Tag: Lagos

  • NGOs tackle teenage pregnancy, empower 300 Lagos youths

    NGOs tackle teenage pregnancy, empower 300 Lagos youths

    By Angela Onwuzoo

    A non-governmental organisation, Youth Development and Empowerment Initiative has empowered over 300 adolescents in seven communities in Ibeju Lekki Local Government Area of Lagos State, with the right information on sexual and reproductive health and rights, to reduce the rate of teenage pregnancy in the area.

    YEDI disclosed that over 80 per cent of teenagers in those communities get unplanned pregnancies and abuse substances because they lack the right information about their sexual reproductive health.

    Collaborating with Ishk Tolaram Foundation and Lagos Free Zone,  YEDI, and its technical partner, GrassrootSoccer implemented Skillz for health in the area to improve the health and well-being of adolescents and youths in those communities.

    The seven benefiting communities include Itoke, Ilekuru, Oke-segun, MagbonSegun, Okunraye, Alasia and Idotun.

    Speaking at a town hall meeting on the outcome of the assessment carried out in the area in June 2023, YEDI’s Executive Director, Adeoye Oluwatomisin, regretted that going by their assessment, the teenagers in those communities lack the right SRH information, adding that such knowledge gap predisposes them to risky behaviours.

    She explained, “Some of the girls said they took a pack of Panadol just to do an abortion, they don’t know the implication of that on their health both now and in future.

    “Even simple things like their menstruation, they don’t have the right information about it. Some of them will just see that blood is flowing because their parents either don’t have the right information or they are not even well equipped to engage the young people.

    “You might even see the young people taking drugs, or abusing substances to get high.
    “So we are here to give them the right information. We have a curriculum that is evidence-based and has been used for some time. It’s been developed by our technical partner. It has been used in over 120 countries.”

    Oluwatomisin said YEDI will be using football and other physical activities to drive home the right  SRH messages to the youths.

    “We are going to be using football to engage them so that they won’t be bored. They will learn even beyond the programme and they can always call us if they are facing further challenges.
    “There are three cohorts, the first set will finish and there is now the evaluation. We also have second and third sets. We are reaching out to a minimum of 300 adolescents.

    “We are going to have experts from NDLEA to talk about drug abuse and Mirabel centre to advise them because we have some of them being abused by their parents, brothers, uncles and neighbours,” the executive director stated.

    Human Resources Manager at Lagos Free Zone, Ibeju Lekki, Beatrice Atipo, said they were supporting the initiative because the majority of the young girls get impregnated before their adolescent age.

    Afipo said, “Over the years that we have been here, we have noticed that the majority of these young girls are being impregnated before the adolescent age.
    The majority of them don’t go to school and they don’t know anything about sexual acts. So bringing this to them is to sensitise them to know more about it and how to abstain from what they are not supposed to do.

    “Majority of them don’t know how to say no to sexual advances and over 80 percent of the girls here are getting pregnant.

    “When children between 10 and 18 get pregnant their lifestyle will change, they won’t be able to go to school and if such an act is being eradicated from a community, it will be of benefit to Lagos Free Zone and the society at large.

    “If they are not pregnant at that age, they will be able to further their education, be useful to themselves, to their parents and Lagos free zone and we can employ them to work in our company, that’s why we are doing this.”

    A community member, Mr. Matthew Oluwaponmile commending the initiative added, “Out of 100 percent, only 30 percent know about their SRH.

    “You will see a child of 16 and 17 already pregnant and some can not even account for who’s responsible for the pregnancy.”

    Also, a traditional ruler in the community,  Jamuiyi Olalekan welcomed the initiative, saying, “The issue of drug abuse, and teenage pregnancy are very rampant in this community and I believe that 90 per cent of the cause is a parental failure. The parents do not know about sexual matters. And truly, it’s very rampant here in our area.”

    Copyright Reportr Door

    All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from Reportr Door.

