Tag: Lagos

  • Traffic: Army bans movement of trucks on Lagos bridges

    … Orders articulated vehicle owners to vacate bridges by Thursday

    The Nigerian Army on Wednesday ordered drivers of articulated and other heavy-duty trucks to vacate the Carter Bridge and other overpasses in Lagos with effect from Thursday.

    There were claims that the bridges may buckle under the weight of the articulated trucks and these may have forced the army to swing into action and prevent a major disaster in the nation’s economic and commercial capital.

    The Federal Road Safety Commission ( FRSC ) had last year warned that the gridlocks created by trucks on the bridges were dangerous and had damaging effects on the overpass.

    The movement of the trucks to the bridges followed the state government’s directive to owners and operators of articulated vehicles, trailers, and petroleum tankers to stay away from Apapa and its environs until it finds a lasting solution to the unending traffic bottleneck in the city.

  • Lagos DNA/Forensic Centre records over 350 cases in 6 months – Attorney General

    The Lagos State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr Adeniji Kazeem, on Monday said the state DNA/Forensic Centre received over 350 applications covering different cases since inception.

    Kazeem disclosed the statistics during the opening of the 5th Crime Scene Management Training for some police personnel at the Lagos State DNA/Forensic Centre on Lagos Island.

    The commissioner said that over 50 of the cases had been resolved while others were still undergoing forensic analysis.

    He said that owing to the high incidence of alcohol and drug related accidents and deaths in the state, Gov. Akinwunmi Ambode approved the inclusion of a toxicology unit as an additional forensic section.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Gov. Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State, had on Sept. 27, 2017, inaugurated the Lagos State DNA/Forensic Centre (LSD&FC) at Odunlami Street on Lagos Island.

    The commissioner said that training police officers on forensic matter was important and apt.

    He said that the results from the training would bring about better equipped and well informed personnel that would understand how to manage crime scenes.

    “All over the world, crime scene management requires effective recognition and identification of physical and biological evidence.

    “It also includes the collection and proper preservation of evidence, documents, and the scientific analysis of evidence and the presentation of impartial facts in the court of law.’’

    Kazeem said that the Ministry of Justice had developed a close partnership with the Nigeria Police and the LSD&FC.

    They had jointly conducted several trainings and seminars for police investigators and prosecutors, he said.

    “The evolving partnership between the German Development Cooperation (GIZ),the Nigeria Police Forensic Team and the LSD&FC is significant and indeed a welcome development,” he said.

    Earlier, the Deputy Inspector-General of Police (DIG) in charge of Training and Development, Mr Emmanuel Inyang highlighted what was required to fight crimes.

    He said that crime fighting, prevention and prosecution required special skills, tactics and training to succeed.

    Inyang noted that for modern-day crime investigators to perform their duties effectively, they must undergo sufficient training on regular basis to sharpen their skills.

    He said that crime scene investigation was very critical in the duties of the police.

    He stressed that the basic raw materials for forensic analysis in crime investigation were usually obtained at the scenes of crime.

    “Effective and timely crime scene management and investigation will in most cases result in a positive outcome.

    “Whereas, a shoddy crime scene investigation will often produce unresolved cases by the police which normally leads to failure of criminal charges in court,’’ he said.

    The DIG commended the German Development Cooperation office in the country and other partners for the capacity building.

    He urged the participants drawn from Oyo,Osun,Ondo,Lagos States as well as from Zone 11 to pay serious attention to the training.

    The Deputy Project Manager of German Development Cooperation in Nigeria, Mr Hartmut Xander said the training was special.

    He said that forensic analysis was the overall law process in any case.

    Xander said he was happy to witness the joint training with the active involvement of the Lagos State Government.

    He said he was optimistic that the participants would be taken through all the major forensic processes, including disaster management within the duration of the programme.

     

  • 2019: Otedola drums support for Ambode, predicts Lagos will become Africa’s third largest economy

    Billionaire businessman Femi Otedola on Sunday predicted that Lagos will become the third largest economy in Africa by the end of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s tenure.

    He said given the governor’s stellar performance, the state would move up from its current fifth position.

