Lagos Bans Illegal LG Taskforce
The
Lagos State Government has banned all local governments from setting up
illegal environmental and traffic taskforce that extort money from
members of the public.
Several local governments across
the state have established parallel taskforce and traffic officials who
arrest motorists and extort between N20,000 and N30,000 from them for
allegedly breaking traffic law.
Commissioner for Local
Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, Ademorin Kure at a ministerial news
conference on Thursday said government has outlawed all forms of
taskforce or traffic officials being set up by councils, desctibing them
as illegal.
“On illegal traffic officers, we have held
meeting with our local government chairmen and the council chairmen
have addressed the press at different times and saying they don’t know
these people.
“A few weeks ago, we issued another
letter to our local governments telling them that wherever we find this
happening, we are going to hold the council chairmen responsible. We
have equally informed the Lagos State Taskforce that they should make
sure that wherever they find these illegal traffic officers, they should
arrest them and prosecute them,” he said.
On illegal
collection of levies by council officials, the commissioner said
government had issued several directives to the councils that local
governments found wanting would be sanctioned.
“Whenever
we receive complaints from any quarters, we promptly act and we direct
our councils to make sure that whatever they are collecting is within
the approved rate by the Lagos State House of Assembly. The fact that
the law is there does not mean that we will not find people who will
want to breach the law, particularly the landowners who sometimes go to
government schemes to sell land to the people.
“We have
constantly held meetings with them through their monarchs for them to
desist from such act and that if they are caught, they will be
criminally prosecuted,” he stated.
On boundary matters,
the commissioner said Lagos and Ogun States had been collaborating on
the retracing exercise of Section “C” which starts from Omu Creek and
ends at Ode-Omi Border town towards the Atlantic Ocean.
He
added that all fieldwork in respect of this section had been completed
while necessary documents concerning the claims of the two states had
been forwarded to the National Boundary Commission (NBC).
“However,
Lagos and Ogun states are awaiting the decision of the National
Boundary Commission on where the imaginary line of demarcation exist and
preparations are in top gear to erect a signpost in the completed
Sections “A” and “B,” he explained.
Comments