Lagos
State Governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola (SAN), Saturday rendered tan
account of the stewardship of his administration in the last 100 days
with an appeal to the citizenry for support, mutual co-existence, ethnic
and religious tolerance as well as obedience to law and order.
Saturday’s event, which is the the 23rd in the series, commemorates the 2,300th
day in office of the present administration and marks a fulfillment of
the Governor’s commitment since 2007 to render to the citizenry, through
town hall meetings with various segments of the society, the account of
the administration’s performance every hundred days.
Addressing
members of the Community Development Committees (CDCs) and Community
Development Associations (CDAs), corporate and private citizens,
religious and traditional rulers as well as artisans and market women
and men at the LTV Blue Roof Hall on Agidingbi Road, Governor Fashola
said the continued development and transformation of the State would
only be possible with the full cooperation of the citizenry in terms of
maintenance of peace, law and order.
The Governor, who enumerated the
various projects executed across the State in the last 100 days,
appealed to the citizenry; “Your support, peaceful co-existence,
religious and ethnic tolerance, discharge of your civic responsibilities
such as payment of taxes and voluntary obedience of laws and
regulations, keeping the peace are all that we ask for, to make your
aspirations materialize”.
Beginning
with the Budget performance in the first and second quarters of the
year, Governor Fashola said the impacts were already being felt in some
projects in the Health Sector, Education Sector and in the area of
infrastructural development as well as other sectors of the economy.
According
to the Governor, such projects include the completion of the Trauma and
Burns Centre in Gbagada, two more flagship Primary Health Care Centres
in Eredo Epe and in Itire, the Folarin Coker Health Centre for public
servants in Alausa, the street light of Carter Bridge, the progress in
the Technical and Vocational Education Colleges as reported during the
State’s Enterprise Day and the reports from the education sector at the
Annual Governor’s Education Award.
On Health, he said while the State
Government’s Health policy remains a matter of non-negotiable
commitment, the honest truth is that free healthcare does not cover
every illness that afflicts the people, adding, “That answer is
insurance. This is the way that I think we can unlock and optimize the
idling capacity and specialties that exist in over 3,000 privately owned
health facilities that ordinary people cannot access”.
Governor
Fashola explained that of the two supplementary budgets presented by
the Government after the second quarter, the first, with the size of N7
billion, was to enable Government finance the building of more houses
under the Lagos Homes Scheme, while the second, amounting to N7.5
billion was for the early acquisition of the Lekki Concession as
provided under the Concession Agreement “in a way that helps us to keep
investor confidence and control any possible increase in the toll fees”.
In
the Education Sector, Governor Fashola expressed joy that more students
are getting into secondary schools from the JSS 1 placement examination
results which, according to him, showed an increase in the number of
candidates from 49,316 in 2012 to an almost doubling of 95,255
candidates in 2013 adding that the results show a pass rate increase in
the examinations from 67.01 percent in 2012 to 96percent in 2013.
“If
you recall that we have since 2011 reviewed conditions of pass from
what was about 30% to a minimum of 50% pass in each of English and
Mathematics in addition to a total aggregate average of an overall of
50% as the minimum pass, you will appreciate the progress that our
children have made and the effort that your Government has made”, the
Governor said.
Expressing
optimism that his administration is heading in the right direction in
terms of its new education policies the Governor added, “I am also able
to report that we have received the results for 2013 WAEC Examinations
which show that out of 51,604 students who sat for the examination,
21,193 secured the five credits in Mathematics and English in one
sitting representing, according to him, a 41.06% pass rate over the 39%
of last year.
“If
you recall that we started from a 7% pass rate in 2007 you will
appreciate how far we have come, to now record an over 41% pass rate”,
the Governor said adding, “For now, all I can say is that, as far as our
children’s education is concerned, we are heading in the right
direction and I see a brighter and rewarding future, even as our work
remains unfinished”.
Throwing
more light on the Government directive that all schools in the State,
whether public or private, should reopen on the same day (September 23),
Governor Fashola said it was aimed at achieving a unified school
calendar for the State adding, “There are many positive consequences for
these, ranging from security planning, transportation planning, career
development to mention a few”.
On Security, the Governor, who said
there has been an aggregate reduction in crime in the State, however,
noted that as a daily growing State, “in a world that is getting
increasingly complex and where no nation is crime free”, the State was
getting its own fair share of problems associated with population
increase with some of its citizens falling victims to crimilals.“But we remain resolute to fight crime and criminals with every resource that we have”, the Governor said, expressing joy that the determination to fight crime in the State has yielded some noteworthy successes against crime and criminals”.
He
listed some of the successes to include arrest of a notorious gang of
five robbers who have been terrorizing the Lagos Island and the
apprehension of the kidnap gang that abducted a number of people
including a Local Government Chairman adding “This was made possible by
the dedication of the officers in the Lagos Command after almost a month
of surveillance that eventually led to the arrest of the criminals”.
“Another notorious gang leader who had
been on the Police wanted list for 14 years, and who had been launching
attacks on our citizens from outside Lagos is now in custody after a
well-planned operation that led to his arrest in his hiding place
outside Lagos”, the Governor said adding that the Command also rescued a
foreign national from kidnappers during the period.
Commending
the gallantry and dedication of the members of the Command, the
Governor declared, “Our officers must be proud of themselves, and so
must all of us be, not only for the work that they have done, but also
the value they give for the support that we give to them from your taxes
and your voluntary contribution to the Lagos State Security Trust Fund,
“especially MTN Nigeria who just gave 25 new patrol values to the Fund
while he urged all citizens to continue to pay their taxes promptly and
to support the Trust Fund with donations.