    Otedola canvassed support for Ambode’s second term so as to continue with the good work, which he said is a continuation of “the foundation laid by his good predecessors.”

    Otedola, who hails from Epe, is the son of the aborted Third Republic Governor of the state, the late Chief Michael Otedola, who was in charge between 1992 and 1993.

    In a statement yesterday, entitled ‘Ambode has done overwhelmingly well’ Otedola, said:

    As a Lagosian and OMO Ibile, I wish to expressly commend and appreciate The great good work our amiable Governor Ambode is doing in our dear Lagos – Nigeria’s no one State. I have watched and followed keenly, in the last three years of the brilliant transformation projects across the State. No doubt, Ambode is building on the foundations laid by his good predecessors. He is building roads and bridges, schools and hospitals, water treatment plants, sewage and storm water drainages, solid wastes management plants and mass transportation infrastructure.

    He has recently gotten approved the electricity power infrastructure for Lagos, which when fully executed, will make Lagos State almost energy independent in Nigeria. You are all aware of the newly-acquired mass transit buses that are going to be natural gas-powered in order for us in Lagos to be the first to comply with the global climate agenda of DE Carbonisations. Clean and Smart Lagos will take us into the modern global village and make us the number four economy in Africa.

    Our visionary governor is also spearheading the modernisation of the Lagos State bureaucracy in order to get all the processes re-engineered for higher and best performances. A good government is a reflection of an efficient and responsive bureaucracy. It is the catalytic driver for private sector growth. A bad and weak bureaucracy will produce nothing for the people. We are lucky to have an able governor like Ambode at the helm of our affairs.

    He is a knowledge-driven leader, hard working, with passion for our great state.

    My endorsement and recommendations for him to have a second term is performance based and not just the usual conventional charade of second term endorsement in Nigeria. I am sure that all my respected compatriots, friends and followers will agree with me that Governor Ambode should please continue with his good job till 2023.

    Ambode, please Carry Go, the 2019 election and continue with your passionate work for Lagos State transformation.

    Thank you for being a true servant leader and with your eyes on the ball, surely Lagos State will become number three economy in Africa.”

     

  • [FULL SPEECH] Why Lagos, Kano connection is fundamental to Nigeria – Osinbajo

    Any student of colonial history will confirm that perhaps the smartest economic decision made by the British was the Lagos-Kano rail, an amalgamation of the Lagos-Ibadan and the Baro-Kano rail in 1912. This sparked off the creation of other rail routes across the country, such that by 1930, there was a unified rail system in four districts. Following the Lago-Kano plot, the rail routes were to move goods and commerce from the Nigerian hinterland to the coast for export.

    So the Western district tapped agricultural produce such as cocoa for export. The Northern district focused on the traffic of groundnuts and cotton, while the North-eastern with headquarters in Bauchi and Eastern district with headquarters in Enugu, developed the coal region and evacuation of oil palm and palm produce.

    I have taken this quick historical digression to demonstrate that any serious planning of local and international commerce in Nigeria must take the Lagos-Kano connection seriously, especially its catalytic role for commerce across the country.

    This is why their Excellencies, the Governors of Lagos and Kano State deserve our commendation for this landmark gathering. This summit for the first time, brings together two of Nigeria’s most demographically significant states and its major centres of commerce, with a combined share of 37 per cent of our National GDP, to explore opportunities for leveraging their individual and combined economic potentials for the benefit of their citizens and the entire country. As salespeople will say, this is truly a buy-one-get-one-free opportunity for investors, policy makers and all who have a stake in the economic future of Nigeria.

    It is not out of place to say that, by virtue of their commercial and demographic importance, where Lagos and Kano go, so Nigeria follows.

    The clout of the two cities extends well beyond the borders of Nigeria, Lagos is arguably the most important coastal city in all of Africa, just as Kano has historically served as a major crossroads on the trans-Saharan trade route that stretches into the Mediterranean and has lasted more than a thousand years in doing so.

    I think Lagos and Kano states have by this collaboration underscored a cornerstone of the federal government’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan, namely the leveraging of synergies among States, and between governments and the private sector.

