo traditional leaders have promised to deliver their domains to Ambode.

    The leaders who were in the palace of the Oba of Lagos, Oba Rilwan Akiolu, promised to vote for the APC on Saturday.

    The Chairman, Eze Ndigbo in Council and title holders, Lagos State, Eze Gordian Dimojiaku, said Igbo had resolved to vote for Ambode, unlike what happened during the presidential election where the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) won in Igbo dominated areas.

    He said: “We are very sorry for what happened last Saturday. We came here today to tell the Oba that on Saturday, you will see a change.

    “Contrary to the insinuations that the Igbo did not vote for the APC, we voted for the APC but maybe our efforts were not enough.

    “But I want to assure the Oba that this Saturday there will be a difference. We have started to work in the 37 local council development areas and the 20 local governments.

    “When we leave here, we will go back to our people and tell them what to do. We have agreed with the Oba in the presence of everybody that we will deliver on Saturday,” he said.

    Dimojiaku called on all Igbo resident in Lagos State to vote for experience.

    He noted that continuity in Lagos will protect the Igbo’s huge investments in Lagos.

    Oba Akiolu said Lagos had provided unparallel opportunities for Igbo to grow in their business, public and private lives.

    He said Igbo had never been discriminated against.

    The monarch said the visit was not just for support for Ambode but for the progress of Lagos.

    “They are showing their solidarity for the progress, growth and development of Lagos. Ambode is just an individual, a symbol that will deliver the message which I, the Oba, the number one traditional citizen of Lagos, other obas and stakeholders, will send him.

    “He is going on a mission and by the grace of God, he will consolidate on the gains recorded. He will make Lagos better for everybody. I want to urge the opposition in Lagos to wait for their time.”

    Ambode has been hailed for his extraordinary leadership qualities and professionalism.

    The APC candidate was the special guest at a lecture organised by the Ikeja District of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (IDSICAN) yesterday at the Sheraton Hotel, Lagos.

    Ambode was the focal point of an academic research titled: “The Effects of Leadership Quality on Public Expenditure Management: Evidence From Lagos State Treasury Under Akinwunmi Ambode As Accountant General”

    According to Prof Kabiru Isa Dandago, who presented the research paper, the APC candidate proved to be a exemplary leader, who has mastered the art of exercising the principles of leadership along the lines of accountability, transparency and prudence.

    “This study aims to explore the potentials of quality leadership on public expenditure management (PEM) towards a better life for the citizenry.

    “It specifically examines the effects of leadership quality on PEM performance, using the six-year tenure of Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode as the Accountant General (AG) of Lagos State as the focal point.

    “In the comity of states, Lagos has distinguished itself as a state with distinct PEM credentials in the six-year leadership of Akinwunmi Ambode as AG.

    “It is, therefore, important to examine Ambode’s underlying leadership qualities for the period under review (2007-2012) and to highlight the lessons, which can be replicated elsewhere.”

    He, therefore, recommended that “Lagosians should strive to exercise their rights to vote a professional, who has exhibited concern and care for them, long before showing interest in serving as their chief accounting officer and chief security officer.

    “A vote for Mr. Ambode is clearly a vote for improving the lives of the present generation of Lagosians and for laying solid foundation for sustainable well-being.”

    ICAN President Chidi Onyeukwu Ajaegbu praised Ambode and the results presented by the study.

    He said: “With 19 qualities of leadership and 16 signs of professionalism acumen that this study makes us see in Akinwunmi Ambode, it has proven beyond doubt that accountants make the best leaders in the world. Lagos is blessed to have him.”

  • ‘Tejuoso deserves another term’

    ‘Tejuoso deserves another term’

    Veteran politician and politician Bayo Osiyemi writes on why the House of Assembly member from Mushin, Hon. Funmilayo Tejuoso, deserves another term in office.

    Let me begin from the very beginning. I have been active in the politics of Mushin in Lagos, Nigeria since the mid-70s from the Ijebutedo? ward in Somolu when it was part of Mushin Local Government Area.

    And when I got invited from my Daily Times base (I mean the real Daily Times that was then Africa’s second best newspaper after Al-Haram of Egypt in terms of size, content and coverage) by my senior colleague and boss, Alhaji Lateef Jakande to join him in his bid to contest for the gubernatorial tiara in Lagos State , I was not a total neophte in the Lagos political terrain.

    The electioneering of that period from mid-78 to the conclusion of the elections in 1979 must rank among the most rigorous governorship campaigns ever undertaken in this state – on land and water – from Orugbo, Isiu, Lekki island, Orimedu, Ibonwon, Odosiola, Agboyi, Tomaro, to Ibeshe, Akesan, Igbologun, Topo Idale to the farthest end of Lagos State in Badagry division.

