News
Authorities Shut Four Lagos Properties for Illegal Wastewater Disposal
The Lagos State Wastewater Management Office has sealed four properties across Ikotun and Ajah for illegally discharging untreated wastewater into public spaces.
The enforcement action, carried out on Wednesday and Thursday, targeted two residential properties at 13, Oritola Street and 1, Temitope Street, Pipeline, Ikotun.
The commissioner for the environment, Tokunbo Wahab, who disclosed the development on X on Thursday, added that a public toilet and a mechanic workshop along Badore Road, Ajah, were also sealed on Thursday.
Wahab said the Ikotun properties were sealed following public complaints, repeated warnings and verified findings from an investigation.
Some of the sealed locations. Photo: Tokunbo Wahab on X
He said the owners had been deliberately channelling untreated wastewater through pipes onto roads.
“The present situation, which remains unabated, showed that the properties were deliberately releasing untreated wastewater into the environment through pipes onto the roads, thereby constituting public nuisance,” he said.
The Ajah premises were shut over what the agency described as “indiscriminate discharge of wastewater into the public drain and the environment.”
Wahab warned that the crackdown would continue, saying individuals and organisations found violating environmental regulations would face appropriate sanctions and possible prosecution under enabling laws.

“@followlasg reiterates the need for residents and property managers to adhere strictly to proper wastewater management practices.
“Individual or organisation found contravening environmental regulations will be meted with appropriate sanctions and possible prosecution in accordance with the enabling laws,” Wahab added.oads, thereby constituting public nuisance,” he said.
The The Lagos State Wastewater Management Office has sealed four properties across Ikotun and Ajah for illegally discharging untreated wastewater into public spaces.
The enforcement action, carried out on Wednesday and Thursday, targeted two residential properties at 13, Oritola Street and 1, Temitope Street, Pipeline, Ikotun.
The commissioner for the environment, Tokunbo Wahab, who disclosed the development on X on Thursday, added that a public toilet and a mechanic workshop along Badore Road, Ajah, were also sealed on Thursday.
Wahab said the Ikotun properties were sealed following public complaints, repeated warnings and verified findings from an investigation.Ajah premises were shut over what the agency described as “indiscriminate discharge of wastewater into the public drain and the environment.”
Wahab warned that the crackdown would continue, saying individuals and organisations found violating environmental regulations would face appropriate sanctions and possible prosecution under enabling laws.
“@followlasg reiterates the need for residents and property managers to adhere strictly to proper wastewater management practices.
“Individual or organisation found contravening environmental regulations will be meted with appropriate sanctions and possible prosecution in accordance with the enabling laws,” Wahab added.
News
Farmers Accuse Banks Of Diverting Agric Funds To Real Estate
A former Chairman of the Agriculture and Non-Oil Group of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Prince Wale Oyekoya, opened a can of worms on the financial institution in Nigeria, Thursday, when he accused them of diverting funds meant for agricultural development into the real estate sector.
Oyekoya, who is also the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Bama Farms Limited, said the action has worsened the financing crisis farmers across the country are facing.
He made the accusation at a panel session during the 2026 Agriculture and Agro-Allied Summit organised by the Nigerian-British Chamber of Commerce in Lagos. The theme of the summit was: “Ensuring Food Security in Nigeria: Innovations, Investments and Policy for a Resilient Future” .
Fielding questions on whether Nigeria has adequate data to identify genuine smallholder farmers at the point of loan disbursement, Oyekoya insisted that such information already exists within government structures through cooperatives and farmer clusters.
“Yes, there’s always data when you go to the ministries. When you go to any government establishment, that is why they say they deal with cooperatives and clusters. So every farmer, every stakeholder in farming in any state must be registered,” he said.
According to him, poor implementation and weak financial commitment remain major obstacles to sustainable agricultural development.
“I believe financial institutions are mostly the problem farmers have. I’m a living witness and I have so many experiences with them that when some of these funds are being given to the banks to be given to the farmers, most of them divert the funds to real estate,” he alleged.
He added that government, banks and private sector players all have roles to play in ensuring food security and sustainable growth in the sector.
However, Manager, Agribusiness and Non-Oil Export, Union Bank, Mr. Utomi Ezinwa, slightly disagreed with Oyekoya. He said that access to finance remained difficult for smallholder farmers because of the risks associated with fragmented production systems.
According to him, lenders are more willing to finance farmers when they operate in groups and have guaranteed markets through anchor arrangements.
