ARMED FORCE REMEMBRANCE DAY.....
The Speaker of Lagos State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforji, represented the Governor of Lagos State, Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola at the remembrance of the Armed Forces held on the 15th of January, 2013 at the Lagos State Police College, ikeja, Lagos.... see some pictures taken at the event below
Wednesday, 16 January 2013
Friday, 11 January 2013
WE WILL REVIEW LAGOS TRAFFICV LAW IF LAGOSIANS INSIST--Speaker Ikuforiji
WE WILL REVIEW LAGOS TRAFFICV LAW IF LAGOSIANS INSIST--Speaker Ikuforiji
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/01/well-review-traffic-law-if-lagosians-insist-speaker-ikuforiji/
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/01/well-review-traffic-law-if-lagosians-insist-speaker-ikuforiji/
Thursday, 10 January 2013
Legislation; LIST OF ALL BILL PASSED INTO LAW BY THE LAGOS STATE HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY under the leadership pf Rt. Hon Adeyemi Ikuforiji from 2006-2011
Legislation
Below is a list of all the legislative (i.e. ninety-six (96)) bills
passed into law by the Lagos State House of Assembly under the
leadership of Rt. Hon. Adeyemi lkuforiji.
Rt. Hon. Adeyemi uses the full range of the legislative process to move the state forward; examples include reforming the health care system, building a safe, clean and peaceful State which enables the creation of jobs for the people.
2006
Updated
|
Bill Description
|
2006 | Lagos State Infrastructure Maintenance and Regulatory (Amendment) Law |
2006 | Lagos State Number Plate Production Authority Law |
2006 | Lagos State Structures for Signage and Advertisement Agency Law |
2006 | Lagos State Pension Reform Law |
2006 | Supplementary Appropriation Law |
The Role of the Speaker in the House –
A Synopsis by Oludotun A. Omoyele
The House of Assembly is presided over by the Speaker who is the Chief
Executive and political head of the State House of Assembly. He is
assisted by other Principal Officers and the Clerk of the House. The
Clerk of the House is the Chief Accounting Officer and administrative
head in a State Legislature.
The Speaker is nominated and elected from among fellow honourable Members. Having sworn an Oath of Office, he presides over the activities of the House as spelt out in Section 95 (1) of the Constitution. He is responsible for interpreting the rules of the House and keeping orders and decorum in the Chamber and Gallery during debates. As the presiding officer, he ensures that the House rules are obeyed as spelt out in Rule 51 and interprets the Business, Rules and Standing Orders of the House.
The Speaker is elected by a simple majority vote. However, he can be removed by two-thirds majority vote as stipulated in Section (2) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Nigeria.
About – Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji
About – Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji
Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji was born in Epe, Lagos State on the 24th of
August, 1958. A devout Muslim, born to the late Chief & Mrs. Murtala
Atanda Ikuforiji.
Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji attended the Local Authority Central School, Epe, Lagos where he had his primary education. Following on, he attended Epe Grammar School where he broke a four-year record in the school by becoming the only candidate who obtained Division 1 out of 105 students that sat for the West African Secondary School Certificate examination in 1975.
His outstanding performance earned him a scholarship to further his studies abroad. He was offered a place to study in Romania at Babes-Bolayai University and Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies where he obtained a Master’s of Science degree in Economic Planning and Cybernetics in September 1981. During his time at university, he was elected as the President of the National Union of Nigerian Students also the President for the Association of Nigerian Students.
On returning to Nigeria, in relation to his education, Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji went on to study at the University of Lagos Business School where he attained a Masters in Business Administration in 1986. Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji also holds a number of certificates from Harvard University the Kennedy School of Government. His continued passion for change in the Nigerian government system also led him to recently attend the Global Change Programme: Leading with Commitment, Creativity and Courage at Harvard University - Kennedy School of Government in May, 2012.
Outside of politics, Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji enjoys table tennis, swimming, and going to the gym. He also enjoys, travelling and experiencing different cultures. He mostly reads motivational books, biographies and the latest research in leadership and managerial techniques. He regularly gets involved in community initiatives, i.e. the youth football club and other sporting activities.
His passion for sports saw him launch the Springfield U17 Football Competition for Epe Division, (Ikuforiji Cup) in 1995, which he still actively supports today.
In the area of academia, he founded the Epe Educational Foundation to provide indigent students with scholarships to further their education. This scheme has been very successful and has seen some of the young people, some of whom are now graduates occupying enviable positions in various fields.
