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Presidency revokes all C of Os in Abuja

LogoDaily Independent Online.         * Wednesday, July 07, 2004.

Looking delectable at 60 (1)

By Sam Kargbo

Lagos, Nigeria’s de facto capital city and “Centre of Excellence,” is a challenge to gerontologists.  In the first place, the city is not only restive but also inflicted by a severe and chronic insomnia.  Lagos is one city where people don’t sleep and rest.  Weekends that are meant for people to rest and recuperate from devastating stress of the week days, are the worst victims.  Instead of recreating in the leisurely and serene beaches adjoining the city, Lagosians would rather throng the streets like termites, though unlike the termites, they do nothing substantially edifying or beneficial.  In other words, trekking is another plague eating the souls of Lagosians.  One can hardly tell as between the vehicular and human traffic which one is worse in Lagos.  Besides places like Idumota and Oshodi, there are one thousand and one other places in Lagos where only the most stubborn drivers can venture to ply with their vehicles.

Someone once told me that if he were in a position to advise Tinubu, he would ask him to leave the management of the vehicular traffic on the intruding and defiant federal highways in Lagos to Ogunlewe, who now seems to have added to his portfolio and jurisdiction, the Federal Road Safety Corp, and instead establish a human traffic department to be managed by a body like LASMA.  Now that Ogunlewe has used his federal might to maliciously banish Tinubu’s state police (or state terror?) from the federal highways in Lagos, I am tempted to tell Tinubu to ask his legal team to examine the possibility of circumventing if not reducing Ogunlewe’s legal leverage by establishing the suggested human traffic department with more or less the same powers as those of LASMA, except that this time around they would be policing human beings including those unruly and lawless drivers on the soils of Lagos State.  The enabling law should endeavour to define the Lagosians as anybody who at any relevant or material time is or found within Lagos State. In which case, if the Honourable Minister Ogunlewe comes to Lagos either on an official or private visit or even en route to finding a safe haven abroad for some of the surpluses funds he gets in the course of his ministering or ministration of one of the most lucrative ministries in the country, he becomes a Lagosians and thereby subject to the suzerainty of the Asiwaju of Lagos State, Senator Bola Tinubu.  Do not think that there is no nuance between a law directed at human beings and one specified for traffic.  But that is not the issue here. What we are concerned with is the riotous and demanding nature of Lagos.

Lest you think that I have a particular bad belle for Lagos,  I want to surprise you with my findings.  In spite of its rambunctious nature, it hosts some of the most beautiful elderly people on earth.  And this is in addition to the fact that it is the home of the most religious and happiest people on earth.  How is that possible?

Let me narrate to you a personal experience I had on Saturday, July 3, 2004. I was invited for a 9 o’clock Television programme on Channels Television the previous night.  I tried to sleep early but old habits don’t die overnight. I slept at about 2 a.m. Woke up at about 5 o’clock on Saturday to enable me deliver a draft document to a client at Apapa at 7 a.m. I did and left the client at about 8:15 a.m. after going through the document with him and he had made his contributions towards the final document.  I rushed to Channels Television and was lucky to get there five minutes to the start of the programme.  I wanted coffee or any energizer but at times one has to endure to avoid embarrassing the host.  I struggled through the programme and dashed to the Lagos State University through the Egbeda axis.  I spent more than two hours on the road.  I was not impressed with Tinubu.  My students were already restive by the time I got to the school.  I apologised to them and rushed through class.  I left in a hurry for the football match between our Super Eagles and the Desert Foxes of Algeria.  I have since had my reservations about our Field Marshall Chukwu.  My guts tell me repeatedly that the NFA has been Wazobianised among the Hausa/Fulani, Yoruba and Ibo cults.  If one is the Chairman and the other is the Secretary then the other should be Coach.  Rubbish.  But that’s not my point. I was anxious to watch the pairing of Aiyegbeni (the best striker at the moment) and Martins (the ‘kid’ of the moment). With the last disastrous outing in Angola, my wish was for a resounding victory over the Algerians.

Because of my experience on the way to LASU, I decided to avoid Tinubu’s road and opted for Ogunlewe’s highway.  That was my mistake.  I spent more than two hours between LASU and Barracks, a distance of less than two kilometres. At some point I was suspicious that Tinubu had used bad belle to close the road to Mile 2 so as to prove the point that without LASTMA the Federal highways would be impassable.  I cursed whoever was responsible. I have not heard of a sudden death of any of those that I suspected were behind the unprecedented traffic jam.  God may not have answered my prayer though I know that He takes His time on everything and weighs my sentiments against the realities on the ground. When it was 4 o’clock, I switched on to Brilla FM. I would have said more about this radio station but I do not want to annoy my proprietor who may not be impressed with free and unsolicited adverts. If the owners of Brilla FM can read this, I advise them to do some form of public relations with Daily Independent so that people like us can have the license to say what we want to say about them. 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

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