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Politics / Lagos Plans IPP For State Tertiary Institutions by ekoileee: 4:34am On Jun 07, 2013
[b]]Lagos State Government has announced plans to provide Independent Power Project (IPP) aimed at ensuring 24-hours uninterrupted power supply will be spread across to tertiary institutions in the state in the nearest future.

Lagos State Governor, Mr. Babatunde Fashola(SAN) revealed this Thursday at a forum held at the Main Auditorium, Lagos State University (LASU) to commemorate his 2200 days in office.

The forum was well attended by students from various tertiary institutions in the state including students of LASU, Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH), Lagos State College of Education (LACOED), Lagos City Polytechnic, youth organisations members of the State Executive Council, amongst others.

Governor Fashola said the state government is already putting finishing touches to commence the project to service government offices in Ikeja and environs including the Alausa Secretariat.

He said on completion of the Alausa IPP the project will be extended to accommodate tertiary institutions in the state, saying the idea was to free the bulk of electricity consumption by government agencies.[/b]

Governor Fashola urged youths to begin to develop new innovations and solutions to societal challenges to ensure the future does not take them unawares.

To this end, he urged youths in the state to come forward and access the N1.5b Research fund provided by the government.

He said he had inaugurated a Committee to set guidelines for access of the research fund, which he said will challenge youths to begin to develop new strategies through adaptive, innovative and creative thinking.

He said the current state of the nation warrants that the training methods be re-orientated to retain the critical building blocks but at the same time become adapted to the real needs of society.

But he lamented that six months since the year started, no one had come up to apply for the research fund saying that the future development of the country rests in the ability of the present generation to come up with home grown ideas and models to solving problems.



http://www.worldstagegroup.com/worldstagenew/index.php?active=news&newscid=8971&catid=26

2 Likes

Politics / Re: Fashola's 2200 Days In Office At LASU. The Best Speech Ever And Pics. by ekoileee: 4:22am On Jun 07, 2013
A critical part of that journey between GOWN and TOWN requires that you get involved in the political process.

The debate for gubernatorial and presidential candidates in other countries takes place in their Universities.

I participated in 7 (seven) debates in 2007 and 6 (six) in 2011. None of them took place in this University.

Maybe we can excuse that omission by the fact that you did not have the facilities to host such debates.

But the facilities are now here in this hall. We are building more



Reminds me of American presidential debates at many of their Universities where many of the universities wage serious battles and lobby vigorously to win political debates and included exposure for their universities. Not like the debate dodging and sneaking D'banj silliness with GEJ


It's not too late to introduce this valuable political and governing process to our universities and colleges and make sure they get involved as the so called leaders of tomorrow

1 Like

Politics / Re: Fashola's 2200 Days In Office At LASU. The Best Speech Ever And Pics. by ekoileee: 3:52am On Jun 07, 2013
Why do we have so much to do in our country and yet still have so many unemployed people?

It seems clear from what I hear from our experts that the GOWN (which is the generic word for our higher institutions of learning such as LASU, AOCOED, LASPOTECH, MOCPED.) is not communicating with the TOWN (the generic word for the larger society comprising the government and its institutions, as well as private sector)
[b]
So the GOWN and the TOWN must begin to talk. There must be a handshake.

It seems to me therefore that our training methods must be re-orientated to retain the critical building blocks but they must also become adapted to the real needs of society.

That is why we have started a school of transportation here, to prepare a new generation of professionals that will become our transport planners, transport managers and transport operators.

The reason is simple. Transportation is a global problem and it is no less so in Lagos or any other part of Nigeria.

Major cities and countries including our state are building transport facilities such as the rail project on the Badagry corridor and the Expressway expansion.

But how many Nigerians have the knowledge about rail construction and how many are involved in building our bridges and highways?

That is why I advised the University management not to move the Transport School to Epe but to leave it in Ojo, so that the students can use the on-going construction as their laboratory.

Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen, this is why I am here today:- To facilitate and encourage the discussion and communication between the GOWN and the TOWN.

We need to build more water works. But how many of us even know how the current water supply is being produced?

We need constant power supply. But how many of us have visited our power generation, power transmission and power distribution facilities?