    The strategic role of the federal government is, of course, the creation of an enabling environment for commerce beginning with the provision of infrastructure. For us, what this meant especially in the context of the Lagos and Kano collaboration is the refurbishing of the Narrow Gauge Lagos to Kano rail; with a concession to General Electric, which proposes to invest almost 2 billion dollars in ensuring that the rail route is effective for movement of cargo from the Apapa port to Kano. Similarly, we are investing in a Lagos-Kano Standard Gauge line, the Lagos-Ibadan portion of that is expected to be ready by the end of the year.

    Similarly, this year, we have budgeted N80 billion for the development of Special Economic Zones in the six geopolitical zones of the country. Part of the plan is to develop Nigeria as the garment manufacturer to the world, using the Lagos SEZ as a garment manufacturing hub, especially because we have become cost competitive with higher costs of production due to higher wages in China. So most of the so called sunset industries in China are looking for a destination, and it is clear that Lagos is that destination. But there is a natural synergy between the textile industry in Kano, which had before now declined due to unfair competition from cheap Chinese imports. So we expect to see the resuscitation of the Kano textile industry, in response to the garment manufacturing demand in Lagos.

    Power has remained a major cost factor and an inhibitor for the expansion of industrial activity in Nigeria. We have taken a multi- dimensional approach, by working on both off-grid and on-grid solutions led by the private sector. So by May this year, we will be adding 450 MW to the national grid when the Azura project in Edo goes live. This is the first fully privately financed power plant in Nigeria. And test power of about 30-50MW is now on the grid preparatory to the May start off.

    At the same time, we are putting off-grid solar capacity in small clusters in key commercial centres. In collaboration with the Kano State Government, we are, with a wholly owned Nigerian company, installing a solar stand-alone system to power the Sabongari market. When completed, it will provide power for 12,000 of the shops and enterprises there. At the moment, it is providing power for about 1000 shops. The assembly plant for the system itself is in Kano.

    A luggage train derailed and got stuck at Omi-Adio railway crossing along Abeokuta-Ibadan road.

    In Lagos, we are looking at possible power solutions for the printers in the Somolu printing cluster. As I said, our emphasis and intervention is on small business clusters. And in collaboration with Lagos government and private sector owner of the IPP at Marina, we are building a distribution network that will take metered power to the Sura market.

    In Ariara market in Aba, we are working with a wholly Nigerian owned company to supply power to Ariara Market’s 31,000 shops through a dedicated gas fired IPP. This is already the largest SME hub in West Africa. All meters for these projects are all locally manufactured meters. Electricity bills will be 20 per cent cheaper than what they currently pay.

    We expect that, in the next few months, mobile payments will come on stream; in other words, people will be able to pay using their mobile phones. We expect that this will greatly assist the retailing of power to small businesses, amongst other businesses.

    At the moment, there is a 4 per cent charge on payment platforms for making these kinds of payment, but once we get the mobile payment system going, that charge will become more competitive.

    Lagos and Kano have also proved that the federal system we operate, which to some extent, guarantees the autonomy of states is not necessarily meant to make the states islands unto themselves, but also to strengthen our corporate and national commercial appeal.

    Both states are the frontline states in the ease of doing business reforms being implemented by the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council (PEBEC), which I have the privilege of chairing. Not only are both states key members of the council, they have also demonstrated remarkable support and collaboration, since the reforms started.

    By working together, we have achieved reforms in the processes around the issuance of construction permits, and the registration of property. On account of these reforms and others we were last year adjudged by the World Bank as one of the top 10 most improved economies in the world.

    PEBEC is thankful for this enthusiasm and collaboration of Governors Akinwunmi Ambode and Abdullahi Umar Ganduje and their administrations and all of the support they have shown to the work of PEBEC. And it is that same enthusiastic collaboration that is manifesting today, in this first-of-a-kind joint Economic and Investment Summit.

    This year, we are working again collaboratively to achieve reforms in the areas of enforcing contracts, registering property, and the issuance of construction permits. Success in these areas will put us firmly on the path of achieving our goal of being a top 100 economy by 2020.