    Contact: [email protected]

  • LG, firm renovate school in Lagos community

    LG Electronics Nigeria, in partnership with consumer electronics retailer, Fouani Nigeria Limited has partnered to renovate and equip the United Christian Junior Secondary School building in Apapa, Apapa Local Government…

    The post LG, firm renovate school in Lagos community appeared first on The Nation Newspaper.

  • Lagos loses N4tn annually to traffic congestion – Report

    Lagos loses N4tn annually to traffic congestion – Report

    A recent study conducted by the Danne Institute for Research disclosed that Lagos, the commercial hub of Nigeria, is losing a staggering N4tn annually, attributed to profound traffic congestion.

    The study, titled ‘Behavioural Causes of Traffic Congestion in Lagos,’ funded by the Bank of Industry and Africa Finance Corporation, underscored the need for immediate action to alleviate the economic and social toll.

    The report was presented on Wednesday in Lagos.

    According to the Executive Director of the Danne Institute for Research, Franca Ovadje the staggering loss could otherwise be directed toward vital sectors such as education, healthcare, and infrastructure development.

    The report identifies behavioral factors as the primary culprits, including poor road infrastructure, violation of traffic laws, activities of agberos at bus stops, and buses picking up passengers.

    Ovadje emphasized that the 21 million-strong population of Lagos is not translating into corresponding productivity due to the crippling impact of traffic jams on daily life.

    The report suggests that doubling the population in developing countries should result in a 5 to 6 per cent growth in productivity.

    Respondents, who expressed traffic congestion as their top challenge, proposed solutions that focus on road construction, repairs, and maintenance, along with a ban on agberos and stringent enforcement of traffic laws.

    The report calls on government authorities to prioritize these recommendations to enhance productivity, attract investments, and generate substantial internally generated revenue through law enforcement.

    The report also highlights that Lagosians spend an average of 2.21 hours commuting daily, with 45 percent spending more than two hours.

    “Areas like Ajah, Etiosa, and Apapa bear the brunt, necessitating urgent measures such as nighttime road construction, creation of alternative routes during construction, and strict enforcement of traffic laws,” the report noted.

    As the Lagos State Government concludes works on the Lekki Coastal Road Construction, the report advocates for sustained efforts to prevent further traffic woes.

    It calls for strict penalties, and increased deployment of LASTMA officials, police, and even soldiers to manage traffic effectively.

    The report concludes by urging a comprehensive campaign against touts and corrupt traffic wardens to restore discipline and order to Lagos roads, essential for transforming the city into a livable and prosperous metropolis.

    In 2022, former Permanent Secretary in the Lagos State Ministry of Transport, Taiwo Salaam, said if the traffic congestion in the densely populated Lagos should continue unaddressed till 2030, the city is estimated to lose as much as $21bn every month.

  • Lagos to deworm 1.4m school pupils

    Lagos to deworm 1.4m school pupils

    By Angela Onwuzoo

    In a move to tackle Soil-Transmitted Helminthiasis, the Lagos State Government has initiated a free school-based mass deworming programme across 10 endemic local government areas in the state.

    Soil-transmitted helminth infections according to the World Health Organisation are caused by different species of parasitic worms.

    They are transmitted by eggs present in human faeces, which contaminate the soil in areas where sanitation is poor.

    Partnering with the Federal Ministry of Health and a non-governmental organisation, Evidence Action, the state government said the free mas deworming exercise is targeting 1.4 million school-aged children between five and 14 years old, who are susceptible to parasitic worm infections in the state.

    Speaking at the flag-off of the exercise at CMS Primary School, Bariga, the state’s Commissioner for Health, Professor Akin Abayomi, explained that the mass deworming exercise will be held in 10 soil-transmitted helminthiasis endemic local governments including Ajeromi-Ifelodun, Amuwo-Odofin, Apapa, Badagry, Epe, Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos Island, Lagos Mainland, Ojo and Shomolu.

    Abayomi who was represented by the state’s Neglected Tropical Diseases Coordinator, Mrs Modupe Dawodu, further disclosed that the exercise would run for five days, from Tuesday 21st to Saturday 25th November 2023.