How many of us know how cars are made from design to assembly?[/b]
.
Politics / Re: Fashola's 2200 Days In Office At LASU. The Best Speech Ever And Pics. by ekoileee: 3:49am On Jun 07, 2013
Creativity is the hand maid of innovation which suggests we must develop things for ourselves.

This is the road to “Made in Nigeria”. This is the super-highway to a new economy that is home-grown and increasingly self-dependent and self-reliant.

Let me attempt to illustrate what I mean with a few examples.

The training of our doctors must adapt to what we are seeing today. Public health issues, life style diseases like hypertension, heart and kidney diseases and cases of cancers. We must find ways to treat these locally and keep the jobs here.

Our medicine must now focus also on sports medicine which is a growing area of need and which requires specialization.

We must stop thinking about treating malaria, and start thinking about how to eradicate plasmodium or create a vaccine for it.

We have put a research fund there. Please use it.

Our lawyers for example must receive training in either contract or commercial law on how to negotiate PPPs or concessions.

Otherwise we will be forced to hire lawyers from overseas because this is the new way that is gaining ground globally for financing public infrastructure.

The content of our criminology courses must change in order to become responsive to the new types of crime that we have to deal with.

As a State and a nation that has so much to build, our bankers, economists, architects, engineers and town planners must be trained in proper project planning, project implementation and project monitoring.

The essence of these skills explains why projects are not delivered on budget, on schedule and why we have thousands of projects across the country which are uncompleted as we see in the print and electronic media reports.

It is ironic that there is unemployment in a nation that has so much to finish.

Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, these examples are not exhaustive.

They are just indicative of how we can do old things differently and I have only sought to use examples that we are familiar with.

My dear students, I hope that I have stirred something in you. If I have, then my mission has been useful because we can start a new journey together today.-Fashola




Talk about inspiring and taking the leadership battle to the actual leaders of tomorrow. This man went there to remind them that they are next in line and practically dropped the baton on their laps to think and worry about.
Politics / Re: Fashola's 2200 Days In Office At LASU. The Best Speech Ever And Pics. by ekoileee: 3:43am On Jun 07, 2013
Always nice to see Past governors gracing all state functions no matter how big or small. Maybe they rotate their presence because you either see Mobolaji Johnson or Pa Jakande, Ndubuisi Kanu, Buba Marwa or Asiwajku or altogether..


There shared value and Love for Lagos state runs deep and unshakable..



Eko o ni baje indeed..
Politics / Re: Fashola's 2200 Days In Office At LASU. The Best Speech Ever And Pics. by ekoileee: 3:34am On Jun 07, 2013
I was going to highlight key points which means highlighting the whole speech because the whole speech is full of key points...



This is one smart, credible, thoughtful and visionary man.



Many salute...

6 Likes

Politics / Fashola's 2200 Days In Office At LASU. The Best Speech Ever And Pics. by ekoileee: 3:29am On Jun 07, 2013
SPEECH DELIVERED BY HIS EXCELLENCY,THE GOVERNOR OF LAGOS STATE,MR BABATUNDE RAJI FASHOLA (SAN), ON THE OCCASION OF HIS 2200 DAYS IN OFFICE AT THE LAGOS STATE UNIVERSITY ON THURSDAY JUNE 6TH 2013.

PROTOCOL

We gather again today to review the progress of a journey we started 2200 days ago and the performance of our social contract.

Our regular 100 day accounting and reporting program has facilitated communication between us and many sections of members of the public who are our employers.

Today it has brought us to the critical stakeholders. The ones I call the leaders in training and in waiting. And I will explain why.

The decision to move this edition of our 100 day accounting period to LASU and dedicate it to communicating with higher education institutions and the undergraduates in training is deliberate.

The reason is simple. Our human resource is the most important resource we have and will ever have.

Our students in tertiary institutions are in the generation right behind us. They are the ones who are being prepared for the job market and leadership responsibility.

They are the ones who will replace me and the commissioners, the permanent secretaries, the legislators and the judges, indeed the entire public service.

They are the ones who in a short time will bear the responsibility to refine our crude oil, generate our electricity, produce our water, manage this university, build our trains, secure our state and country and generally be responsible for our people’s well-being.

All of these will happen very soon.

The question then is this. Do these leaders in waiting and in training understand what we are doing?

Do they understand why we are doing it?

What are the choices of study that they themselves have made?

