

Is it a case of limited time frame, priority
and budget constraint?
Governor Babatunde Fashola has a good reputation to have made progress in the
affairs of Nigeria’s economic capital, Lagos State.
His gigantic strides in infrastructural development, environmental sanitation, traffic management and internally generated revenues cannot be ignored. The praise and accolades the governor receives every-day from political analysts, Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs), international development bodies and stakeholders at large are well deserved. He has indeed changed the face of Lagos. But has he done enough?


His gigantic strides in infrastructural development, environmental sanitation, traffic management and internally generated revenues cannot be ignored. The praise and accolades the governor receives every-day from political analysts, Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs), international development bodies and stakeholders at large are well deserved. He has indeed changed the face of Lagos. But has he done enough?
Many have
criticised the governor for focusing mostly on urban areas and abandoning the
rural areas. The governor at various forums has justified his concentration on
these areas, on the grounds that the majority of those in the rural areas work
in these urban areas, so they benefit from the developments in such areas.
Not deterred
by accusations that his government is elitist, Fashola has soldiered on in his
quest to ensure Lagosians have a brighter and more rewarding future – as his
campaign slogan stated in 2007 when he first contested for the no 1 position in
the state. This is not to say though, that the Fashola administration has done
nothing for rural areas.
A photo-journalist
has captured through his lens a typical rural setting in Lagos, with focus on
the Ifako area of Lagos.
See the
pictures below:



I like what Fashola is doing but he did pay attention to a particular area.
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