    This uncommon opportunity makes me declare that I know this lovable Lagos State, breadth and width, like I know the lines on my palm; it’s people such as the late Adeniran Ogunsanya, Theophilus Owolabi Sobowale Benson, and Chief Alade Sonubi (Allan Show) of Ikorodu Division; Barrister Sanu Sobowale, Chief Tele Olukoya, and Otunba Bayo Dejonwo of Epe Division; H,H, Hakeem-Habeeb, Hilario Baba Akerele, Samuel Akanbi Onitiri, Chief Raufu Williams (Raw Cash) and First Republic Senator Alhaji Anifowose, Chief Davis ( Baba Rigimo) of Lagos Division; Alhaji Raufu Isola Solomon ( father of our own Senator Ganiu Solomon), , Prince M.A. Taiwo, Chief Aguntasolo of Ijeshattedo, Chief Wahab Irawo (father of today’s Oba. Fatai Irawo of Odi-Olowo, Chiefs Banjoko and Ekerin of Oshodi, Chief Rafiu Jafojo and Alhaji Akinyemi and Alhaji Oreelope (father of out-going Deputy Governor Joke Adefulure), and Mrs Biola Babatope (wife of the boisterous radical-turned conservative, Chief Ebenezer Babatope, all of Ikeja Division; and Chiefs Senu, Bolaji Senu Hundeyin, Richard Ege, Stephen Dansu, Afolabi James, the Togan of Badagry( who later became an oba in one of Badagrys satellite towns).

    But, none of those politicians, especially of the female hue, that I know in this state, is as enigmatic as the longest serving female member of the state legislature, Hon. Mrs Adefunmilayo Tejuoso (nee Smith),  who is seeking another term into the House of Assembly from Mushin Constituency 1. Beautiful and brainy (she has a masters degree in law) and is undoubtedly a toast in the Lagos social circuit, oftentimes in the company of her husband, Kayode, a prince and son of the reigning Osile, Okeona Egba, Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    But, behind her soft exterior is a lady of steel, who is largely misunderstood or misrepresented. Bold, principled and articulate, she’s any knowledgeable persons candidate for the Speakership of the House anyday. When it comes to gender issues, she is reputed to be passionate; no wonder she has a number of related bills to her authorship. And, on issues of empowerment of the young and educated and the care of the elderly and the widows, I doubt if any legislator at the state level, male or female, had done better. It perhaps could be situated in her character of not given to blowing her trumpet that much of these had not gotten adequate mention in ths media.

    I am the first among equals in the Central Working Committee coordinating the ongoing 2015 Elections in Mushin One Constituency and that has afforded me the opportunity of knowing this lady many love to hate, at really close quarters. Those who know me know I am not given to platitudes. And when I put my thoughts to paper, the subject must be really worth it. I find this honourable lady quite engaging. She’s brilliant, she is articulate ( making me wonder what business the dull and door benchwarmers have being in the legislative houses), she’s principled and brutally frank in calling cant’ and humbug by their real names.

    Uncharacteristically of the typical politician of low repute, she doesn’t talk from both sides of the mouth and she’s my ideal poltician whose position on any given issue is clear with no ambiguity. This may explain why she’s so largely misunderstood or misrepresented, such that all manners of atrocious behaviour are falsely attributed to her.

    As one who, immodesty be damned, has seen the world and exposed to quality politicians/lawmakers, the stuff of which make a nation great, Hon Tejuoso is a quintessential lawmaker which any sincere and sane society should cultivate and embrace, rather than be stigmatised. If I am to influence the voting on April 11, I won’t hesitate to garner all the votes for this candid candidate of my All Progressives Congress.

    Tejuoso is human and may not be unbothered by the barbs being thrown at her, especially from known quarters, some of who had once benefitted from her large heartedness and from unknown quarters? who sadly but innocently are in the majority. She needs not bother much, for a number of reasons. One, she’s in good company of good but unfairly assessed politicians like Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Alhaji Lateef Jakande and Nigeria’s toast of democracy and scourge of political revisionists, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Ttinubu.

    I’m convinced that where Awolowo and Tinubu succeeded, Funmi Tejuoso too will succeed. All she needs do is to continue to stay positive, convinced in the thought that some of the best days of her life hasn’t happened yet? Point is I have been enriched by experience to conclude that one should not feel bad when people say something false and bad about you, and judge you as if tgey truly know you, remembering that dogs bark  if they don’t know a person.

  • Tejuoso: we don’t need bloodshed in elections

    Tejuoso: we don’t need bloodshed in elections

     The Osile of Oke-Ona, Abeokuta, Oba Adedapo Tejuoso, has appealed to politicians to obey the rules of politics, adding that the country can avert bloodshed after the general elections.

    The monarch, who spoke yesterday in Lagos, at the presentation of his 15-page booklet titled: “Handling victory or defeat in elections”, lamented the lack of the fear of God by the political class, stressing that character and good name do not matter to desperate actors.

    Oba Tejuoso said the booklet, which is being printed by ‘Project Peace,’ a platform for preaching peaceful elections, is not for sale. Copies will be distributed freely and it will also be available on the internet.

    He said he was motivated to send the message of peace to Nigerians, particularly politicians, who should realise that politics should not be a do-or-die affair.

    Oba Tejuoso said: God does not want bloodshed, despite the plan of the devil. Elections will hold next month. People have different ideas about elections. But, we don’t want bloodshed. We urge politicians and government officials to conduct themselves very well during the election.

    “I offer this advice as a medical doctor, traditional ruler and one of the fathers of the nation. There could be divergent views. But, the views must be harnessed by all to move forward. Nigeria is a large political family. God is against bloody elections. God does not want anybody’s blood to be shed.”

    The monarch recalled that he was inspired to send a message to former Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi to pray to avert bloodshed in the last governorship election.

    Oba Tejuoso added: “We are also planning to raise an altar of thanksgiving and prayer in Abuja to avert bloodshed in the general elections.”