Why did they make them? Does our society still require those skills they are learning?

Is there an inherent flaw in the training we are offering in a way that it does not connect with our societal needs?

Why do we have so much to do in our country and yet still have so many unemployed people?

It seems clear from what I hear from our experts that the GOWN (which is the generic word for our higher institutions of learning such as LASU, AOCOED, LASPOTECH, MOCPED.) is not communicating with the TOWN (the generic word for the larger society comprising the government and its institutions, as well as private sector)

So the GOWN and the TOWN must begin to talk. There must be a handshake.

It seems to me therefore that our training methods must be re-orientated to retain the critical building blocks but they must also become adapted to the real needs of society.

That is why we have started a school of transportation here, to prepare a new generation of professionals that will become our transport planners, transport managers and transport operators.

The reason is simple. Transportation is a global problem and it is no less so in Lagos or any other part of Nigeria.

Major cities and countries including our state are building transport facilities such as the rail project on the Badagry corridor and the Expressway expansion.

But how many Nigerians have the knowledge about rail construction and how many are involved in building our bridges and highways?

That is why I advised the University management not to move the Transport School to Epe but to leave it in Ojo, so that the students can use the on-going construction as their laboratory.

Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen, this is why I am here today:- To facilitate and encourage the discussion and communication between the GOWN and the TOWN.

We need to build more water works. But how many of us even know how the current water supply is being produced?

We need constant power supply. But how many of us have visited our power generation, power transmission and power distribution facilities?

How many of us know how cars are made from design to assembly?

Twenty five years ago I was still in school and I did not have an answer to these questions.

I studied in Nigeria, in a government owned University of Benin, like LASU, so I understand this problem.

Twenty five years later I have become your Governor with the responsibility to solve these problems.

I expect many of you to assume leadership responsibilities even earlier than I did.

I am here because I want you to be better prepared than me.

I am here because I want you to leave school with the jobs waiting for you rather than you looking for the jobs.

Or better still to leave school with a clear idea of what you are going to establish or produce and how you want to go about it, instead of idling at home looking for employment.

But whatever you do, there are three things you must do.

First you must become adaptive. Secondly, you must be innovative and thirdly, you must be creative.

But I will come back to these issues if you just permit me to quickly digress and deal with the reporting part of my 100 day programme.

Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, since the last time when we presented our 100 days report on February 26 this year, your government has made some more progress.

First I am pleased to report the first quarter budget performance which was 61%.

The impact across various sectors has been encouraging.

The implementation has helped us to continue to progress many civil works projects such as the Adiyan Phase II water works, the Lagos Badagry Expressway, Mile 12 – Ikorodu Road, over 200 inner city and neighbourhood roads across Lagos, educational projects within LASU, AOCOED and other institutions.

Many housing projects across Lagos are now at roofing stage while we have commenced many more as we prepare to start allocation later this year.

We have also completed some projects in the last 100 days such as the Emeka Anyaoku Housing estate in Ikeja, the flagship twenty-four hour Primary Health Care centres in Lagos Island, Mosan Okunola in Alimosho and Ajara in Badagry have been fully re-fitted, re-staffed and now operational.

Two more will be added in June as we march on to fulfil our commitment to deliver a pilot of 57 (Fifty Seven) flagship primary Healthcare facilities that will set the pace for Grassroots Healthcare and a robust preventive and referral based health care system.

During the last 100 days our Ministry of Tourism hosted our Annual Heritage Week that climaxed with a Boat Regatta and Carnival. They have become the subject of international understudy because they get bigger and better year after year.

Our commitment to Education was also heightened as we hosted our 3rd Education Summit which showed a successful implementation of the recommendations of the last summit.

Permit me to share two quick indices of the successful implementation with you.

From a baseline of an average of 7% of students who passed WAEC in 2007 with 5 (five) credits including Mathematics and English in one sitting, we now have an average of 39% of students who passed as at 2012.

At the University level, from a baseline of a withdrawal of accreditation for 10 (ten) courses, all courses have received accreditation except 1 (one) and LASU is now ranked 11th amongst the list of 129 (One Hundred and Twenty Nine) Nigerian Universities and is the highest ranked State University.

This is of course not to suggest that we are satisfied with where we are or that we will ever stop seeking to improve.

