Tag: epe

  • Lagos kicks off N10 billion aquaculture centre project in Epe

    Lagos kicks off N10 billion aquaculture centre project in Epe

    Construction has commenced on the Lagos Aquaculture Centre of Excellence (LACE), a major fish farming and processing facility located in Igbonla, Epe. The first phase of the project is valued at ₦10 billion.

    Once completed, the centre is expected to produce 50 million fingerlings annually, 2,000 tonnes of table-size fish, 20,000 tonnes of processed fish, and 24,000 tonnes of fish feed each year. The project is being executed under a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model on a 35-hectare site.

    The Lagos State Government signed a Joint Venture Agreement with Dula Agro-Services Limited to develop the LACE project.

    Speaking on the development, Commissioner for Agriculture, Ms. Abisola Olusanya, said the centre would support the establishment of at least 5,000 smallholder fish farms. It is also projected to create approximately 1,000 indirect jobs during the construction phase and 500 direct jobs once operational.

    The facility will include hatcheries, grow-out systems, fish processing units, and a feed mill to support both the centre and associated out-growers. These out-growers will supply fish to the processing plant, enhancing the entire aquaculture value chain.

    Ms. Olusanya added that the centre will also serve as a hub for research and training in aquaculture, covering farming practices, business development, and sustainability.

    According to her, LACE is designed to anchor aquaculture growth in Lagos by diversifying fish species, enhancing food security, and empowering local fish farmers. The project also aims to boost fish production, ensure stable fish supply, and promote processed and value-added aquaculture products for both domestic and export markets.

    She emphasized the importance of expanding hatcheries and processing plants to improve farm incomes and create employment, especially in rural areas.

    Dula Agro-Services Limited Managing Director, Mr. Adeyemi Adeshina, said the PPP initiative reflects a strategic vision to position Lagos as a leading player in global aquaculture. He noted that the centre will focus on producing export-quality seafood while maintaining environmental standards.

    He also highlighted the project’s goal to improve access to quality fingerlings and reduce feed costs through its dedicated feed mill, ultimately contributing to the growth of Nigeria’s aquaculture industry.

    Adeshina expressed confidence that, with the right infrastructure, Nigeria can become a competitive force in the global seafood market.

  • Femi Otedola largesse – By Francis Ewherido

    Femi Otedola largesse – By Francis Ewherido

    Last week, Augustine University, Ilara-Epe, Lagos State, installed Mr. Femi Otedola, as the new chancellor of the university. During his speech, he announced the donation of N1m to each of the 750 students of the university. That came to N750m. The implication is that he has substantially paid the fees and other bills of all the students for 2023 second semester. Some people might dismiss the gesture as pouring water into holes that are already full. Some people assume that only the rich send their children to private universities. It is true that you need to achieve some level of financial capacity before you send your child/ward to a private university. It costs about N2.5m and above per annum to keep your child/ward in a private university.

    But there are various categories of people who have children in private universities. We have those who can comfortably send their children abroad, but for reasons other than finance choose to send them to school in Nigeria. There are those who wanted to send their children abroad, but got scared off by the volatile exchange rate. There are those who earn enough to comfortably train their children in a private university. There are those who send their children to private universities, not because it is financially convenient, but they are just pissed off with the frequent disruptions in the academic calendars of government-owned universities. Finally, there are those who have to really run around after every semester to source money for the next semester. No matter the category you fall into, there is no parent who will not welcome the N1m gift for his child. It is a big relief. I can imagine an avalanche of prayers for Mr. Otedola for this kind gesture. Even for rich parents, it is a relief.

    One big mistake people in the lower financial rung make is that they do not understand that even the richest of people appreciate gifts. A man might have cartons of champagne, whiskey and brandy that now sell for N200,000 per bottle at home, but if you visit him and give him a bottle in appreciation or respect, he will appreciate it and add it to his collection. Gestures do not necessarily have to be financial. Human beings just appreciate people who are there for them and treat them well. It is a tragedy for anyone to feel that he cannot be useful to or be there for others. That is the mentality of people who are inherently selfish and self-centred.

    Otedola is well known for his philanthropic gestures. I know he has been supporting this university since it was established. Before him, his father, Sir Michael Otedola, played a role citing the University in Epe and acquiring the land. While alive, Sir Otedola supported the Catholic Archdiocese of Lagos, the owner of the university. When I came to Lagos in the 80s, the Otedola people knew was Sir Michael Otedola. He was a successful businessman and a public relations guru. He was also well known for his philanthropic activities. He became the governor of Lagos State in 1991 and he was governor until the Abacha Coup truncated his tenure in 1993. Many of these students to whom Femi Otedola gave N1m to probably know him more as DJ Cuppy’s (Florence Otedola) rich dad. It is only now that he is their chancellor that they will see him in new light as their Chancellor. It is a role reversal of some sort for Femi Otedola. In the later years of Sir Otedola, he was referred to as Femi Otedola’s father in spite of his intimidating achievements. May be some day, the younger generation will only know Femi Otedola as DJ Cuppy’s dad.