    He added that children, aged five and 14 years, in schools and communities in the 10 LGAs will be dewormed and treated for soil-transmitted helminthiasis using Mebendazole Tablets (500mg) during the exercise.

    He said, “The Lagos State Ministry of Health is happy to collaborate with the Federal Ministry of Health and Evidence Action to commence implementation of the school-based deworming exercise targeting children five to 14 years to treat soil-transmitted helminthiasis using Mebendazole; a medication used to treat infections caused by worms.

    “This round of treatment will focus on 10 endemic LGAs – Ajeromi-Ifelodun, Amuwo-Odofin, Apapa, Badagry, Epe, Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos Island, Lagos Mainland, Ojo and Shomolu reaching approximately over 1.4 million at-risk children in public and private primary and junior secondary schools and the communities with safe and free medicines received from the Federal Ministry of Health through the World Health Organisation drug donation program to be administered at no cost to eligible children.”

    Abayomi noted that school-based deworming is an important evidence-based strategy to treat children at risk of parasitic worm infections, adding that teachers and community health workers have been trained to safely and effectively administer the medicines to the children.

    While urging residents in the affected LGAs to take advantage of the exercise, the commissioner noted that the exercise reflects the state government’s commitment toward a worm-free state for all, especially school-aged children.

    Also speaking, Country Director of Evidence Action, Tope Ogunbi, who was represented by the Senior Program Manager, Maryann Edeh, noted that the school-based deworming programme is an effective and cost-effective strategy to ensure that the diseases disrupting the educational growth of children are treated.

    She noted that the mass deworming campaign reflects the commitment of the Lagos State government through the ministries of health, basic education and State Universal Education Board and Evidence Action towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals One and Three as well as the Government’s top health priorities in reducing poverty.

    The Country Director explained that Evidence Action has delivered over 1.8 billion deworming treatments globally and is happy to continue to support governments across the world and in Nigeria with cost-effective and evidence-based health interventions to reduce the burden of poverty.

    Ogunbi stressed that Evidence Action through the Deworm the World program is proud to collaborate with the Lagos State Ministry of Health to provide mass deworming treatment of STH targeting 1.4 million children across the 10 endemic LGAs through active collaboration with other line ministries in partnership with the Federal Ministry of Health.

    “Public school teachers and community health workers have been trained to safely and effectively administer this medicine to children, during the school days, and in communities with supervision and support of frontline health workers in the state”, she said.

    She encouraged parents residing in the affected LGAs where the exercise is being held to ensure that their children and wards within the target age bracket receive deworming treatment, noting that the treatment is free and effective.

    Copyright Reportr Door

    All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from Reportr Door.

    Contact: [email protected]

  • Lagos to introduce monthly physical fitness programme

    Lagos to introduce monthly physical fitness programme

    Samuel Bolaji

    The Lagos State Sports Commission, in collaboration with the Office of the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Sports, Damilare Orimoloye, has concluded plans to flag off the inaugural edition of the “Keep-fit Lagos” monthly aerobics programme, designed to improve the physical and mental wellbeing of the people of Lagos.

    The Director-General, Lagos State Sports Commission, Oluwatoyin Gafaar, disclosed this recently at the Mobolaji Johnson Sports Centre, Rowe Park, Yaba, a statement said on Tuesday.

    Gafaar noted that the LSSC was concerned about the fitness and wellness of Lagos residents and their desire to live a healthy lifestyle, adding that every nook and cranny of the state would feel the impact of the exercise.

    He said the commission would do everything within its powers to ensure a successful monthly exercise.

    He stated further that the initiative, which is scheduled to be flagged off on Saturday, December 9, 2023, at the Mobolaji Johnson Arena, Onikan (formerly known as the Onikan Stadium), was in line with the T.H.E.M.E.S.+ agenda of Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, adding that the programme would promote inclusiveness among the residents while enabling them to bond and imbibe the culture of physical fitness for optimal performance.

    Copyright Reportr Door

    All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from Reportr Door.