    Permit me to take a quick peek into the future, which, as is often said, is already here with us. One of the key drivers of economic prosperity is competition; in this case, competition among Sub-nationals or States and nations. As the world becomes flatter with technology, that will be even more the case. One great example comes to mind, of how this competition might play out. In 2017, Amazon, the American retail and technology giant, announced plans to open a second headquarters in North America. What was interesting was that instead of making the decision entirely an in-house one, as companies usually do, Amazon chose to let cities across the United States, Canada and Mexico, bid for what you might call the hosting rights for the Amazon headquarters 2, as the project later came to be known.

    More than 200 cities submitted bids, and Amazon announced a shortlist of 20 cities just last month. A final announcement, of the winning city, is now pending.

    Why is this important? The city that will host Amazon headquarters 2 will enjoy more than $5 billion in construction investment alone, not to talk of the tens of thousands of direct and indirect jobs that Amazon will bring to the city, and the multiplier effect on the local transportation, hospitality and entertainment industries, and the additional investment that other companies will bring because of Amazon’s presence in that city.

    Now think about what this development might mean for Nigeria in the decades ahead; when companies make important decisions about citing their offices and industries primarily based on how easy a State makes it for people to do business in it. States that make it easy for investors to acquire land, register property, pay taxes, and access broadband internet will be the clear winners, while States that make these things difficult or impossible will languish as the world carries on around them.

    Your Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen, that competitive scenario I have just outlined, is the future of the world. Indeed, there are theorists and thinkers who now argue that, going by current and projected rates of urbanization, cities, not countries, will propel the economies of the future and ultimately determine the fate of humankind.

    It may sound far-fetched right now to imagine that city economies will in some way displace nation-states in global importance, but you only need to consider the fact that in many cases, cities around the world existed longer than the countries to which they belong. Lagos and Kano, as much cities as they are States, both predate the existence of Nigeria.

    Long before Nigeria existed as we know it today, both cities existed as important regional centres of trade and commerce. It is a given that they will continue well into the future, increasingly gaining clout and influence.

    With the opening up of national borders across West Africa and even the entire continent, there will be even more room for both cities to assert themselves economically; to seize rapidly emerging opportunities, to ride on the waves of investment and innovation to become truly globally competitive, and to show the way to the rest of Nigeria.

    On our part, the Federal Government will support the efforts of all State Governments to reform their economies, attract investment, and collaborate with one another. The days when the Federal Government would seek to undermine Governors and their administrations are now well behind us. The State Governors would be the first to attest to the fact that President Buhari is deeply committed to helping every State in Nigeria achieve its full economic potential.

    We are seeing unprecedented levels of National–subnational engagement, especially through the mechanism of the National Economic Council. One of the driving philosophies of that Council is fiscal transparency; as a Federal Government, we have been careful to not hold back information from the States, because we realise that development can only happen in an atmosphere of trust and collaboration.

    Over the next two days there will be robust conversations around governance, infrastructure, fiscal matters, tourism, security, the knowledge economy, and other issues. I am confident that these discussions will throw up useful insights and opportunities for learning, all of which I’m sure will be documented for future relevance.

    I am also confident that investors and businesses will leave this Summit with increased knowledge about the opportunities for investment in Lagos and Kano States, and with greater optimism for the future.

    The Federal Government will be paying serious attention to the outcome of this Summit, to help guide and direct our engagements with the States.

    Let me again commend Governors Ganduje and Ambode for this historic business and investment summit, and also commend Governor Ganduje for making the rather long journey to Lagos. I must also say that Governor Ambode deserves special mention for his farsightedness in establishing collaboration; working with Governor Atinuke Bagudu of Kebbi on the famous Lake Rice, and even leasing land from Ogun State to grow rice, which is another act of collaboration, very well done.

    While thanking you for your attention, it is now my special pleasure and privilege to declare this summit formally open.

     

    Thank you.

  • Only Lagos pays workers as at when due – TUC

    The president of the Trade Union Congress (TUC), Bobboi Kaigama, has said only Lagos State Government pays workers on its payroll as at when due.

    The TUC boss said the other 35 state governments all owed their workers’ salaries and other entitlements despite the federal government’s bailout and Paris Club refunds.

