The governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party in Lagos
State, Mr. Jimi Agbaje, has challenged the All Progressives Congress-led
government in the state to domesticate the Freedom of Information Act
which was signed into law by President Goodluck Jonathan in 2011.
Agbaje said this in a Facebook post on Thursday.
The
PDP candidate argued that the finances and the running of the affairs
of the state were deliberately made opaque so that a godfather would
continue to have his way.
He, therefore, stated that there was a need to free Lagos from the shackles of slavery.
Agbaje
said, “The ruling party has accused us of negative campaigning because
we have dared to challenge their record especially as it pertains to the
transparency and openness of government.
“Lagos’ failure to
domesticate the Freedom of Information Act has kept the people in the
dark for way too long on how this states’ affairs are conducted but
today we are ‘woke’.
“Lagosians want a government that would
prioritize their needs over the dictates of one man in every single
circumstance – housing, healthcare, jobs, opportunities for the youth
etc. I know this because I hear it everywhere I go.
“People are
tired of the secrecy. They are tired of the tyranny. And to belittle
this is to underestimate the resolve of Lagosians to bring about a new
order in Lagos in this election. To them, as it stands today, Lagos is
not free.”
The PDP candidate wondered how the APC in Lagos could
promise a better life for the people when trucks and trailers had been
parked on the side of major roads thereby causing untold hardship for
motorists.
He said the APC, through high and superfluous taxes
like toll fees, had made the cost of transportation high and made life
harder for the people.
Agbaje added, “Our vision to #setlagosfree
is not a trend or a fad, it is real and it has started a groundswell of
men and women across this state who are determined to live in a Lagos
that is free from the control of overlords.
“It is real for
people like Abdul, a young man that I met who works as a security guard
for an office leasing company in Ikoyi. Abdul earns a little over
N45,000 a month of which 60 per cent of that income goes into
transporting himself to work every day. Get this: That number was
actually around 44 per cent before the hike in the toll on the Lekki-Epe
Expressway. For him, Lagos is not working.
“It is real for
people like Bisola, a young mother of two, who lives on the
Surulere-axis and has to contend with trucks that are parked recklessly
on major roads and side streets – even on weekends – despite several
complaints from her residential association. For her, Lagos is not
listening.”
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