Early Career
After his studies in Romania, Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji returned to Nigeria in 1982 to undertake and complete his National Youth Service Corps. During his service he was made the Chairman for the Nigerian National Youth Corps for the Federal Housing Authority where he served.
His career background includes a secondary school teacher, the Managing Director for Springfield Import and Export Procurement and General Contracting, a Networking & Technology lecturer for Wake Technical Community College in North Carolina, USA. He also undertook various roles at the International Bank for West Africa (Afri-Bank).
Political career
Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji is a highly visionary leader with over twenty years leadership and managerial experience working at the helm of public and private organizations. He has extensive experience developing and implementing budgets at the regional and state levels of government with a population of approximately eighteen million residents. He is politically astute, diplomatic and results oriented with the ability to achieve outstanding results in challenging environments.
Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji's political career started in 1978. His experience as the Secretary General of the National Union of Nigerian Students, followed by his role of President of the National Union of Nigerian Students in Romania, between 1980 and 1981 sparked his interest in politics.
Between 1982 and 1983, he served as the General Secretary, Unity Party of Nigeria in Ward A4, Epe, and was an active member of the Social Democratic Party of the same Ward in 1990.
He contested the 2003 election into the Lagos State House of Assembly on the platform of Alliance for Democracy to represent Epe Constituency 1 and later emerged Speaker of the Assembly in December 2005.
He has since transformed the Lagos State House of Assembly, resulting in great changes in its operation and administration making it more efficient to the electorate.
Speaker of the Lagos House of Assembly
Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji was first elected Speaker of the Lagos House of Assembly on 29th December, 2005. Following his victory at the April 14th 2007 General Elections, he was returned to represent Epe Constituency II in the State Legislature under the aegis of Action Congress (AC) now Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN). At the inauguration of the 6th Assembly held on Monday, 4th June, 2007, he became the first Legislator to serve as a Speaker for two consecutive terms.
Rt. Hon. Adeyemi’s Pledge to Lagos State House of Assembly
Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji strives at all times by way of motions, resolutions and legislations to enhance the quality of the living condition of the people of Lagos State; his aim is to cooperate with well meaning individuals, groups and organizations for the entrenchment of a virile democracy in a true federation and in totality, by his actions and deeds, give meaning to the concept of true representation.
Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji has established himself as a leader who is "of the people, by the people, for the people."
He said in his victory speech in 2011:
"To whom much is given, much is expected. Hence, we can’t afford to let
the people of Lagos down. We must get to the task of making good laws,
effective governance and administration of the state in the paramount
and collective interest of the people."
As the Speaker, he approved and managed the re-development of Lagos State House of Assembly; he commissioned several buildings during the 4th Assembly, including schools, water pumping stations and sporting facilities.
From June 2007 – June 2011, he successfully implemented the activities and plans for the Lagos State 5th Assembly. He also passed successfully Seventy-Two (72) State bills for Lagos State; examples include the establishment of the Lagos State Waste Management Regulatory Bill, the Lagos State Signatory Bill and Advertisement Bill.(See Legislation)
Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji is a member of a number of Committees within the House. He is the Member of the Education Committee, Member of the Commerce and Industry Committee and the Member of the Environment Committees.
He successfully introduced the conduction of the plenary sessions in the local native tongue, first of its kind in Nigeria.
Due to his outstanding work from June 2005 – June 2011, he was overwhelmingly re-elected as the Speaker of the House by his colleagues. He developed the House to be recognised as the "Leading" House of Assembly in Nigeria. He has been honoured as the Best Speaker in Nigeria by the National Leadership Award in Abuja, among other awards.
For his outstanding work as the Speaker, Rt. Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji received the “Certificate of Excellence” in October 2008, in recognition of his outstanding contributions towards the development of the democratic process in Lagos State, Nigeria as a well as the whole African continent. This goes to show his commitment to the development of Democracy in Africa.
Rt Hon. Adeyemi Ikuforiji in April 2010 successfully completed the "Public Financial Management" course from the Harvard University John F. Kennedy School of Government Executive Education. He was also awarded certificates for the successful completion of "Science, Technology and Innovation Policy" programme and "Leadership for the 21st Century" in 2008 both from Harvard University.