    The TUC president made this disclosure on Friday at the Congress’ National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Lagos. A communique from the event was circulated to the media on Wednesday.

    Kaigama warned against diversion of money meant for workers’ salaries as well as other benefits into electioneering expenditure by state governments.

    “We want to say without fear of contradiction that the only healthy state in this country that has no arrears of salaries and other wages or unpaid benefits is Lagos State. All the other states have one issue or the other in terms of salaries, wages or benefits of their workers that have not been paid. There is no exception.

    “You will find out that, if it is not one month’s salary that is not paid, it would be 13 months of gratuities or pensions that have not been paid. Or that contributory pension deductions are not being remitted or that there are certain promotion arrears and death benefits that have not been paid. So, I am telling you, taking this issue holistically, we can only say Lagos State is the only healthy state in this country.”

    “We keep saying that, if state governors cannot meet their obligations to their workers, they should just resign and leave the stage. We have continued to argue that, apart from the first generation states that were created by the military, there is no state that was created thereafter that did not have its submission that the state had the capacity to pay the wages of the workers in the state and other things.”

    He said the view that Nigeria should return to regional government was not misplaced because the trust of workers in state government has been eroded.

    “So, if it is just for the purposes of payment of salaries, no other developmental issues like infrastructure, health facilities, roads, rails transportation and so on, we are better off with regional government,” the TUC president said.

    Kaigama added that corruption is what has made governors to owe workers.

    Kaigama’s claim of states’ indebtness to workers has however been faulted by some states like Enugu where its Nigeria Labour Congress chairman said the state government does not owe any worker.

  • Lagos student, four others killed as police, hoodlums clash in Mushin

    Not less than five people including a student and a policeman were feared killed in cult-related violence in Mushin area of Lagos on Monday and yesterday.

    Two traders were killed inside Ladipo International Market on Monday evening by suspected cultists. A policeman, a hoodlum and a pupil died during a clash at Idi-Oro area in Mushin.

    The pandemonium was reportedly occurred after police team raided a shop on Elegba Street, where some hoodlums sold hemp. The hoodlums attacked the policemen with broken bottles and stones in retaliation.

    One of the affected victim

    The cops, who retreated, reportedly returned with reinforcements and engaged the hoodlums in a gun battle.

    TheNewsGuru.com learnt that the police shot tear gas canisters into Ansar-Ud-Deen Secondary School.

    A witness, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the police shot tear gas canisters into two private secondary schools –Ansarudeen Comprehensive College and Amazing Grace Secondary School – where some pupils were choked.

    A pupil of Amazing Grace, Samuel Okechukwu, who was asthmatic, reportedly died.

    The source said, “The police had been raiding Akala and Idi-Oro for some weeks now and carrying away bags of hemp. The hoodlums believe that the police resell them. They had been planning to fight back.

    “Last night (Monday), a man on Elegba Street took delivery of hemp worth N7m and the police got information about it. Around 11am, the policemen, led by the Area Commander, Area D Mushin, Akinbayo Olusoji, headed for the shop and seized the hemp.

    “The residents, who had been enraged by previous raids, mobilised and launched an attack. They threw stones, broken bottles and other items at the policemen.

    “The policemen returned with reinforcements. Three people were shot dead. They fired two tear gas canisters into Ansarudeen Comprehensive College on Alhaji Lasisi Street and another one entered into Amazing Grace Secondary School on Elegba Street. Many of the pupils were affected. A boy died in Amazing Grace.”

     

  • Chinese girl rides bicycle from Morocco to Lagos

    A Chinese female cyclist, Huang Shuang, who rode from Morocco to Lagos, Nigeria, within five months, says she is convinced that anybody can achieve anything he or she determines to do.

    Huang, also known as CICI, told our reporters in Lagos on Monday that she was inspired to embark on ‘`cycling around the world’’ after riding around her country.

    The cyclist said that her experience in China motivated her to begin global cycling in America where she covered about 5,500 km in two months.

    “I am glad that I have also been able to ride from Morocco to Lagos, Nigeria.

    “ This is an indication that irrespective of our sex, we can achieve anything we set out to do.

    “The whole idea about my cycling started when, one day, I decided to embark on a cycling trip around my country, China.