    This Otedola’s gesture should remind all of us of the need to spread joy. Otedola put smiles on the faces of 750 students and over 1,000 parents, their financial status notwithstanding. Putting smiles on people’s faces is not the prerogative of billionaires or rich people. We all can. We have witnessed, seen, watched or read about lunatics, children, homeless people and all kinds of people putting smiles on other people’s faces. A kind word can do it. An act of kindness can do it. A telephone call can do it. Consoling a bereaved person can do it. A melodious voice can do it. God has given us all innate gifts that we can use to put smiles on people’s faces. One thousand naira gift can also do it.

    In a country where the minimum wage is N30,000, majority of Nigerian parents cannot afford to send their children to private universities. That is why it is very important for government-owned universities, especially federal universities, to run smoothly without incessant strikes. It is very important to have a stable educational system. A friend’s son is spending his seventh year in the University for a five-year course due to strikes.

    In the 60s when my father went to the University of Lagos down to the 80s when I went to the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, it was not fashionable for parents to send their children abroad. In some circles, it was even felt that the only children who went abroad to study were those who could not compete to get admission in Nigeria. In fact, the family of one of my roommates in the University, Kelechi, was based in London, but his father sent him to Nigeria to do his secondary school and university education. There were also rich Nigerians who chose to send their children abroad, not because the foreign universities were better. They did that because some of them also schooled abroad and some wanted to give their children international exposure.

    Private universities are recent developments. The government-owned universities could not just cope with the number of Nigerians seeking admission. The first set of private universities started in 1999. Augustine started in 2015. There are currently about 80 private universities in Nigeria and more are in the pipeline. It is important that any Nigerian who desires to go the university should have the opportunity. But even more important is what is next after graduation. That is where much work needs to be done. The graduates universities produce should be tailored towards our current realities. Nigeria has myriad of problems and they should be solution providers. The current situation where we have 1000s of unemployed and unemployable graduates is not good. That is what my roommate in the university would refer to as “no work done.” Our universities need to produce solution providers before “work is done.

    These days when I read news of new universities and polytechnics being approved or accredited, the first question that comes to my mind is where their products will get jobs. We need to look at the curricula of these schools. Beyond producing solution providers, which I mentioned above, we must also produce self-starters who can graduate and go on to set up businesses. The universities should study and adopt the Igbo traders’ apprenticeship method. It has been hugely successful and it is home grown. Just producing graduates without plans to keep them fully engaged can only compound our security situation.

  • Lagos APC Rep., Raji wins 3rd term in Epe

    Lagos APC Rep., Raji wins 3rd term in Epe

    Rep. Wale Raji, (APC-Lagos), representing Epe Federal Constituency has been reelected for a third term.

    Six political parties including the APC contested for the house of representatives seat in the constituency.

    The parties are Accord Party, African Democratic Congress (ADC), New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP), All Progressives Congress (APC) and the  Peoples Democractic Party (PDP).

    Prof. Olufemi Saibu,  INEC Returning Officer for the election from the University of  Lagos (UNILAG) on Sunday, declared Raji as the winner at the collation centre in Epe.

    Saibu said out of the 29,222 accredited voters, APC polled  19,337, PDP – 9,039, while the ADC polled 439.

    He said: ”In view of that, the candidate of the APC is declared winner as the party had polled the highest number of votes and returned elected.”

    Saibu is of the Department of Economics, Faculty of Social Sciences UNILAG.

  • Suspected hoodlums attack 4 banks, vandalise property in Epe

    Suspected hoodlums attack 4 banks, vandalise property in Epe

    As agitations against Naira scarcity across the country spread, Epe town in Lagos state had its fair share of the destruction of banks and properties by some suspected hoodlums.

    NAN reports that about four banks were vandalised by some suspected hoodlums in Epe, on Friday.

    The attacks happened around 10:05 a.m. on Friday when some suspected hoodlums were spotted destroying bank properties in Epe.

    The banks included Polaris, United Bank for Africa, Zenith Bank, and First Bank.

    The Nigeria Police, however, intervened at the scene to restore peace and normalcy in the area.

    All efforts to speak with the Divisional Police Officer and some bank managers proved abortive.

  • NCF raises alarm, says Lekki-Epe corridor may be washed away by 2024

    NCF raises alarm, says Lekki-Epe corridor may be washed away by 2024

    The Nigerian Conservation Foundation warns that the Lekki-Epe corridor, including the Lekki Conservation Center (LCC) and the estates surrounding it may be washed away by 2024 if nothing is done to check the ocean encroachment.

