Tag: uniforms

  • Amaechi: uniforms for bus conductors’ll guarantee safety

    The introduction of uniforms for bus conductors will ensure safety and bring more development to the nation’s transport sector, Transportation Minister Rotimi Amaechi has said.

    He spoke yesterday at the inauguration of the uniforms for members of the Bus Conductor Association of Nigeria (BCAN), Lagos State chapter, in Lagos.

    BCAN is an affiliate of Trade Union Congress (TUC).

    Represented by Director, Road Transport and Mass Transit Administration Mrs Anthonia Ekpa, Amaechi expressed his support for the initiative.

    According to him, 95 per cent of Nigerians are commuters and users of the public transports.

    He said: “You have to change the perception of the people; you have to create a positive impression about yourself and make yourself accessible.”

    He urged women to register as members of the association.

    TUC President Comrade Bobboi Kamgama said the launching will curb ‘one chance’ and kidnapping in the commercial buses.

    He said:  “This situation has become so disturbing and worrisome that if urgent and pragmatic measures are not taken, the safety and security of commuters will be greatly hampered.

    “Bus conductors are being fingered as the culprits of crimes which have over the years been plagued with the twin evil of ‘one chance’ and kidnapping through the use of commercial buses.”

    BCAN President Comrade Isreal Adeshola, said that introduction of official uniform was to tackle the security challenges facing transporters in the state.

    “Gone are the days when people attribute thuggery and touting to conductors, we are now organised with over 4,000 members in Lagos State.”

    Adeshola said it is mandatory for all conductors to be registered members of the association and that in collaboration with the Lagos State Government the conductors will be trained at the Lagos State Drivers Institute (LASDRI) and issued with uniforms, badge and I.D card.

  • Lawmaker distributes uniforms to Lagos school

    Member of the Federal House of Representative representing, Amuwo-Odofin constituency, Mr. Oghene Ugoh, has distributed free 1,000 school uniforms to four schools in Amuwo-Odofin area of Lagos State.

    The exercise, which had the support of a charity body-Warri Boys Social and Welfare Association, was held at the Palace of Alafin of Kuje Amuwo-Odofin, with hundreds of residents comprising teachers, parents, community development association and representatives from beneficiary schools.

    Speaking at the event, the donor said the items were to support parents whose children in the area go to school with torn uniforms

    He said: “I gave free buses to the children. Sometimes I board the bus together with them and I see a lot of children in torn uniform. So I informed the Warri Boys Association to help with 1, 000 uniform and they obliged, I am very grateful.”

    He noted that the development of local communities is a responsibility of every public office holders. He noted that  he was willing to do his best to lessen the suffering of the rural poor.

    President of the Warri Boys Social and Welfare Association, Pius Enakerakpo, said the body’s decision to sponsor the production of the uniform was informed by their desire to spread love, goodwill and care to hapless individuals in the society.

    He said Warri Boys Social and Welfare Association comprised top businessmen who came together for the purpose of supporting member’ gestures geared towards charity.

    Some of the beneficiary schools include; Satellite Secondary School, Ibese Secondary School, Festac College, and Z I Primary School.

  • Once upon two uniforms

    Once upon two uniforms

    First, an acknowledgement, and then a caveat.

    I owe the title of this piece to Femi Osofisan’s play, Once upon Four Robbers.  I cannot claim much familiarity with that work.  But somehow, its title bobbed up from the deepest recess of memory, and I shamelessly adapted it.

    So, to Himself the Okinba, ìbà.

    The caveat:  Other than the title, Osofisan’s play and this piece have nothing in common.

    Twenty-seven years and two months separate the dramas related here.  The first one was acted out in a hallowed courtroom of the High Court of Lagos, and the other in a rowdy session of the Senate.  The one was riveting drama, the other an unsubtle show of power.

    First, the court drama.

    The famous prisoner, jailed for expressing a perfectly legitimate request that his case be assigned to a judge other than the one before whom his prayers had been denied in as many as 10 previous appearances, insisted on turning up before yet another tribunal in his prison uniform.

    Prison officials would have none of it.  He was a prisoner all right, but they maintained that it would be unseemly for him to appear before a tribunal in prison clothes.  That may have been a concession to the fiery attorney, one of the sharpest dressers in the business.

    But he was not flattered.  He was not ashamed to be a prisoner. He was not embarrassed to be seen  in public dressed in prison uniform. Whose body was it, anyway?

    The Tribunal was just as troubled as the prison authorities.  Why would the suspect insist on appearing before so grave and dignified a body in prison clothes?   After all, he was not your run-of-the-mill prisoner but an honourable member of the Bar who, in another circumstance could be standing before the Tribunal as counsel rather than culprit.