    “After the trip around China, I was motivated to take my first cycling around the world to America, where I covered about 5,500km in two months.

    “Now, I am in Lagos from Morocco, after I flew from America to France, where I cycled around Europe for four months, before taking ferry from Spain to Morocco,’’ she said.

    Huang said that she always travelled with money, noodles, tent, sleeping bag, clothes and bicycle repair accessories.

    The cyclist, who left Morocco for Lagos on Sept. 6, 2017, said that her trip was fascinating though she experienced tiredness, robbery, accidents and sleeping under bridges and in gas stations.

    Huang said that she crossed the desert within six days and was well received by many African villages.

    The cyclist said that, sometimes, she happily ate local meals made by the villagers.

    ‘`I have happily sung and danced with children in different African villages and communities where I passed the nights or stopped to cook.

    “I have seen the most beautiful sunset, the most stunning mountain views, breath-taking lakes and virgin forests across Africa.

    ‘`My trip has also exposed me to many African children still living in poverty, hunger, without education and basic amenities,’’ she said.

    The Chinese said that she would be cycling to about 33 countries in the next three years, adding that she would continue her cycling from Lagos to Cameroon, Gabon, Congo, Angola, Namibia, South Africa, East Africa and some other countries.

    Huang said that her cycling was also informed by her desire to interact with children in African communities before inaugurating a free lunch for them in 2018.

    The cyclists said that she hoped to raise some money for the benefit to about 2,000 children.

  • Police nab 13 cross-border, cyber criminals in Lagos

    The police in Lagos said they have arrested 13 suspected cross-border and cyber criminals, including four Beninois who specialised in snatching exotic cars in Nigeria for sale in Benin Republic.

    Parading the suspects before newsmen on Tuesday, the Commissioner of Police in Lagos State, Edgar Imohimi, said the command arrested six men who specialised in generating users’ bank details from stolen phones.

    According to the police commissioner, the command also recovered hard drugs worth over N90 million from three suspects at Akala area of Mushin, Lagos.

    Narating how the Beninois gang, at gun point, snatched a Toyota Prado from a victim using an ATM machine in Victoria Island, Imohimi said:

    “Their exploits started on Jan. 21 at Ajose Adeogun, Victoria Island, Lagos when the owner of a Toyota Prado jeep went to use a Zenith Bank ATM.

    “After using the ATM, before he could drive off his car, the three hoodlums that had been stalking him forced him out of the car to the back seat and drove him off with his car.

    “He was later stripped naked and dropped somewhere at Ikoyi while his car was driven away with mobile phones, a laptop computer and N45,000 cash.

    ” When the hoodlums got to Ikoyi, they sighted a couple in a Toyota Jeep buying barbecue at Southern Sun area. The hoodlums forcefully took control of the car and drove the victims away.

    “The victim’s wife was later dropped at a junction before Third Mainland Bridge while the husband was dropped off on Third Mainland Bridge.

    ” After a careful analysis and undercover operations, on Feb. 11, the group were intercepted at Mile 2 while on a mission.

    “An AK-47 rifle, 43 AK-49 ammunitions, one locally made cut to size double barrel gun, six live cartridges, one licensed plate number and assorted charms were recovered from the hoodlums,” he said.

    A native doctor who specialised in making charms for the hoodlums was also paraded along with the suspects.

    Imohimi said that the six cyber criminals specialised in stealing mobile phones from which they generate users’ bank details and withdraw money from their bank accounts.

    “On Feb. 7, at 6pm, a woman reported to the police at Egbeda that her sister’s phone was stolen at a birthday party.

    “When the victim went for sim card replacement, as soon as she inserted her sim into her phone, she received a bank alert of N1.15 million transfered from her account to other banks.

    “After investigation, a gang who specialise in dispossessing victims of their mobile phones with the use of motorcycle was apprehended.

    “The gang is made up of two groups. One specialise in snatching the mobile phone and sell to the other group that work on the Sim cards to generate bank details and BVN to transfer money from the account.

    “Ten laptops, one Infinix mobile phone and 10 Sim cards were recovered from the hoodlums,” Imohimi said.