Lagos – The commercial hub of Nigeria
Lagos – The commercial hub of Nigeria
Lagos State has been described as the Centre of Excellence and a forward
thinking State. It is arguably the most economically important state
of the country, containing Lagos, the nation's largest urban area. Lagos
State lies to the south-western part of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
on the West Coast of Africa.
Lagos State is a socio-cultural melting pot attracting both Nigerians and foreigners alike. The name ‘Lagos’ was given by a Portuguese explorer called Ruy de Sequeira who visited the territory in 1472 and named it Lago de curamo’ meaning lake, after the Port of Lagos In Southern Portugal on account of its wet topography.
Lagos is a port city and the most populous city in Nigeria, with a population 11.2 million according to an estimate made by the United Nations in 2011. (UN, 2011). The Port of Lagos is Nigeria's leading port and one of the largest and busiest in Africa. The port has seen growing amounts of crude oil exported, with export figures rising between 2008 and 2010. Oil and petroleum products provide 14% of GDP and 90% of foreign exchange earnings in Nigeria as a whole.
The commercial, financial and business centre of Lagos and of Nigeria are situated in the business district of Lagos Island, where most of the country’s largest banks and financial institutions are located.
Its progress, development and growth originate from its dynamism as the nation’s commercial and cultural melting pot in tourism, football, education and from the commendable foresight of successive administrations that have governed the state.
Lagos State is known for its culture, with festivals playing a big role in shaping the lives and beliefs of the people. The major festivals include the Adamu Orisha (Eyo masquerades) of Lagos Island, Egungun, Kori and Osun lya Alaro festivals at Ikeja, Eluku Festival at Ikorodu, Ebi Festival and Okoso Festival (Boat regatta) of Epe, the Sangbeto Masquerades of Badagry and a host of others.
One of the most famous festivals in Lagos is the Eyo festival also known as the Adamu Orisha Play. This festival is unique to the Yoruba’s and is traditionally performed on the Lagos Island.
Lagos also has one of the largest and most extensive road networks in West Africa some of which include a bus rapid transit (BRT) system, air, rail and ferries.
The Lagos-Ibadan expressway and the Lagos-Abeokuta expressway are the major arterial routes in the north of the city and serve as inter-state highways to Oyo and Ogun States respectively. To the west the Lagos – Badagry Expressway serves outlying towns such as Festival Town, which was the location for the 1977 Festival of Black Arts and Culture 77….Festac 77.
Lagos's importance as a commercial centre and port and its strategic location have led to it being the end-point of three Trans-African Highway routes using Nigeria's national roads. The Trans–West African Coastal Highway leaves the city as the Badagry Expressway to Benin and beyond as far as Dakar and Nouakchott; The Trans-Sahara Highway to Algiers, which is close to completion, leaves the city as the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway. Lagos is known to be the second fastest growing city in Africa and the seventh fastest in the world. Lagos has one of the highest standards of living as compared to other cities in Nigeria as well as in Africa.
Lagos is known to be the second fastest growing city in Africa and the seventh fastest in the world. Lagos has one of the highest standards of living as compared to other cities in Nigeria as well as in Africa.
The People
Lagos State is made up various groups of indigenous settlers. The Pioneer settlers are the Aworis, who arrived from Isheri along the Ogun River led by an Ife prince called Ogunfuminire and later settled at Iddo between 1400AD and 1550AD.
Other dominant indigenous settlers are the Egun of Badagry and the Ijebu of Ikorodu and Epe divisions of the State. These settlers are famous for their business enterprises. The Ijebu of Epe are believed to have migrated from Remo in Ogun State. Others are the Sano and Agunda who established themselves at Olowogbowo, Breadfruit, Bamgbose and Campos areas of the State.
There is also a mixture of other pioneer settlers collectively known as the Ekos.
While the State is essentially a Yoruba-speaking environment, the official Language for Lagos State is English. Other dialects spoken are Egun and Ijebu.
CITATION OF RT. HON. SABIT ADEYEMI IKUFORIJI, HON. SPEAKER, LAGOS STATE HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY
CITATION OF RT. HON. SABIT ADEYEMI
IKUFORIJI, HON. SPEAKER, LAGOS STATE HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY
Great men
are products and makers of history. Beyond their human restraints and
ingenuity, the lines they traverse on earth are given to them by the challenges
and passions of their immediate environment.
The
unfolding personality of Rt. Hon. Sabit Adeyemi Ikuforiji epitomizes the
dramatic rise from grass to grace of a child of destiny whose extremely humble
background and promising academic genius only combined to throw him up as an
accomplished technocrat, consummate politician and seasoned administrator.