    Perhaps the prisoner’s attorney could persuade him to appear before the court in his everyday clothes  and not in his prison uniform?

    No, thanks.  All that the law required, his sedate and urbane leading counsel replied, was that his client appear before the Tribunal. His client was ready to answer the Tribunal’s summons, without preconditions.

    The police officer despatched to fetch the prisoner returned, without him. The prisoner would not step out of the precincts except in his prison uniform, the officer reported.  The proceedings were adjourned.

    Two weeks later, the prisoner was brought to court wearing that contentious uniform, ebullient as ever, showing not the faintest sign of embarrassment and decidedly not asking to be pitied. If anyone ever looked spiffy in a prison uniform, it was Prisoner Number J60/4990.

    The press photographers clicked away.  They knew a unique moment when they saw one.

    A robust sense of humour was unlikely to be counted even among the prisoner’s minor assets.  But he had an almost infinite capacity to surprise.  And so, he urged the photographers to make a good job of taking the snapshots, and to be sure to send the prints, with his compliments, to the kabiyesi judge who had jailed him for contempt.

    The Tribunal commenced its assignment at last, under an intriguing division of judicial labour whereby a suspect, arrested by the federal authorities (unlawfully, said a judge) and detained by the same federal authorities (lawfully, the same judge said), is prosecuted by the Lagos State Government before a Tribunal empanelled by the federal authorities.

    But its discomfiture at having to try the suspect in his prison uniform was almost palpable.

    Not for long, however. Between the first session at which the prisoner did not show up and the second one at which he turned up in the prison uniform they found so discomfiting, some enterprising prison official had combed ancient statute books and found, to the immense relief of everyone in that corner, a law that apparently prohibited appearing in court or before a tribunal wearing a prison uniform.

    This deus ex machina was read out solemnly to the prisoner. He was unimpressed, and so was his attorney. It was not immediately clear whether this was a contrivance, an ingenuous interpolation. But it resolved the problem, and the prisoner soon regained his freedom.

    Prisoner Number J60/4990 was none other than Gani Fawehinmi, our Gani of cherished memory, and the foregoing is based on my column with the same title for The Guardian (January 30, 1990), reproduced in my book, Diary of a Debacle.  His attorney was the legal titan Chief GOK Ajayi (SAN), also since deceased.

    The second case about a uniform has been playing out lately on the floor of the Senate, with television cameras beaming it live to a national audience.  It has little of the texture, the subtlety of the Fawehinmi case.  But who cares for subtlety when you can have mass entertainment guaranteed to take away attention from the pains of the recession and other discontinuities of social life, however briefly?

    At the centre of the drama is an unlikely figure, Colonel Hameed Ibrahim Ali (retired), a former military governor of Kaduna State, and currently Comptroller-General of Customs and Excise, or rather the official uniform he has chosen not to wear to work, or to appear before the Senate.

    The Customs Service had been demanding proof of payment of duty on pre-owned vehicles from end-users who had bought them directly from smugglers, or from dealers who had bought them from smugglers.  Brimming with unaccustomed solicitude for the plight of the unfortunate end-users who stood to be gravely exploited, the Senate asked that the practice be stopped.  For good measure, it invited the Comptroller-General to appear before it to defend his controversial directive.

    Ali had sent two of his deputies to represent him.  The Senate would not receive them, saying that its rules precluded appearances by persons other than heads of agencies.  It was Comptroller-General Ali,  or nobody else.

    Bowing to pressures from the Senate, Ali announced that he was suspending the directive ahead of his scheduled appearance, which he made in mufti, not in his full official uniform as the Senate had demanded with all the threats and tantrums that Dino Melaye and his cohorts could work up.

    They rebuked him for insubordination, warned him severely to come dressed in his official uniform for his next appointment or face some unspoken consequence, and walked him out.  But not before he had told them that no law enjoined him to wear the uniform of the Customs Service.

    As far as I know, nobody has cited any law that Ali has breached.  Convention perhaps, or tradition.  In any case, the kerfuffle is not about law.  The Senate rarely cares about law, except when it serves its purpose.

    The whole thing is about power.  In formal terms, the balance lies with the Senate, which can, at summary proceedings, invoke its contempt powers to jail for a limited time those who disobey its orders.

    Ali could defy the Senate and end up in jail, like Gani, or walk away from the job.  The one will portray the Senate as overbearing, if not overreaching; the other will hand it a dubious victory.

    There is a third possibility.