“Some smallholder farmers can’t work alone. It is important that they work in association and link up to an anchor. When the market is guaranteed, we check the anchor himself, does he have capacity, does he have track record? There’s nothing stopping us from funding smallholder farmers,” he said.
Ezinwa noted that financing costs also remain a major burden on agricultural production.
“One of the major challenges apart from financing itself is the cost of the financing and we need to talk about it,” he added.
In his presentation, Guest speaker, Founder And Managing Director of Babban Gona , Mr. Kola Masha warned that Nigeria’s food security crisis could worsen if investment in agriculture and rural youth empowerment is not urgently scaled up.
News
2027: Court Hears Suit Seeking To Stop Jonathan’s Bid Today
A Federal High Court in Abuja will today hear a suit seeking to stop former President Goodluck Jonathan from contesting the 2027 presidential election, amid renewed debate over constitutional term limits and growing speculation about his possible political return.
The suit, marked FHC/ABJ/CS/2102/2025, was filed by lawyer Johnmary Jideobi, who is asking the court to declare Jonathan constitutionally ineligible to seek the presidency again.
Justice Peter Lifu had, on April 28, ordered that hearing notices be issued and served on the defendants, following the failure of some parties to file their responses.
Jonathan is listed as the first defendant in the suit, while the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the attorney-general of the federation (AGF) are named as second and third defendants respectively.
The plaintiff is seeking an order restraining Jonathan from presenting himself to any political party as a candidate in the 2027 election, as well as an order barring INEC from accepting or publishing his name as a presidential candidate.
Jideobi asked the court to determine “whether in view of the combined provisions of sections 1(1), (2) and (3) and 137(3) of the 1999 Constitution, the 1st defendant is eligible, under any circumstances whatsoever, to contest for the office of the president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria”.
The plaintiff argued that Jonathan had exhausted the constitutional limit for the office, having completed the tenure of late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua after his death in 2010 and subsequently serving another full term following the 2011 election.
In an affidavit filed in support of the suit, Emmanuel Agida, who deposed on behalf of the plaintiff, said Jonathan’s reported interest in the 2027 election prompted the legal action.
“That the plaintiff believes that the 1st defendant, having completed the unexpired term of late President Yar’Adua and subsequently served a full term after the 2011 election, has exhausted the constitutional limit of two tenures as president,” the affidavit read.
The plaintiff further argued that allowing Jonathan to contest and possibly win the election would amount to him taking the presidential oath for a third time.
“That if the court does not intervene timeously, a political party may present the 1st defendant as its presidential candidate in the 2027 general election, thereby breaching the constitution,” the affidavit added.
Exclusive
Idanre Group Urges Aiyedatiwa Over Selection of New Owa
The Idanre Development Assembly (IDA) has appealed to Ondo State Governor, Lucky Orimisan Aiyedatiwa, to urgently approve the resumption and conclusion of the selection process for a new Owa of Idanre Kingdom.
In a letter dated May 7, 2026, and addressed to the governor at the Government House in Alagbaka, Akure, the socio-cultural body expressed concern over the prolonged vacancy on the throne following the transition of the former Owa on July 31, 2024.
The letter, jointly signed by the President-General of IDA, Chief Dr. Anthony A. Omolola, and the Secretary-General, Prof. Oluropo E. Akinfala, noted that the situation had been worsened by the recent death of the Regent and Lisa of Idanre Kingdom, High Chief Christopher Oluwole Akindolire, on May 1, 2026.
According to the group, the absence of a substantive monarch has created social and economic hardships across Idanreland, particularly affecting traders and market women whose trading locations were allegedly relocated to unsafe and unconducive areas pending the installation of a new king.
“The market women and men are worst hit in the hardships with the cultural relocations of their marketplaces to areas that are not conducive and dangerous for their merchandise,” the letter stated.
The group further claimed that several motor and motorcycle accidents, including incidents involving loss of lives and limbs, had occurred in the affected areas.
The Assembly said the selection process for a new Owa had already advanced to the stage where kingmakers were expected to convene publicly under the supervision of local government officials to elect a new monarch before the process was halted by the state government.
The group argued that the suspension of the process had deprived the kingmakers of the experience and guidance of the late High Chief Akindolire, whose passing, it said, had heightened tension and debate within the kingdom.
Appealing to the governor to intervene in the interest of peace and stability, the IDA urged the state government to approve a date — preferably within May 2026 — for the completion of the selection process.
“A stitch in time saves nine,” the group stated, expressing confidence in the governor’s commitment to peace and development in Ondo State.
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