Sharing a
similar circumstance of birth with the late business mogul and politician,
Chief M.K.O. Abiola, the quintessential Lagos House of Assembly Speaker was the
first surviving child of his poor parents, who having lost eight boys
consecutively to infant illness, only had to thank the Almighty God for saving
the young Adeyemi from the clutches of death.
Adeyemi
Ikuforiji was born on Sunday, 24thof August, 1958 in the then rustic
but highly sociable community of Epe in the old Epe Division of Lagos State.
Though his parents belonged to the lower ebb of the social ladder in the
society, their informed appreciation of the import of western education as a
means of socio-economic liberation, made them to enlist the young Adeyemi at
the Local Authority Central School, Epe, where he had his primary education.
For his
post-primary education, Adeyemi proceeded to Epe Grammar School in 1971 where
his glowing record of brilliant performance in academic activities brought him
to the limelight as a shining star.
It is
refreshing that by the time Adeyemi got admitted to Epe Grammar School, only
two or three candidates were reported to have previously passed their School
Certificate Examinations in Grade one. Nobody else could attain this feat for a
period of four years until June 1975 when Adeyemi Ikuforiji the young star
broke the jinx when he emerged as the only student who passed with Grade one
out of 105 candidates that sat for the examination. In the entire Epe Division,
comprising of about six secondary schools, Ikuforiji was probably the only
candidate who attained this feat. This
uncommon academic achievement, more than earning him a Government’s overseas
scholarship to study in Romania, was to further strengthen the informed
confidence of his indigent parents in education as a means of empowerment.
It is
noteworthy that Adeyemi Ikuforiji was firstly awarded a Lagos State Relief
scholarship in 1973 when he was in Form Three among the 104 students whose
diligence and excellent performance in their studies saw them becoming proud
beneficiaries of the scholarship scheme across the state. On this joyful day, the 65-year-old Pa
Ikuforiji, Adeyemi’s father, was said to have jumped on his armchair in
excitement when Adeyemi came home to break the joyful news of scholarship
award.
A promising
star and Child of Destiny from birth, Adeyemi quickly seized the opportunity
provided by the overseas scholarship and proceeded to Babes-Bolyai University,
Cluj where he graduated in flying colours. Full of brilliant ideas and burning
with great vision to be outstanding among his contemporaries, Adeyemi Ikuforiji
immediately enrolled at the Academy of Economic Studies in Bucharest where he
obtained a Masters of Science degree in Economic Planning and Cybernetics in
September, 1981. Back home in Nigeria, Ikuforiji saw the extreme gap between
the vast human and material resource base in the country and the low managerial
capacity of the industrial sector. His entrepreneurial instinct and desire to
help in augmenting the level of productivity of the available manpower made him
to enrol at the University of Lagos, Akoka, Lagos to pursue a Masters of
Business Administration (MBA) degree which was then seen in the country as an
exclusive preserve of top management cadres in the public and private sector.
He finally got his MBA degree in 1986.
On his
return from his academic sojourn abroad, Ikuforiji had his compulsory National
Youth Service (NYSC) at the Federal Housing Authority after which he joined
IBWA (now Afribank) in 1983.
Given his
advanced training and expertise in Information Technology as well as his
inclination for innovative development, Ikuforiji was made the Project
Coordinator for the Computerization Project designed for all the branches of
Afribank across the country. Not long after, the Afribank’s management, noting
the huge success and impact of the computerization project across their
branches, made this Child of Destiny, Adeyemi Ikuforiji a member of the Bank’s
6-man Strategic Planning Team that worked with the Consulting firm of Arthur
Anderson & Co to draw up strategic plans for the Bank. It is worthy of note
that this development was the first of its kind in the Nigerian Banking
Industry.
As a man
that is full of brilliant ideas and one who is gifted with enterpreneural
prowess, Ikuforiji saw the need to brace up his courage and launch himself out
as an employer of labour when he left Afribank in 1992 and established his own
business outfit, the Springfield Ventures Limited. Few years later, his
adventurist spirit and knack for providing solution to nagging problems in the
corporate sector saw him establishing the Next Century System Limited, a
Software Consulting firm that developed the first indigenous and comprehensive
banking software package that was eventually adopted and used in a couple of
banks in Nigeria during that period.
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