On the contrary, it is to measure how steadily but gradually we are progressing and to encourage you to keep pushing and pressing because our efforts are yielding results.

It is also to emphasise what can happen when disputes which are inevitable, are resolved by negotiation and constant engagement, instead of strikes, lockouts and disruptions.

During the last 100 days we have also approved bursaries and scholarships to the following category of students in order to help them support themselves through school and to ensure that no child is left behind only because the parents are poor.

Some of the beneficiaries are:

• 1,385 LASU Students - N41.635m
• 907 Lagos Students in other Universities – N33.690m
• 109 College Students – N2.460m
• 50 Blind Students N3.0m
• 140 Students in the Nigerian Law School and 21 Students in the Maritime Academy N32.2m
• 390 Lagos Students in other tertiary institutions across Nigeria – N87.5m
• 11 Students overseas N37.124m

We will certainly do more as the requests are evaluated and recommended for approval.

In the last 100 hundred days we have been vigorously battling crime and the security reports I received at our monthly meeting which held yesterday shows that things are getting better.

In addition to the security reports, our security agents and agencies have become more pro-active.

We have published security tips for citizens and we are translating them into the 3 main languages.

Our border patrols have been intensified to ensure that only law abiding citizens enter our State.

We continue to monitor and raid known dark spots and criminal hideouts.

In the last few weeks, 360 (Three Hundred and Sixty) of such suspects have been charged to court, for possession of drugs or other dangerous weapons.

We have also successfully impounded large amounts of drugs and arrested the merchants of such drugs which are used to fuel crime.

We are also intensifying training for investigating officers to provide them with new skills for evidence gathering to support criminal prosecution.

All told, we have raised our game and there will be no comfort for criminals in our State.

I can only urge citizens to co-operate with law enforcement and support our efforts to further equip them by contributing to the Security Trust Fund.

So my message to you is, if you see anything unusual, say something by calling 767 or 112.

But do not be afraid. Be vigilant and safety conscious and go about your business because we are working hard to ensure that criminals do not harm you and that our State continues to remain uncomfortable for them.

Of course just a few days ago, we completed and opened the first cable stayed bridge in West Africa, the Lekki Ikoyi Link Bridge as a transport solution to decongest Lekki, Victoria Island, Ikoyi and access to the Mainland.

I will conclude this part by re-assuring Lagosians that your Government remains focused on service delivery and our commitment to you in the remaining 2 (Two) years will not be different from our commitment on the first day.

Having concluded in summary form, the reporting part of the 100 days programme, let me return to the future and our main discussion, about the GOWN and TOWN.

In order to help the GOWN assist in developing the TOWN, we have created an Innovation Council led by the Honourable Commissioner for Science and Technology and other members drawn from the private sector.

Their brief is to promote innovation and development.

We are also operating an After-School Graduate Development Programme where we are investing graduates with new skills to help them adapt to the needs of our economy and find well-paid jobs or start their own business
We have also created in our State budget, a provision to fund research and I have inaugurated a Committee to set guidelines for access.

Currently for this year the sum of N1,500,000.00 (One Billion, Five Hundred Million Naira) was budgeted and to my knowledge no person has applied for the research fund.

Why is all these important? You may ask.

The answer is simple. The key for finding a solution to unemployment and joblessness is in 3 (three) simple words – ‘made’ ‘in’ ‘Nigeria’.

No other nation has done it another way.

We barely competed in the agricultural age before oil overcame us. We missed industrialization, but we can leapfrog industrialization and get on the train of the age of technology.

Do not misunderstand me. Without agriculture, processing and industrialization, there will be no made in Nigeria. So we cannot do without those two.

What I mean is that we must use technology developed by our own people to fast track our deficit of agriculture.

So to get to “Made in Nigeria”, we must innovate and be creative.

They may sound like catchy or fancy words but I think they mean something very simple.

Innovation requires us to start looking for new and more efficient ways of doing the same thing.

Creativity is the hand maid of innovation which suggests we must develop things for ourselves.

This is the road to “Made in Nigeria”. This is the super-highway to a new economy that is home-grown and increasingly self-dependent and self-reliant.

Let me attempt to illustrate what I mean with a few examples.

The training of our doctors must adapt to what we are seeing today. Public health issues, life style diseases like hypertension, heart and kidney diseases and cases of cancers. We must find ways to treat these locally and keep the jobs here.