    He called on victims of the cyber fraudsters, especially those whose phones were stolen at Iyana-Ipaja, Iba, Festac and Alaba, to come to the command.

    Imohimi said that 183 wraps of drugs suspected to be Marijuana,129 wraps of substance suspected to be cocaine and bottled hard drugs worth over N90m were recovered at a criminals’ hideout in Akala.

     

  • Lagos APC Reps endorse Ambode for second term

    Members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the House of Representatives from Lagos State on Saturday endorsed Gov. Akinwunmi Ambode for a second term in office.

    The APC caucus in the House, led by the Majority Leader, Mr Femi Gbajabiamila, presented a letter to the governor at the Lagos House in Alausa, Ikeja, asking him to re-contest in 2019.

    Gbajabiamila said the decision to unanimously endorse Ambode for a second term was as a result of his brilliant performance in office in the last two and a half years.

    Gbajabiamila said the lawmakers were proud to be associated with the achievements of the governor so far, and would be supporting him all the way for another term in office.

    “We are members of the House of Representatives APC caucus from Lagos State.

    “We all came into Lagos today to perform a very unique and sacred duty; something we did not take very lightly at all; something we deliberated over a couple of days ago and we spoke with one voice.

    “Because of the giant strides of our amiable governor in the last two and a half years in governing the state, we sat together and we decided without a dissenting voice to seek his audience and endorse him for re-election in 2019 as the governor of Lagos State,” he said.

    The House Leader described the endorsement as history repeating itself, as the caucus was the first to endorse the governor for election in 2015.

    He said it was instructive that there was not a single dissenting voice in the decision to support Gov. Ambode for re-election.

    Gbajabiamila urged the governor to see the endorsement as a call to do more for the people of the state, come 2019.

    Responding, Ambode thanked the federal legislators for the honour done to him, saying the endorsement would spur him to do more for the people.

    “I am greatly humbled to receive the APC caucus in the House of Representatives from Lagos State.

    “I am more delighted that this word of encouragement by way of this letter is to inspire me further to continue to render service to the good people of Lagos.

    “I want to thank you so much for the honour you have done me; I receive it with all humility and I pray that God gives us the grace to actually honour all the letters and the words in this message,” Ambode said.

  • FAAN revenue increases by 68 % from automated MMIA car park

    The Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) says monthly revenue has gone up by 68 per cent following the introduction of automated operation at the new car park at the Murtala Muhammed Airport (MMIA), Lagos.

    Mrs Henrietta Yakubu, General Manager, Corporate Communications, FAAN, told newsmen in Lagos on Tuesday that the automation had blocked revenue loopholes since the exercise began at the car park on Jan. 8.

    She said the new system had also reduced rowdiness and vehicular traffic associated with the manual toll collection at the park.

    Yakubu said FAAN would review the performance of the exercise by the end of this quarter and make adjustments where necessary for better service delivery.

    She explained that the authority decided to overhaul the whole system to restore orderliness and reduce complaints from passengers and airport users.

    “Then, we were wondering if all the people that park their vehicles at the car park are airport workers and travelers.

    “Also, we are in an era of technology where people no longer do things manually, but automated.

    “That was what prompted FAAN into introducing automation in its operations. Since we started, there has been a lot of sanity at the car park; there is a lot of orderliness,’’she said.

    According to her, the long queues experienced in the past has been brought under control.

    “If you are not dropping, you are encouraged to go to the car park and do your business there, rather than parking on the road and creating traffic jam,” she added.

    Yakubu said FAAN was also planning to construct a multi-storey automated car park within the General Aviation Terminal, explaining that it would help to boost the agency’s revenue generation.

    Yakubu also disclosed that FAAN was also working on the poor toilet facility at the International Wing of the MMIA.

    “We are doing complete overhaul of the facility so that we can have new toilets for users.

    “We have been getting a lot of complaints from our customers on the state of our toilets. You know MMIA is an old airport and what we are doing is in line with our core value of comfort for passengers and other users of the airport.

    “We believe it’s necessary for us to remove obsolete ones and replace them with new ones, while we are waiting for a new terminal,” she added.