Lagos to completely ban okada, keke in all LGAs
By Bisola Adeyemo
The Lagos State Government has announced a complete ban on motorcycles (okada) and tricycles (keke), as a means of transportation in the state.
This was contained in a communiqué issued after a stakeholders’ meeting on Monday at the Adeyemi Bero Auditorium, Alausa Secretariat, Ikeja.
At the end of the meeting, a 12-point resolution was reached, among which was a ban on Okada “as a means of transportation in the state.”
Gov Babajide Sanwo-Olu during the meeting said the string of lawlessness daily witnessed from the confrontation between commercial motorcyclists and law enforcement agencies required urgent action.
“Based on all that we have seen and experienced in the past couple of weeks, as well as the increasing threat posed by the activities of commercial motorcycle operators to the safety and security of lives, we will be announcing further changes to the parameters of motorcycle and tricycle operations in the state in the coming days.
“No society can make progress amid such a haughty display of lawlessness and criminality,” he added.
Sanwo-Olu also said from next week, the state would be inaugurating the First and Last Mile buses next week, which would take the routes the motorcycles were plying, the punch reports.
The state commissioner of Police, Odumosu, also raised the alarm over rising security breaches from the menace of okada operations in the state.
He said between January and early this month, 320 commercial motorcycles were impounded in 218 cases of criminal incidents in which 78 suspects were detained and 480 ammunition recovered.
In the same period, the Lagos police boss said Okada accounted for 83 per cent of 385 cases of avoidable fatal vehicular accidents in Lagos.
It was also stated that stakeholders agreed that the state government should take over abandoned and uncompleted buildings in the state and take control of abandoned vehicles in every nook and cranny of Lagos.
Other decisions taken were that the government could take over houses, hotels and event centres where hoodlums hibernated or kept arms.