Our medicine must now focus also on sports medicine which is a growing area of need and which requires specialization.

We must stop thinking about treating malaria, and start thinking about how to eradicate plasmodium or create a vaccine for it.

We have put a research fund there. Please use it.

Our lawyers for example must receive training in either contract or commercial law on how to negotiate PPPs or concessions.

Otherwise we will be forced to hire lawyers from overseas because this is the new way that is gaining ground globally for financing public infrastructure.

The content of our criminology courses must change in order to become responsive to the new types of crime that we have to deal with.

As a State and a nation that has so much to build, our bankers, economists, architects, engineers and town planners must be trained in proper project planning, project implementation and project monitoring.

The essence of these skills explains why projects are not delivered on budget, on schedule and why we have thousands of projects across the country which are uncompleted as we see in the print and electronic media reports.

It is ironic that there is unemployment in a nation that has so much to finish.

Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, these examples are not exhaustive.

They are just indicative of how we can do old things differently and I have only sought to use examples that we are familiar with.

My dear students, I hope that I have stirred something in you. If I have, then my mission has been useful because we can start a new journey together today.

It will be a journey of GOWN and TOWN, in which you will have a lot of questions to ask me, starting from when I conclude my address today.

I hope I will be able to answer some of your questions.

As for those that I am unable to answer, I hope you will let us work together to look for the answers.

A critical part of that journey between GOWN and TOWN requires that you get involved in the political process.

The debate for gubernatorial and presidential candidates in other countries takes place in their Universities.

I participated in 7 (seven) debates in 2007 and 6 (six) in 2011. None of them took place in this University.

Maybe we can excuse that omission by the fact that you did not have the facilities to host such debates.

But the facilities are now here in this hall. We are building more. You must create the environment, by being peaceful, stopping violent clashes so that people feel safe about coming here.

Being involved in the political process is the first step to the GOWN and TOWN handshake.

The research you conduct, your term papers, project works on varied subjects must get to us to assist us in formulating policies.

As we constantly engage, you must innovate and be creative to begin to respond to the demands of the TOWN.

This is the only way in which our economy can have beneficial impact on our people.

If we fail to act along these lines and I truly hope not, we will continue to see a growth in the African and Nigerian economy as we have been witnessing but we may not see enough jobs.

The reason is simple. Africa has a young and growing population as we all know. Nigeria’s population is the largest of that population which is a big market.

Unfortunately, the goods that service that market from shoes, wrist watches, cars, underwear, food, writing materials, telephones, televisions, music systems and almost anything you can think of are not made in Nigeria.

This is the reason for jobless growth.

Innovation and creativity from our institutions of learning can reserve this trend.

My dear students, let us seize the moment. We know the problem, the solution is obvious, the only thing that stands in the way is us.

Thank you.

Eko o ni baje o!





Babatunde Raji Fashola, SAN
Governor of Lagos State

June 6, 2013


.















6 Likes

Politics / Re: Akpabio To Commission 30 New Projects, Flag Off Others by ekoileee: 3:40am On Jun 06, 2013
Politics / Re: Akpabio Has Layed A Solid Infrastructural Frame Work For His State. by ekoileee: 3:28am On Jun 06, 2013
ujoinme: Am sure you do know how to browse a web page! your stupid popaganda is defeated as well meaning and development minded forum members will browse through the sites and watch the videos to inform themselves of whats going on. haters like you will keep hating.



But you provided the website and sent me there to look and I showed you what I saw so blame yourself for sending me there..

Stick to your road pictures or you'll get disgraced..
Politics / Re: Akpabio Has Layed A Solid Infrastructural Frame Work For His State. by ekoileee: 3:10am On Jun 06, 2013
ujoinme: Am sure you do know how to browse a web page! your stupid popaganda is defeated as well meaning and development minded forum members will browse through the sites and watch the videos to inform themselves of whats going on. haters like you will keep hating.



But you provided the website and sent me there to look and I showed you what I saw so blame yourself for sending me there..
Politics / Re: Akpabio Has Layed A Solid Infrastructural Frame Work For His State. by ekoileee: 3:05am On Jun 06, 2013

thats a section of one of the primary schools that the national good goverance tour people randomly choosed to visit in the state during their tour. I can proudly pit that primary school with any in the nation. if random sampling were to be the yard stick.
can you proudly show me a picture of a better primary school in your neck of the wood?


