community
Sanwo-Olu Inaugurates Ultra Modern Sangotedo Market
Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State on Wednesday inaugurated the ultra modern Sangotedo Market in Eti Osa East Local Council Development Area (LCDA).
Inaugurating the market during his working visit to Eti Osa Local Government Area, Sanwo-Olu said it would bring improved commercial opportunities to several communities.
He said this would also translate into higher earnings, more jobs, and better standards of living for the residents in the local government and its environs.
According to him, the market is government asset that had been passed on to the residents, hence, they must ensure that it is adequately taken care of.
”The market belongs to you, and you should look after it and ensure that it is always kept clean and well-maintained,” he said.
The governor commended the Chairman, Eti Osa East LCDA, Mr John Ogundare for naming the market after Late Rafiu Olufunmi, a former chairman of the LCDA.
He called on the LG/LCDA chairpersons to continue to collaborate with the state government, so as to deliver more democracy dividends to the residents of Lagos State.
In his address, the LCDA chairman, Ogundare said the new Sangotedo market project was initiated, following demand by the populace for a central market and healthcare facility.
He said the council prioritised the building of a modern primary health facility at the site of the old council secretariat, given the importance of the project to socio-economic wellbeing of the residents.
According to him, before the newly built ultra modern Sangotedo Market, the place first started as a cluster with sellers from other parts of Eti Osa East, and later became a full fleged market.
He said the structure was in a deplorable state, all because it did not have the facilities of a modern market.
Ogundare said the Olufunmi family of Eti-Osa later donated land for the market project, necessitating the council to allocate funds for its construction along the Lekki-Epe Expressway.
The council chairman named the market after his late predecessor, Mr Rafiu Olufunmi, who was the scion of the Olufunmi family that donated the land for the project.
An APC leader and chairman of Governor Advisory Council (GAC), Prince Tajudeen Olusi, said the rousing welcome accorded the governor by the populace showed the people’s approval of the current administration in the state.
Olusi urged the residents to remain loyal to APC for the delivery of more dividends of good governance.
The Elejigbo of Langbasa in Eti-Osa, Oba Olakunle Badru, said that the administrative style of Gov. Sanwo-Olu had changed the fortunes of the state.
Badru charged traders who would be using the new market to maintain the edifice and keep their trading activities within the perimeter of the market.
The new Sangotedo market is made up of 192 lock-up shops, 106 open shops, 28 suites, 65 key clamps, 12 chicken stalls, eight toilet facilities and parking lot for 100 cars at a time. (NAN)
community
32-year-old in Court For Allegedly Robbing Man of N4.5m iPhones

The police in Lagos on Friday arraigned a 32-year-old businessman, Wilfred Ochie, who allegedly robbed a man of two iPhones worth N4.5 million with gun.
Ochie, who resides at 3, Eleda Avenue, Iba, Lagos State, appeared before an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court on a two-count charge of conspiracy and robbery.
The defendant, however, pleaded not guilty to the charges.
According to the prosecutor, ASP Adegoke Ademigbuji, the defendant committed the offences on April 16 at Iba.
The prosecutor said that the defendant ordered two iPhone 16 Promax from the complainant, Mr Samuel Olotu, on jiji.com, on payment-on-delivery term.
The prosecutor said that when a rider went to deliver the phones, he was robbed at gunpoint.
Ademigbuji said that the defendant was tracked with the number he used to call the complainant.
The alleged offences contravene Sections 297 and 411 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.
The Chief Magistrate, Mrs O. O. Kushanu, granted the defendant bail in the some of N400,000 with two sureties in like sum.
Kushanu adjourned the case until June 19 for mention. (NAN)
community
Court Remands Septuagenarian in Kirikiri Correctional Centre For Alleged Defilement

An Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday remanded a 74- year-old man, Aderinsola Addiths, in Kirikiri Correctional Centre for allegedly defiling his neighbours ‘s teenage daughter.
Addiths a retiree, who resides at No. 1, Rafatu St., Balogun area, Iju Ishaga, Lagos is standing trial for defilement.
The Chief Magistrate, Mrs O.
O Kushanu refused to listen to the accused plea, and ordered him to be remanded in the Kirikiri Correctional Centre until May 20 pending advice from the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP).The Prosecutor, ASP Adegoke Ademigbuji told the court that the offence was committed sometimes in 2024 and February 2025 at the accused residence.
Ademigbuji said that the victim, a 13-year-old girl was sent to buy sachet water by the accused and upon her arrival, he shut the door after her.
The prosecutor said that the septuagenarian defiled the girl.
The offence according to the prosecutor contravened section 137 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.
community
Poultry Farmers Decry High Cost of Feeds, Low Patronage

Some poultry farmers in Bwari Area Council of the FCT, on Monday in Abuja, decried the incessant rise in the cost of poultry feeds, while also groaning over low patronage in the sale of birds in the market.
The farmers expressed their concerns in separate interviews in Abuja on Monday, while calling on producers and suppliers to consider a reasonable intervention.
One of the farmers, Mrs Joy Felix, said that although poultry farming was a profitable business that involved a lot of capital, it had, however, suffered set backs at the point of sales.
“You spend so much in setting up and most importantly the cost of feed hardly comes down once it goes up. Sometimes it suffers artificial scarcity and then a hike in price when it resurfaces.
“Once it is the fourth quarter of the year when a lot of people keep birds for either personal or commercial purposes during the Christmas season, the rush that comes with it gives the producers of these feeds a high advantage to make money and at the end of the day, you spend so much feeding these birds and then buyers bargain for less.
“It is somewhat frustrating. At the end, you may have to sell at a give-away price so you do not loose.”
Felix added that the cost of drugs for the birds was another challenge to the farmers, who are forced to use organic methods to treat diseases in birds.
“We sometimes use medicinal plants like bitter leaves and pawpaw leaves to either treat minor infections or boost their feeding, except when the situation is severe and in dire need of a veterinarian,” she said.
She urged various farmers’ associations, as well as other stakeholders to intervene and assist in finding a lasting solution to the challenges, with the hope to ease the plight of the farmers.
Similarly, Mr Ayo Bamidele, another poultry farmer, said that the cost of chicken feeds is so high, ranging from N10,000 to N14,000 per 50kg bag in the last one month, depending on the brand and location of farm.
According to Bamidele, a lot of farmers find it difficult to sell their birds during the festivities because, there is usually more supply of the birds than demands for it.
He said: “The cost of feeds has made farmers to put high price on the birds yet, buyers do not have that kind of money to buy them.
“Some of us actually made good breeds grow well enough for the price we put but the buyers don’t know this, they have no idea what it takes to feed and make the birds gain weight.
“Also, with the economic situation, people want to buy but they don’t have the money. It is unfortunate. I wish we all can just help each other make things easy for ourselves.”
He, however, said that he was optimistic that he would make profitable sells against all odds, during and after the yuletide.
Mr Elimah Jacob, a distributor of poultry feeds in Bwari town, said that the high cost of feed was not new but a challenge that usually came with the period of mass poultry farming, especially before December.
He also said that the increase in prices of the feeds was usually from companies that produce the goods, whom, he added, also complained about either scarcity or shortage of raw materials for sufficient production.
Jacob also attributed the challenge to cost of transportation from the suppliers to the distributors, which has risen a great deal.
“We pay for bags of feeds in millions and the transportation, which may be in one or more trailer vehicles, cost a fortune also.
“Most times, you pay in full, yet, it takes several weeks before your supplies arrive because, the demand may be high at that moment and it takes turns to service distributors.
“By the time it finally gets to the point of sale, there is usually a rush for it.”
He noted that the prices, though not constant, may go lower after the Christmas celebration. (NAN)