    Ali could challenge the Senate’s order at law and then, taking a cue from Senate President Bukola Saraki, find or manufacture every conceivable distraction, explore every interstice of the law, no matter how unpromising, pile objection upon objection and adjournment upon adjournment, and with scant regard to jurisdiction hopscotch from one court to another and generally draw out the hearings until the Eighth Senate will have run its term.

  • Corps orders 100,000 uniforms from factory 

    The massive investment made by the Cross River State government with the establishment of the Calabar Garment Factory has started yielding fruits.

    The Peace Corps of Nigeria at the weekend engaged the garment outfit to produce 100,000 pieces of uniforms for its officers and men.

    Under the terms of the contract, the factory is to produce 40,000 pieces as the first consignment, with an additional 60,000  later.

    Speaking during a facility tour of the factory and delivery of materials by the corps for the production of the uniforms, the Deputy National Commandant in charge of Administration, Mr. Edet Ekpenyong, hailed the fully automated factory and assured of the corps’ readiness to synergise with the government to ensure the factory performs within its install capacity.

    He praised Governor Ben Ayade for his industrialisation drive as well other transformation initiatives going on in the state.

    His words: “We are here to deliver our materials to the Calabar Garment Factory to begin production of 100,000 uniforms for us, but starting with 40,000 units. I am very excited and proud with what I have seen here at the factory. It is very clear that Governor Ayade is doing everything to move the state from a civil service state to an industrial hub. We have been monitoring the activities of Cross River and it has been a beehive of industrial activities since Ayade came to power. The state has never been in the media the way it has been since the coming of the present government. Honestly, I’m overwhelmed and we are very proud we will be working with the state.”

    Governor Ayade said the government would help the corps succeed, adding that 4,000 indigenes would be recruited into the Peace Corps.”

    Speaking on the development, he said the concept of the garment factory was not driven by politics, but by the obligation of the state to reconstruct its economic and financial architecture.

    Ayade said: “The state, by its geography, by its location, is supposed to be an industrial hub because it is on a coastline with the Atlantic Ocean. When we saw the state had no presence of heavy industries and businesses, considering our early contact with the white man, it became clear that notwithstanding our opportunity of early enlightenment, we needed to take advantage to create a new industry, a new workforce, a new structure that can take Cross River State out of what our history was. So it had to start with a garment factory.”

    The governor, who expressed happiness that the officials of the corps were impressed with the sample of the uniforms the factory had produced, said: “I am happy that the same thing I was fighting for while in the Senate has turned into reality. My core motion in the Senate was for the creation of the Peace Corps and with this contract for the production of their uniforms, we are going to be happy and of course, you know we have similar understanding with the Nigeria Police. But the Nigeria Peace Corps has come so fast and so sudden. I am happy that production has started.

  • Over 3,000 bus conductors to wear uniforms, badges

    The National President of the Bus Conductors Association of Nigeria (BCAN), Mr Israel Adeshola, has said as from March bus conductors in Lagos State must wear uniforms, name tags and badges.

    Adeshola, who made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja yesterday, said the Lagos State government has approved wearing of uniforms and badges.

    He said the use of badges and wearing of uniforms by over 3,000 bonafide members got the approval of the government on Monday.

    “We are in collaboration with Lagos state government on the issue of badges and uniforms for commercial conductors, which was finalised on Monday.

    “This is because we don’t want to start without the government’s approval. So by first week of March we will roll them out,” he said.

    Adeshola explained that the introduction of uniforms, name tags and badges had become necessary to enforce decorum and ensure safety of duly registered members and members of the public.

    According to him, with the vital information on the badge, any conductor involved in crime can easily be identified and apprehended.

    He explained that the novel idea was being experimented in Lagos before other states can take a cue.

  • Schools to get free uniforms, others

    Despite Educational Support, (RES), a non-governmental organisation, will today give free school uniforms to Diamond Mines Primary School and the Ijaye High Land College, both in Ifako Ijaye area of Lagos State.

    Additionally, Ijaye High Land College would receive sanitary pads for young adult female students.

    Programme Director of the group, Shobitan Pat, said the gesture was part of its contribution to the educational needs of school age children, adding that the group is committed to uplifting Nigerian education.

    She expressed concern that many children are out of school due to lack or inadequate support by their parents or guardians.

    “But this is just the beginning,” Shobitan noted.

    “Help is coming to the less privileged; many more schools would benefit from this endeavour. School age children who are out of school will soon be re-enrolled,” she assured, adding that RES is determined to look out for those children wherever they are and integrate them back into the school system.

    The group, she said, was set up to assist in paying tuition for the less privileged, and  meet other essentials including educating them.