Fashola Commissions 103 New Classrooms.

[img]http://2.bp..com/_bDcpR_wJ7hk/TBI3ijaDcgI/AAAAAAAAD9M/IvDZxjRVnUo/s1600/2.jpg[/img]


[img]http://1.bp..com/_bDcpR_wJ7hk/TBI3s48xhUI/AAAAAAAAD90/mBw3FIEESqA/s1600/7.jpg[/img]

[img]http://3.bp..com/_bDcpR_wJ7hk/TBI3nH4aUjI/AAAAAAAAD9c/vplFgUVX1z0/s1600/4.JPG[/img]


[img]http://3.bp..com/_bDcpR_wJ7hk/TBI3o1bjXnI/AAAAAAAAD9k/5MrXRupi7oQ/s1600/5.JPG[/img]


http://happylagosian..com/2010/06/fashola-commissions-103-new-classrooms.html
Politics / Re: Akpabio Has Layed A Solid Infrastructural Frame Work For His State. by ekoileee: 2:48am On Jun 06, 2013
ujoinme:
since you appear to be so interested in the affairs of the state with little information about how its ran nor its policies i will do you another favour by linking you to the state govt. web sites and its information arm so you can learn about its affairs and stop spewing palm wine palour gossip about the state.
here: http://aksgonline.com/
http://www.uncommontransformation.tv/


This is one of the most absurd, pointless and vacant websites ever. What's in there?


Instead of sending me to that worthless website with vague references to some imaginary nonsense, why not just list and show us what's in there?


Well, let me help you. This is the main infrastructure page from the website and this is the first item on that page..



[img]http://www.uncommontransformation.tv/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/articles/borehole.jpg[/img]


http://www.uncommontransformation.tv/?q=infrastructure


^^^^^^^ World class water works with the largest budget in Nigeria..



lmao
Politics / Re: Akpabio Has Layed A Solid Infrastructural Frame Work For His State. by ekoileee: 2:28am On Jun 06, 2013
Eko Ile:



That's a FG website with state amd FG projects all mixed up..


I wonder why you went to the FG website instead of Akwa Ibom website..



Anyways, this is a world class school from the link you produced..


Politics / Re: Let's Have Your Complaints, Suggestions & Enquiries Here by ekoileee: 5:00am On Jun 05, 2013
Like they say, little things bugs lazy and shallow minds.
Politics / Re: Brazil To Build New Satellite-Town In Abuja by ekoileee: 4:57am On Jun 05, 2013
This is one meaningless gibberish with no substance ...

1 Like

Politics / Re: Let's Have Your Complaints, Suggestions & Enquiries Here by ekoileee: 4:48am On Jun 05, 2013
And how's that troubling your existence?
Politics / Re: Nigeria To Borrow N47billion From ADB (African Development Bank) by ekoileee: 4:46am On Jun 05, 2013
taharqa2: SHUT ya Hypocritic mouth tha, @OP. The State with by far d highest burden of Loans in d country is Lagos, and it is still borrowing. When the FG tried discouraging the Lagos state from borrowing $600m last yr, you and yr fellow Hypocritical clowns were shouting blue murder, asking d FG to approve it. So shut that trap you call yr mouth, and stop seeing everytin as an opportunity to do Propaganda- like you really cared about the Economy..... By d way, I dont think this loan is a 'new' one per say; it apparently is part of those approved in d Middle-term Borrowing Plan documentd already passed by d NA..

Ode, we don't borrow money to embezzle and fund recurrent expenditure and our recurrent and capital expenditure are not upside down like your crooked masters.


The dumb clowns are making billions of dollars in oil profit and they are still borrowing left and right.

What responsible government budgets 82% recurrent expenditure and 18 capital expenditure? Are we even surprised they are borrowing everyday?

10 Likes

Politics / Re: Let's Have Your Complaints, Suggestions & Enquiries Here by ekoileee: 4:28am On Jun 05, 2013
Please release eko ile and eko ilee. spambot attac...