    Contact: [email protected]

  • Airtel, smartcash claim 22 awards at Lagos Advertising and Ideas Festival 2023

    Leading telecommunications network Airtel and its subsidiary, Smartcash Payment Service Bank, have been recognied at the highly esteemed LAIF (Lagos Advertising and Ideas Festival) awards with a significant haul of…

    The post Airtel, smartcash claim 22 awards at Lagos Advertising and Ideas Festival 2023 appeared first on The Nation Newspaper.

  • Lagos agog as 1XBET cup final holds Thursday  – Sporting Tribune

    Lagos agog as 1XBET cup final holds Thursday  – Sporting Tribune

    Finally, the maiden edition of the 1XBET Community Football Championship is coming to a climax after six weeks of pure grassroots football across five different communities in Lagos State.

    Forty teams of non-league players started the journey and now, the tourney sponsored by the foremost Nigerian betting company, 1XBET, has Ighalo FC and Bariga FC  who topped the Mainland and Epe Conferences respectively in the final.

    Organisers of the championship, Match International Limited led by Engr. Waidi Akanni, while chatting with the 1XBET Cup Media team, expressed his satisfaction with the standard, discipline and quality of play displayed by the teams and officials, so far, in the championship.

    “We are very impressed by what we have seen so far, in the championship. All the teams and officials have shown that with more such competitions, there’s hope for non-league players, as well as, young players to express their innate talents for further exposure.

    The former Nigeria international player, who was also a former Chairman of the Lagos State Football Association, expressed untold praises to the sponsors of the epochal competition.

    “We give profound gratitude and appreciation to 1XBET for sponsoring this championship. We have had several grassroots football competitions hosted in different parts of Nigeria. Yet, I can confidently tell you that the 1XBET Community Football Championship has set a lofty and enviable benchmark for grassroots football development in Nigeria.”

    According to the organisers, the final match of the championship between Odion Ighalo FC and Bariga FC, slated for Thursday, November 23, at the Mobolaji Johnson Arena, Onikan, Lagos would be preceded by a novelty 5-aside match between Lagos Legends, a group of former footballers, and then the equally important third-place game, between De Elites FC and Young Strikers FC.

     

    YOU SHOULD NOT MISS THESE HEADLINES FROM SPORTING TRIBUNE 

     

    2023 Ballon d’Or: Osimhen finishes eight, becomes highest ranked Nigerian footballer

    Super Eagles and Napoli forward, Victor Osimhen, has achieved the highest ranking for a Nigerian in the history of the Ballon d’Or football award. Osimhen achieved this milestone by ranking eighth in the 30-man list of the 2023 Ballon d’Or award.…..

     

    2024 Olympic Qualifiers: Super Falcons thrash Ethiopia, zoom to next round

    Nigeria’s Super Falcons have booked a place in the third round of the qualifiers for the 2024 Olympic Games after a 4-0 win against Ethiopia at the Moshood Abiola Stadium, Abuja on Tuesday. The former African champions won the second-round contest 5-1 on aggregate.….

    FIFA bans ex-Spanish football federation chief, Rubiales, for three years

    Former Spanish Football Association president Luis Rubiales has been banned from all football-related activities for three years. Rubiales kissed forward Jenni Hermoso on the lips following Spain’s Women’s World Cup final win over England.

     

    The 5 Most Thrilling Premier League Finals That Shaped Football History

    There’s no doubt that the Premier League is one of the most competitive football leagues in the world, filled with extraordinary talent, tactical brilliance, and captivating storylines. However, few things rival the exhilaration of a title race that comes down to the wire…..

     

    AFCON: Sports Minister expresses displeasure over exclusion of Nigerian referees

    Minister of Sports Development, Sen. John Owan-Enoh has expressed displeasure over the non-inclusion of Nigerian referees amongst match officials listed for the 2023 AFCON slated for Cote D’Ivoire….