Another
area where progress was recorded during the last 100 days, Governor
Fashola said, is in the Transportation sector where, according to him,
“the commitment of Government in improving efficiency in public
transportation is yielding results”. Such results include the recent
formal handing over of the 7 kilometer Ibeshe Road, the over 200 inner
city roads currently under construction across the State, the on-going
resuscitation of five ferries retrieved from the Lagos Lagoon.
The
Governor, who said repairs on three of the ferries would be completed
this year so that they could join the 59 already operational ferries on
the States waters, put the monthly passenger ridership on at 1,788,370
passengers per month from 495,010 passengers per month in 2010
expressing joy that work is moving towards conclusion of the Osborne and
Mile Two Jetties preparatory to making them fully functional in a short
while.
On
the implementation of the States Road Traffic Law, the Governor said it
has resulted in the reduction from 646 reported accidents in August
2012 to 118 reported accidents in July 2013 and the reduction in
motorcycle related deaths from an average of 12 in August 2012 to an
average of 1 over the same period, adding, “This justifies the
commitment with which we intervened”.
Governor Fashola warned commercial
motorcyclists who still ride on the restricted roads “either with the
wrong motorcycle or without helmets or without registration plate or
with more than one passenger” to retrace their steps adding, “Nobody
will be allowed to act outside the law made by our House of Assembly.
Our commitment to enforcement remains very high”.
He
also warned operators of tricycles that they must comply to the same
provisions of the Traffic Law relating to safety and the routes they can
operate; mainly the inner streets and not on highways adding that
except for the fact that the tricycles have cabins, they are not
different from the commercial motorcycle.
“However,
we understand that our public transport policies are still developing
and it is not our intention to inflict any hardship on our people who
rely on them. This is why I gave clear directives last year that we will
not seek to enforce the Traffic Law as it relates to them if they keep
off the major highways”, he said.
The Governor promised that other safety
policies under the Traffic Law would soon be unveiled “to make motoring
in our State a happy experience and raise standards to global
competitiveness”.
He
recalled that during period the State hosted the Lagos State
International Table Tennis Championship with 350 participants from 13
countries. According to him, ‘Our sporting centres, hotels and
transporters were kept busy”, adding, “It is the first of a ten Sport
Championships now known as the Lagos Sports Classics”.
Pointing
out that the hosting was a fulfillment of his commitment to Lagosians
at the closing of the 2012 National Sports Festival that the State’s
athletes would be kept busy while keeping all the upgraded sports
facilities in good and efficient use, the Governor said soon the State
would be hosting the athletics events of the Sports Classics and the
remaining other eight sporting events, adding, “So to our sportsmen and
women, get ready for a busy sporting calendar. And to our Ministry of
Sports, coaches and all supporting agencies, I say keep up the good
work”.
Governor
Fashola also reported with joy the verdict of the National Census
Tribunal on the petitions by his administration, on behalf of 14 local
governments in the State against the Census figure allocated to the
State by the National Population Commission after the last 2006 Census
exercise in the country saying as a result of the petitions, the
Tribunal has ordered a recount in 14 out of 20 communities in the State.
The
Governor advised, “No nation that wants to prosper and solve human
challenges should ever be tardy or play politics with data collection
projects such as population census. You cannot manage what you cannot
measure”.
He
also announced the Supreme Court verdict on the State Government’s case
against the Federal Government relating to the latter’s incursion in
the area of tourism saying the the Supreme Court was emphatic in
affirming the position of the State Government that it is only a State
Government and its House of Assembly that have powers to regulate
tourism, with the exception of tourist traffic which deals with issuance
of visas, length of stay and immigration into Nigeria.
He
declared, “Apart from the revenue erosion, the incursions made it
difficult to grow that sector and create jobs, because the operators
were caught between two governments; and understandably were often
unsure of who their appropriate regulator should be, between the State
and the Federal Government” , adding that the victory “is victory for
federalism and for all the 35 other States including the Federal Capital
Territory, Abuja, who can now take their tourism destiny in their own
hands”.
Still
on the courts, Governor Fashola said the State Government was ready to
go to the Supreme Court to challenge the verdict of the Lagos Division
of the Court of Appeal which acquitted Major Al Mustapha on charges of
conspiracy and murder of late Qudirat Abiola.
Governor
Fashola declared, “Because our Constitution permits a further appeal to
the Supreme Court, and because we place the highest premium on every
human life and because the families of the victims deserve every right
to agitate the matter to the final court, just as the accused would have
been entitled, your Government has appealed on behalf of the people to
the Supreme Court”.
Other
areas which the Governor reported include the registration of the All
Progressives Congress (APC),which he said became a reality in spite of
the criticisms of the opposition, commencement of Saturday service in
Government departments such as Lands, Physical Planning, Motor Vehicle
Administration and the Vehicle Inspection service from 10am to 2pm and
the payment of compensations to those who lost property as a result of
the Dana air crash and erection of a cenotaph at the site of the crash
among others.
Noting
that the periodic briefings have helped to deepen the democratic
experience in the State, Governor Fashola said its uniqueness, in the
sense that no other no other government in the country has committed to a
regular 100 day, town hall style meeting, the State Government has
never failed to hold it and has never changed the date.
“It
has been beneficial to you and to us because it keeps us on our toes to
deliver and it reinforces how seriously we hold your mandate and value
your support”, he said adding that apart from the fact that the
administration has remained true to it as a commitment it freely made,
the unsustainable attempt by competitors “to sloppily copy it, in a very
poor imitation about which they have now gone quiet, speaks volumes
about the commitment of your Government”. The credit, he said,
“certainly belongs to all our public servants and officers who work
tirelessly to deliver the progress that I am always delighted to
report”.
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