    According to her, the vision was borne out of the desire to see the country meet the education needs of poor parents who she observed lacked the financial power to pay their children/wards’ tuition, buy books/stationeries, and uniforms.

    “Such indigent parents often watch helplessly as their children are sent out of school due to their inability to meet their financial obligations for their children.”

    She continued: “This scenario is like a vicious circle as such parents were also sent out of school during their school days, and ended up living in poverty and lack.

    “With their great potential, all they require is the financial support to enable them aqcuire sound education, so they can make a positive impact on our nation and the world at large,” she added.

  • Council donates uniforms to pupils

    No fewer than 300 primary school pupils of GidanTsara community in Bodinga Local Government Area of Sokoto State were have received uniforms from the council Chairman, Alhaji Abdullahi Tsara.

    He said the presentation was his contribution to boosting education in the state.

    “The uniforms will go a long way in augmenting the efforts of their parents,” Tsara said.

    “Similarly, the gesture would encourage more parents to enrol their children in schools.

    “This is absolutely imperative, as there is the need to shore up the enrolment, retention and completion of the pupils,” he added.

    Tsara promised to replicate same gesture across the council’s 11 wards.

    “My administration will continue to accord priority to education as it is the elixir for national development,” he added.

  • Council donates uniforms to pupils

    No fewer than 300 primary school pupils of GidanTsara community in Bodinga Local Government Area of Sokoto State were on Sunday given uniforms by the council Chairman Alhaji Abdullahi Tsara.

    He said the presentation was  his contribution to boosting education in the state.

    “The uniforms will go a long way in augmenting the efforts of their parents,” Tsara said.

    “Similarly, the gesture would encourage more parents to enrol their children in schools.

    “This is absolutely imperative, as there is the need to shore up the enrolment, retention and completion of the pupils,” he added.

    Tsara promised to replicate same gesture across the council’s 11 wards.

    “My administration will continue to accord priority to education as it is the elixir to national development,” he added.

  • PDP accuses opposition parties of sowing army uniforms, buying PVCs

    PDP accuses opposition parties of sowing army uniforms, buying PVCs

    The Peoples Democratic party (PDP) in Ondo State has raised the alarm over the  illegal Army uniforms allegedly sowed by the opposition party All Progressives Congress (APC) as part of its election rigging plots.

    The PDP said the APC and another opposition party are busy collecting voters card from potential voters, with a promise of an imaginary palliative, ahead of the next month’s election.

    In a statement in Akure by the Publicity Director, Mr Ayo Fadaka, the PDP said it has uncovered the plan to flood the state with thugs in  fake  army uniform to  intimidate voters.

    He said the opposition parties have engaged garment makers contracted to make available Army uniforms of different sizes for use by their thugs to enable them  alter proceedings and manipulate election during and after voting on election day.

    Fadaka alleged that the tailors handling the sewing project are working from two neighbouring states.

    The party official said a formal complaint has been lodged with the police.

    The ruling PDP  has warned  members of the opposition party who have been collecting the PVC’s of potential  voters on the pretext that it will qualify them for food items that would be supplied  as palliative to cushion the effect of the economic crunch.

    Warning the people against the antics of those he described as “political frauds, desperate to steal the people ‘s mandate by any means possible”  Fadaka said the opposition parties are desperate and adopting all kind of fraudulent means to ensure that the people are short changed in the election.

  • Police arrest four ‘illegal’ vendors of uniform

    Police arrest four ‘illegal’ vendors of uniform

    The police in Lagos have arrested four persons who allegedly run a factory where criminals produce and sell its uniforms, accoutrements at the Police College, Ikeja.

    Police boots, belts, badges, ranks, shirts, trousers, force numbers, cardigans and caps were recovered from the suspects, currently being grilled at the X-Squad, unit.

    It was gathered that some concerned persons had petition the Inspector General of Police (IGP) Ibrahim Idris about criminals coming into the college to purchase police uniforms in the factory.

    Idris, The Nation gathered, constituted a panel of inquiry headed by a retired Inspector General of Police (AIG), which recommended thorough investigation on the issue.

    “When the recommendation was forwarded, the Commissioner of Police directed X-Squad to take over. We went to the shops and discovered that truly people were selling police uniform and kits and people believed to be Civilians were coming to buy them.

    “We have to arrest the people in the shops and seized 11 big bags of police uniforms and kits such as belts, identity cards, emblems, boots, socks among others.

    “The exhibits and the suspects have been moved to the state command headquarters, while we are still tracking the other suspects on the run,” said a source.

    Contacted, the command’s spokesperson, Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent of Police (SP) said the suspects would be charged go court for conspiracy and unlawful possession, sale of Police kits.