  • Gbenga Adeyinka 1st extols Sanwo-Olu’s virtues as Unity Tour climaxes in Lagos

    One of Nigeria’s leading comedians Gbenga Adeyinka 1st has extolled the virtues of Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu as he is set to round off his Laffmattazz South West Unity Tour in…

    The post Gbenga Adeyinka 1st extols Sanwo-Olu’s virtues as Unity Tour climaxes in Lagos appeared first on The Nation Newspaper.

  • Lagos trains sexual, domestic violence survivors in entrepreneurship

    Lagos trains sexual, domestic violence survivors in entrepreneurship

    By Agency

    The Lagos State Domestic and Sexual Violence Agency has organised business entrepreneurship training for survivors of Sexual and Gender-Based Violence.

    The DSVA Executive Secretary, Mrs Titilola Vivour-Adeniyi, made the disclosure in a statement on Thursday in Lagos.

    Vivour-Adeniyi said that the training was in collaboration with SME100Africa.

    She stated that the training was in fulfilment of one of the promises of the state government to survivors of SGBV.

    She added that “The government training is to renew survivors’ confidence and financial independence, following their traumatic experiences, in keeping with Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s THEMES Plus Agenda, particularly gender equality and social inclusion.

    “The training was conducted by professionals for survivors of SGBV who have gone through a rigorous assessment process and have shown interest in starting or upscaling their businesses to make them independent.

    “It is also to ensure that they are able to stand on their own, thereby minimising the likelihood of returning to the place of abuse.”

    According to her, the training covers various businesses across sectors, focusing on financial management, marketing and digital transformation.

    She added that the training aimed at nurturing participants for skills in a changing business world.

    (NAN)

  • Lagos State should bear responsibility for LAWMA siblings’ deaths

    Lagos State should bear responsibility for LAWMA siblings’ deaths

    This will be hard to see through in Nigeria, but it is an idea worth exploring: the families of the two sisters employed by the Lagos Waste Management Authority and crushed to death on Monday by a motorist trying to escape from officials of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority should sue the Lagos State Government for vicarious liability. They should not only demand hundreds of millions of Naira in punitive damages but should also insist that the state make sweeping environmental management reforms to protect the road sweepers they subject to the hazards of the Lagos-urban dysfunction.

    Now, I have been Nigerian for long enough to know how this new tragedy will go: top state officials will make all the right noises about how they regret the deaths, vow to prosecute the offender (and will probably do), and wait for the next incident so they can repeat the platitudinous spiel. The state lawmakers too will go into an overdrive with summons issued left and right but will get nowhere at the end of the knee-jerky vituperations. Like the executive, the legislative body will murmur complementary condolences and move on.

    Now, I am not exonerating the reckless driver from his alleged crime, but the invisible hand that operated in the siblings’ unwarranted deaths is that of Lagos State. Between LASTMA and LAWMA, two government agencies that urgently need to revise their methods in the light of the casualties resulting from their operations, the unfortunate victims of Monday’s accidents hardly stood a chance.

    As various news media have reported, the two LAWMA women (not yet named) were working at the Charley Boy section when a yet-to-be-identified motorist speeding away from extortive LASTMA officers lost control of his vehicle and ran over them. The two women, reportedly in their 60s, were also siblings.

    Despite eyewitness accounts, LASTMA has washed its hands clean off the unfortunate incident by saying their men were uninvolved. First, there are too many cases of their officials causing mayhem on the road for them to be vindicated merely on account of their innocence plea. Second, there will likely be footage from several CCTVs in the area. Can they retrieve them to prove their men have nothing to do with the unfortunate incident?

    In a society that values dignity and life, the inane practice of subjecting people to sweep the highways would not even exist. There is no cruder means of ensuring a clean urban environment than deploying thousands of men and women to sweep highways while dodging an unending stream of cars, trucks, and motorbikes daily. It is perilous employment; those not crushed or maimed by rogue vehicles spend all their working hours inhaling fumes, dust, and stench from Lagos’ polluted air and clogged drains.