    Dr Joseph Onoja, Director-General of NCF, gave the indication at an event to mark the 40thanniversary of the establishment of the foundation and award night held on Saturday in Lagos.

    Onoja said that about 128 metre of land have been lost to the ocean between 2018 and 2022.

    According to him, the ocean encroachment, if left unchecked, is an existential threat to the collective existence of the Lekki-Epe corridor.

    While taking the attendees through his presentation, Onoja said that the foundation had been painstakingly tracking the ocean movement since 2018 using its active drone images and comparing it with google images.

    “We started taking active drone images in 2018, especially the Lafiaji axis, “ Onoja said.

    He said that an earlier redline (marked position), as at Aug. 25, 2022,  was gradually becoming  part of the ocean.

    “We continued to track the movement between 2020 and 2021. By July 2021, our reference house has gotten close to the ocean. By Aug. 25, 2022, the ocean could just be seen beside the house.

    “Now from our projection and from what is happening, if everything remains constant, our referenced redline will remain just by the ocean in 2026

    “However, things are not equal, we have already been beaten by the beachhead.

    “By our projection, if nothing is done, by 2024 the ocean will have reached the lower part of the terrain and the ocean will flow freely and meet us on the Lekki-Epe expressway.

    “That is the reality we are facing,” Onoja said.

    The Lekki Conservation Centre (LCC) is a 78-hectare (190-acre) Natural Resource Conservation in Lekki, Lagos.

    The Centre was established in 1990 to serve as biodiversity conservation icon and environment education centre.

    Onoja said that the LCC now has more built up houses and estates around it.

    “So, the tendency for the ocean to wipe all of these is very high, if nothing is done,” the director-general said.

    He appealed to the Lagos state government for assistance to forstall this occurence.

    “We are ready to collaborate with the LASG and the Federal Government to see that the reality on ground does not lead to a humanitarian, ecological and national disaster”.

    Earlier, the D-G noted that the NCF was established in 1980, while the LCC was established in 1989.

    He expressed gratitude to Chevron for its generous support to the LCC.

    He said that the LASG donated the Canopy Walk Way to the LCC, the longest in Africa, in 2015,

    He said that with the donation of the walk way, the revenue of the center has increased and the that it had also attracted many guests to the reserve.

    “So far, we have over 100,000 people visiting the reserve.

    “It is a heritage site for the Lagos state government and we are proud of the relationship we have with the state.

    “However, since its construction in 2015, we have been the ones taking care of it and its safety standards.

    “We appeal to the state government to come to our assistance, especially our fence,” Onoja said.

    He noted that when it was best days the foundation’s fence was 2 meters high, adding that later it become 1.8 meters high.

    “However, over time our environment has been sand-filled and our fence is now less than a meter.

    “We need assistance to reconstruct it,” Onoja said.

    Highlight of the event was the cutting of the anniversary cake and giving of awards to deserving individuals in the society.

    The awards came in different categories including Special Recognition Award, Award of Dedicated Service, Long Service Award and Posthumous Award.

    The Founder of the NCF, Late Chief Lawal Edu, among others, got the foundation’s posthumous award.

    Chief Emeka Anyaoku (MFR), a former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth and General Theophilus Danjuma (rtd) GCON,  got the special recognition award.

    The award night was graced by people from all works of life who are passionate about protecting the earth and environmental sustainability.

  • Police nabs fake soldier in Lagos

    Police nabs fake soldier in Lagos

    Samuel Msughter an unregistered soldier has been nabbed by operatives of the Lagos police command in the Epe axis of Lagos state TheNewsGuru.com can confirm.

     

    Benjamin Hundeyin, the state Police Public Relations Officer, confirmed the development on Friday.

    According to him, the suspect specialized in escorting goods in army uniform, adding that an investigation had commenced to unravel the extent of his criminality.

    He said, “The Lagos State Police Command has arrested a fake soldier, Samuel Msughter, aged 28 on the Epe-Ijebu Road. The suspect specialised in escorting goods in full army uniform.

    “Investigation is ongoing to unravel the full extent of his criminality, especially with the uniform. The suspect will be charged to court at the end of the investigation.”

  • Lagos Obas, lawmaker condemn killing of teacher, student in Epe

    Lagos Obas, lawmaker condemn killing of teacher, student in Epe

    Two traditional rulers and a lawmaker in Epe Division of Lagos State have condemned recent killings of a school teacher and a student in the area.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Razak Bakare, a student of Michael Otedola College of Primary Education (MOCPED), Epe was shot dead on campus last Wednesday, while Ahmed Saheed, a teacher in Poka, also in Epe area, was killed on Friday.

    Speaking with NAN on the killing of the MOCPED student, Oba Babatunde Ogunlaja, the Aladeshoyin of Odo-Noforija, expressed dismay over the killing of the student on campus.

    Ogunlaja said such occurrence was a condemnable, and called on the institution’s authority to install CCTV cameras on the school premises.

