Your Excellency,
Let me begin this piece by joining fellow Nigerians across all
divides, in condoling you and the entire members of the family on the
death of Pa Ibrahim Adebayo Ademola Fashola.
May Allah grant him Aljanar
Firdouz. Ameen.
Sir, I have settled for this open communication against my wish
because I am a non-partisan stakeholder in the Social Contract between
Your Excellency and the people of Lagos State whose popular mandate Your
Excellency has been exercising since 2007 election. With all sense of
modesty, as a keen watcher of Your Excellency’s brilliant performance
and exhibition of your administration’s sense of responsibility and
responsiveness, I ought not to have resorted to washing a ‘dirty linen’
in public.
However, I am constrained by the absence of a better opportunity or
forum for a non-partisan active electorate like me to have an audience
with Your Excellency due to the exigencies of your office, tight
schedule coupled and in most cases, with bureaucratic bottleneck and
protocol arrangement that usually fence off elected state functionaries
of your status. In the light of this, I wish to be understood in the
circumstance I have found myself.
Is LASTMA Above the Law?
Some of the universal principles of the Rule of Law by which
democratic governments are measured and distinguished from oligarchies
or dictatorships are that:
•Government and its officials, agents, individuals and private organizations are accountable under the law
•The laws are clear, publicized, stable, just and are applied evenly
and protect fundamental rights, including the security of persons and
property
How compliant is the Lagos State Transport Management Authority
(LASTMA) with these principles? Your Excellency, if my personal
encounter with the agency on Tuesday, August 6, 2013, along Iyana Oworo
axis of Lagos Third Mainland Bridge, is anything to go by, the agency
does not operate within the ambit of the Rule of Law but the Iron Law of
Oligarchy, which is anathema to democratic norms and values for which
the government of Lagos State enjoys public respectability and
accolades.
Should LASTMA be a Judge in its own Cause?
On the fateful day, the traffic was hectic from the Adeniji-Adele end
of the Third Mainland Bridge and on getting to the Oworosoki axis, it
became a standstill and a bumper-to-pumper situation. As the traffic
crawled on, a LASTMA official wearing a name tag Akintomide and staff
No. 67634 ordered me to pull out. I complied as a law-abiding citizen,
after which I asked him to explain the rationale behind the order. He
said I was under arrest because somebody attempted to alight from my
car. Almost in a jiffy, a standby towing vehicle had swung into
business. In defiance of all entreaties, the car was towed to their
Oshodi office.
On Wednesday, August 7 when I reported to LASTMA’s Oshodi office to
secure my car, I was served a notification of offences and penalties
bill for imaginary offences such as: wilful parking- N50,000; towing
vehicle N20,000 which amounted to N70,000. Other expenses incurred were:
demurrage charge N8,000 and driving test N5,000. All these amounted to
N83,000. Frantic efforts to meet the Chief Executive or any senior
officer in the organization were frustrated in order to make it a fait
accompli for me to acquiesce to the fines imposed on me without passing
through the due process of the law. Eventually, I had to cough out this
much, which is about 75% of my basic salary as a university teacher!
LASTMA and the Political Image of the State
It is not the intention of this piece to give a panorama of the
excesses and unethical behaviour of some LASTMA officials that impinge
on the fundamental rights of Nigerian road users in Lagos State. To the
credit of the administration under Your Excellency, the deviants against
who prima facie case were established, have been fumigated from the
agency. But it is not yet over, until it is over; as a Yoruba proverb
says: ti ina koba tan ni aso, eje ko le tan ni ekanna, meaning: as long
as there are lice in the clothing, so long there will be blood in the
fingernail. LASTMA as an agency of the state of Lagos needs training,
retraining and continuous cleansing of the Augean stable so that bad
eggs will be flushed out. Who knows whether the bad eggs are the fifth
columnists working against the interest of the State. Moreover, it is
perplexing that despite a subsisting order by a court of competent
jurisdiction in Lagos, LASTMA continues to pitch Your Excellency against
the Judiciary by the continued violation of an order by Justice Okon
Abang that declared imposition of fines or penalties by LASTMA on any
offender as illegal, null and void.
The Position of the Law on LASTMA Powers
Your Excellency, it is on judicial record that Mr. Jonathan Odutola
got a judgment against LASTMA on September 21, 2011 and a fine of
N500,000 was imposed on the agency as damages. It is also on record that
Hon. Justice Okon refused the application by the Lagos State government
for a stay of execution of the order. By implication, the continued
arbitrary imposition and collection of fines by the agency of the State
of Lagos under the guise of traffic offence amounts to contempt of
Court. Until a superior judgment vacates the subsisting order, the
position of the law is that LASTMA cannot impose or collect fines. Quod
Erat Demonstrandum!
The reaction of Your Excellency was widely reported by the media that
the State has residual authority to legislate on municipal issues under
which the road traffic law falls and that LASTMA could be a local
solution to a unique traffic problem, subject to innovation. Hon.
Justice Okon Abang declared that Sections 9, 11, 12 and 13 of the law
establishing LASTMA are in conflict with Section 36 of the Constitution
of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended). My question in
this instance is: whose law supersedes in a federation between the
central authority and the component units? Section 3 of the 1999
Nigerian Constitution is clear and lucid that: “If any other law is
inconsistent with the provision of this Constitution, this Constitution
shall prevail, and that other law shall to the extent of the
inconsistency be void.”
In the light of this, with all sense of humility, I put it to Your
Excellency that your agency LASTMA has violated my fundamental right to
fair hearing because it constituted itself into an accuser, the
prosecutor and the judge in its own cause. Rather than seeking a redress
in a law court, I hereby demand an apology and a refund of the money
collected from me under false pretences by the agent of Lagos State.
On a final note, the establishment of LASTMA is one of the best
things to happen in Lagos State. Not only because of the job
opportunities it has provided, but also for reducing social crimes and
display of insanities by motorists on Lagos roads. Notwithstanding, it
would be right and proper for the agency to conduct its operations with
high sense of responsibility, probity, human face and milk of kindness.
Thank you Your Excellency for reading me.
Mrs. Ogbonna-Nwaogu wrote from the Political Science Unit School of
Arts and Social Sciences, National Open University of Nigeria,
Headquarters, Lagos.
E-mail:mauify@yahoo.co.uk
No comments:
Post a Comment