Thanks..
Politics / Re: Fashola Sues Jang Faction Of NGF by ekoileee: 6:55pm On Jun 02, 2013
BabaTony:

Eko ile....Me list for you. I dey craze?. Thats a bloody waste of my time my friend. The projects are in akwa ibom if want the list I have told you ..take a trip. I know transport fare is the issue, if you cant afford a flight ticket to the state owned newly built international airport then go to your dump at ojuelegba and take a bus to akwa ibom. Don't ever ask me to waste my time listing projects for your sorry a55.

So you are either lying or you are just too lazy to put your money where your dirty mouth is...

What a dullard...
Politics / Re: Why Can't The Anambra State Government Build The Second River Niger Bridge??? by ekoileee: 6:52pm On Jun 02, 2013
adconline:

Stop being silly, individuals don't engage in building public infrastructure for the govt. that's exclusive job of the govt, both FG and state. It's not done anywhere! Niger bridge bridge is important to FG, SS, SE etc.


It's important to everybody, but 30 years later, still no bridge. The question is, who is going to build it or the begging goes on for the next 30 years?
Politics / Re: APC Supported Amaechi To Disgrace Jonathan by ekoileee: 6:48pm On Jun 02, 2013
Slow down grasshopper, you'll get served accordingly come 2015....lmao
thelastpope10:

You are a political ignoramus, no insult intended. So you think that if the PDP has differences, they will also carry those differences into the 2015 election and allow the opposition to win? So you think those 7 govs will allow APC win and they will now be opposition and be begging Tinubu for positions? You are really delusional. Once the primaries are decided, everyone will simply fall in line and work for the success of the party just like 2011
Politics / Re: Lagos Lawmakers Fault Tolling Of Lekki-ikoyi Link-bridge by ekoileee: 5:26pm On Jun 02, 2013
Why is this fhagot chasinge around with his goofy homosexual smile?

Stop chasing me around and stop smiling at me, I don't so men and I don't mess around with your kind..


Damn too many village fhagots running around NL ...
Politics / Re: Fashola Sues Jang Faction Of NGF by ekoileee: 5:21pm On Jun 02, 2013
Frank-C:
This is still part of the stuupidity of APC. Ok. Assuming Fashola's gang win the suite, which is not possible, what happens next? 16 governors will say that they are not part of it and coalesce in PDP gov forum. Amaechi retain his opposition followers which will be seen as APC governor's forum and their moves will be countered by the PDP governor's forum. Who wins? Still GEJ. The strategic target is to whittle down the influence of NGF or make align it to Mr President's interests.

For APC kids running around here who believe that it is all about noise making, what exactly is the difference between a divided NGF and a dead NGF? The moment you people supported Amaechi, you killed the body and lose your only executive level buy-in to FG policy directions. Who wins again? GEJ. You people should make less noise and articulate your position. You are presently a pawn in Mr Fix-it's chessboard. No court can ever force FG to recognize an unconstitutional body, so GEJ can still go ahead and recognize Jang's faction by any damn name even if the court rules in Fashola's favor. Who wins again? GEJ.

This is simple political strategy used at SUG level. I wonder how grown up men consider noise more important than scoring real strategic political points. Insulting GEJ from today till thy kingdom come is just what it is-noise. He keep whipping you guys into line.

When people say that you can't easily win a fight against FGN, they know what they are saying.


Regardless of your illogical, thoughtless and absurd essay, this is about illegalities and flagrant violation of governing rules. When you lose elections, you take your case to the nearest court for due adjudication and this is what we expect our leaders to do. We expect them as leaders and chief law enforcement officers to respect stated laws and set good examples.

Get your corrupt head checked for your own good ...
Politics / Re: LASG Plans Total Water Supply By 2020 by ekoileee: 5:00pm On Jun 02, 2013
fluteman:

Eko Ile how do you do it? i mean dealing with ignorant and 'not too clever' people all the time and having to point out their stupidity......must be very tiring i guess. Just going thru some post turns my stomach...Nigeria is doomed with the sheer number of dullards it is unfortunately cursed with....na waooo


These lousy ignorant and illiterate villagers are like pest and you have to be very aggressive with them because they get very unruly. Infact, this is the only language they understand.