    The Oba said he has been working tirelessly with security agencies, vigilantes and other relevant stakeholders to fish out the perpetrators since the incident happened in the community.

    He called on Lagos State Government to rebuild a collapsed fence in the institution which served as escape route for criminals.

    Also, Oba Olufolarin Ogunsanwo, the Alara of Ilara Kingdom in Epe, lamented the killing of the teacher in Poka area of Epe on Friday.

    He pledged that the traditional institution would support all efforts by security agencies to fish out the killers.

    Mr Abiodun Tobun, representing Epe Constituency 1 in Lagos State House of Assembly, decried the recent killings in the area.

    He said that the institution was known for peace since its establishment until the recent ugly incident.

    “I totally condemn such act and I know the management of the institution will take adequate measure to prevent a repeat of such incident,” he said.

    The lawmaker urged students to face their studies, be ambassadors of peace and agents of development and not agents of killing and destruction.

    “Know the type of friends you keep in school, do not join cultism, rather join reading/study groups and be a religious,” he said.

    Tobun said that he would work closely with traditional rulers and other relevant stakeholders in the fight against cultism, hooliganism, hoodlums and other social vices in the area.

  • By-election: Abiru clears all 19 wards in Ikorodu, wins Epe

    By-election: Abiru clears all 19 wards in Ikorodu, wins Epe

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has declared the All Progressives Congress (APC) winner of Saturday’s Lagos East senatorial by-election in Ikorodu division.
    Dr Andu Akala, INEC Local Government Collation Officer for Lagos East Senatorial poll for Ikorodu, declared the result at the INEC collation centre in Ikorodu on Saturday.
    According to Akala, the APC’ Tokunji Abiru, polled 19,204 votes to beat his closest rival, Babatunde Gbadamosi, of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), who got 3,766 votes in all the 19 wards in Ikorodu.
    He added that ADP got 167 votes, ADC – 107 votes and AAC – 84, out of the 23, 966 total votes cast in the federal constituency election.
    Abiru also won the Lagos East senatorial by-election in Epe Local Government Area.Prof. Elijah Oyeyemi, INEC collation officer in Epe, said that Abiru won with a wide margin of 22,213 out of the total votes cast of 24,678.

    He said the total accredited voters was 24,736 while the total registered voters was 147,074.

    The INEC official said valid votes was 24,296, while voided votes was 382.

  • Photo: Three confirmed dead as truck falls in Lagos river

    Photo: Three confirmed dead as truck falls in Lagos river

    Three people have been confirmed dead as a truck fell into the Epe River from Berger Bridge late Friday night.

    As at Friday night, the number of people in the six tyres truck were uncertain as rescue officials could do nothing this Saturday morning.

    Dr Femi Oke-Osanyintolu, Director General, Lagos State Emergency Management Agency, LASEMA, had said the Agency received information late last night of an accident involving a Volvo tipper that fell off the Berger bridge in Epe into the Epe river.

    “Upon arrival at the scene of incident, it was discovered that the six (6) Tyre Truck was loaded with Sand .The number of people in the truck was unknown.

    “Since it was the late hours of yesterday night, a combined team of Agency responders, Marine Rescue Unit, Nigeria Police and Local Divers have been carrying out Search and Rescue operations.
    No deaths or casualties confirmed at present,” he had said.

    However, on Saturday, Oke-Osanyintolu confirmed that three adult male were brought out of the River dead.

    ”The six (6) Tyre Truck has been located and retrieved along with the bodies of three adult male.

    “A combined team of Agency responders, Marine Rescue Unit (LASWA & LASEMA), Nigeria Police and Local Divers have been carrying out Search and Rescue operations,” he said.

    He said further search by a team of police and LASEMA was still on.

  • LASEMA confirms death of six people in Epe

    LASEMA confirms death of six people in Epe

    The Director- General, Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA), Dr Olufemi Oke-Osanyintolu has comfirmed that six persons died after a truck fell on commercial taxi on Epe Expressway.

    Oke-Osanyintolu told News Agency of Nigerian (NAN) in Lagos that six out of the seven persons involved lost their lives after the accident that occurred earlier on Wednesday.

    According to him, the truck with unknown registration number had fallen on the fully loaded commercial taxi OPEL car with registration number Lagos SMK-312ES.

    ”Seven people were in the crushed car and six of them lost their lives.

    “After the accident, the response team rescued the only surviving man, who was trapped beneath the truck. He is now receiving treatment in the hospital.

    “We have handed over corpses of deceased persons to the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) to transport them to the mortuary.

    “We appeal to members of the public to comply with the COVID-19, lockdown and social distancing guidelines to avoid endangering themselves,” Oke-Osanyintolu said.

    He also urged the rescue workers to follow the social distancing guidelines of the Lagos state government.