    When I pass the streets and see people—mostly women, and in the older age bracket too—sweeping the highways that even pedestrians are sometimes otherwise forbidden to cross for the riskiness, all I see is crass exploitation of poverty. The state directly exposes these people to death and disability on its ill-contrived road network. Sometime around 2012, then managing director of LAWMA, Ola Oresanya, disclosed that at least 57 street sweepers in Lagos were crushed to death by vehicles while doing their jobs between 2007 and 2010.

    The Monday incident also recalls the similar deaths of Kikelomo Bamidele (who was also pregnant), crushed to death by a petrol tanker and “Bisi” who died when a vehicle reportedly driven by a military officer had a burst tyre and somersaulted several times before knocking her off the Third Mainland Bridge. There have been documented deaths in the highbrow districts (e.g. Osborne Road in 2018) as well as lowbrow ones (e.g Ojuelegba, 2019). Death comes fast and furious to the street sweepers, no matter the neighbourhood.

    Those fortunate enough to survive a ramming by a vehicle suffer lifelong injuries and disabilities that might lead to them losing their jobs. Meanwhile, these are citizens who barely earn enough in the first instance. Multiple media reports have reported on—and emphasised—how these sweepers are poorly paid despite the hazards of their jobs. Those not rammed by oncoming vehicles pray daily against such eventuality while inhaling damaging dust and fumes. If these people eventually suffer health problems due to the nature of their jobs, what provisions are available for them regarding healthcare facilities, insurance, and disability claims?

    One wonders: it is 2023, why have the managers of the so-called principal city of Nigeria not come up with less precarious means of street cleaning? Machines have long been invented for this task. They not only mitigate the risk to humans, but they are also far more efficient. Well, it turns out that Lagos State once came up with the idea of mechanised street cleaning under the Akinwunmi Amobode administration. Both the N576m allocated for the project and the noble intention of moving human sweepers to access roads instead of the highways went down a dark hole of corruption, inefficiency, and the sheer lack of accountability that typifies much of our public service.

    LASTMA maintains a crude operational tactic of chasing fleeing cars (where they have an operational vehicle). So oppressive are their practices that when men of the Nigerian Army brutalised some of their officers months ago, many of those who commented on the incident could not look past their abuse to elicit some fellow feelings for them.

    A wise man once said that where purpose is not known, abuse is inevitable. In the case of LASTMA, their catalogue of abuse stems from how they misconstrue their purpose. They tend to act as if ensuring the smooth flow of traffic across the state is secondary—or merely incidental—to sadistically extorting drivers and turning traffic offences into a key source of revenue. They are less concerned about tailoring their operations to produce the conditions that will ensure efficient traffic management; they just want to punish.

    For a concrete jungle with a poor road network, lack of urban infrastructure, and a perennial dysfunctional management of facilities, Lagos punishes traffic offences too severely. They do not even factor the consistent diminishment of purchasing power into their charges. What they bill you for traffic offences, even the state itself cannot pay its equivalent as minimum wage.

    So severe is Lagos’ punishment for traffic infractions that they proceeded to auction impounded vehicles last year. There are many heartless things that our leaders do every day to worsen life for the people they have already impoverished, and that was one of them. So morally unjustifiable were their actions that they backed down after facing much criticism. In March, when the governor was so desperate to be re-elected that he turned himself into a vote carpetbagger, they returned some impounded vehicles to the owners. For them to have buckled under the blowback that met their policy meant that they did not quite think it through, and they probably cannot connect the law that empowered them to auction vehicles to any reasonable procedure for ensuring traffic compliance. We are unlucky to be ruled by sadists who cannot invent enough means of making people cry.

    While they pulled back on that one extreme action, the punitive order they have systematically constructed remains intact. What Lagos has facilitated with its traffic management is a system whereby the punishment is so severe that people would rather risk limbs and lives to escape their officials. The multiple recorded instances of people causing accidents because they were fleeing LASTMA officials have included LASTMA officials themselves. All the various incidents of accidents should have been enough for them to evolve their traffic management methods to be more humane, but no, they cannot think outside the small box of subsisting on people’s tears, sweat, and blood.