I just don't know why they don't spend the same energy scrutinizing and criticizing their
Incompetent isi ewu and pami village governors...
Politics / Re: Why Can't The Anambra State Government Build The Second River Niger Bridge??? by ekoileee: 4:02pm On Jun 02, 2013
Rhino.5dm:


Hmm, who ever pulled this scam called sea port must be soooo strong and those who believed him must see the shrink. Those are 70 ton-fixed base refurbished cranes, NO? Na war!


Funny enough, na only lizards and snakes dey conduct business there. What a waste.
Politics / Re: Why Can't The Anambra State Government Build The Second River Niger Bridge??? by ekoileee: 3:34pm On Jun 02, 2013
ACM10: I'm appalled by the hypocrisy of most posters here. How can someone say that Anambra should allocate its resources to the construction of second Niger bridge? How many federal projects has been executed in the east by the federal government? Compare the projects that were executed by the federal government in the east to the project that executed in Lagos alone by the same entity. If people could reason from the angle of objectivity and equity, this country would have been a better place. Saying that Anambra should fund the project because it is regarded as the most industrious state in Nigeria and also with a high concentration of rich Nigerians is akin to telling Nigeria's rich men and looters to service the Nigeria's external debt. It just don't happen that way. People should drop their twisted logic and approach issues from the angle of objectivity.

Okay keep waiting, 30 more years of begging is really not a big deal.
Politics / Re: Why Can't The Anambra State Government Build The Second River Niger Bridge??? by ekoileee: 3:28pm On Jun 02, 2013
enyice:


Stop been unneccessarily unreasonable. That some states has achieved a great number of success shouldnt give you the right to taunt those who are yet to.

Good leadership is indeed the bane of a developmental and progressive state, finance is secondary.

You sounded as if taking over federal projects is such an easy task. Before the advent of fashola, every dilapidated federal roads in lagos will always have a very massive green billboard with the inscription ''this road belongs to the FG, pls bear with us'' by tinubu.

Oshodi was hell with xtremely deep potholes and mud. The entire stretch of the oshodi abeokuta xpressway was nothing to write home about.

The lagos-ibadan expressway is still there, its been that way for over 14yrs, apapa-oshodi expressway, mile2-badagry expressway, not minding the economic importance of this roads to both state govt nd FG, all the bridges in lagos linking the mainland to the island are being built by FG.

Sometimes, you just have to understand that their are more issues to this which ofcos am nt privy to before you start condemnin a tribe.

HAPPY SUNDAY BRO!...


I don't even get the meaning of this post, maybe you quoted the wrong person..
Politics / Re: Why Can't The Anambra State Government Build The Second River Niger Bridge??? by ekoileee: 3:24pm On Jun 02, 2013
Rhino.5dm:
Just passed the bridge. Is that the port with two ugly cranes?
What a shame.

Those are not cranes jare, they we makeshift forklifts for lifting yam and cassava imaide warehouse....

lmao..
Politics / Re: 2nd Niger Bride: Lagos To The Rescue!? by ekoileee: 10:41pm On Jun 01, 2013
I was just on the phone with fashola and he promised to look into this bridge matter. He expressed great sadness that people are still begging for a bridge in 2013.

1 Like

Politics / Re: LASG Plans Total Water Supply By 2020 by ekoileee: 12:06am On Jun 01, 2013
Crayola1:

Ok dear go find and English teacher and use apprehend and see if they don't ask you why you didn't substitute a better word.


What teacher? You are assuming that other people are clueless and grammatically challenged like you....
Politics / Re: LASG Plans Total Water Supply By 2020 by ekoileee: 12:05am On Jun 01, 2013
GeneralJ:
Well, so how do u know they will ban ownership of boreholes, are u a winch,

Are you a lagosian, how do u know they will drink urine, and they are not buying for tinubu, by the way, you are calling him Tinubu, do u have any proof that he stole something, did he steal anything from you, and they are not buying from tinubu they are getting it from the state water company IDIOT


With hatred and bitterness, people are predisposed to such insane and outrageous utterances .
Politics / Re: LASG Plans Total Water Supply By 2020 by ekoileee: 12:01am On Jun 01, 2013
Crayola1:

Then why use it if its inappropriate phrasing. Nigerians and the beat down of the Englisg language part 5000 angry grin


There's nothing inappropriate about the word and usage, if you don't know your way around words and usage that's your ignorance and problem.

1 Like

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