Laderin Train Station Road Set for Completion Soon – Ogun Governor

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…calls for quick dispensation of justice

Governor Dapo Abiodun of Ogun State has announced that the construction of the Laderin train station road in Abeokuta will soon be completed.

He expressed dissatisfaction with the Federal Government’s decision to build the train station without providing an access road.

Speaking during a special church service to mark the 2024/2025 Legal Year at the Cathedral Church of St. Peter, Ake, Abeokuta, the governor highlighted his administration’s efforts to improve infrastructure.

Following the construction of a world-class airport at Ilishan, his government opened a new access road from the Sagamu-Benin Expressway, despite the existing Ilishan and Iperu roads.

Abiodun noted that the contractor overseeing the Laderin road project has completed two large box culverts, which will help drain water from the area.

He added that earthwork and drainage construction will begin shortly, signaling the road’s final phase of development.

He said: “We don’t understand why a train station is built without an access road as part of that project conception. Today, we have built a world-class airport in Remo; can you imagine that we built that airport without considering the access road to that airport?

“There are other existing roads to that airport. However, we have begun the construction of an access road that tees off the Sagamu-Benin Expressway. If you are coming to that airport, you don’t need to go through Ilisan or Iperu; you make a left turn straight to the airport. This is what a project from inception should look like.

“In this instance, this train station was conceived, built, and completed without an access road being part of the project.

“As a responsible governor and government, we have taken it upon ourselves to award the contract for the road leading to that train station, and that contract is currently ongoing. However, the construction of two big box culverts that will channel stormwater away from the road has been completed.

“Earthwork and drainage will start. I will, however, personally urge the contractor to ensure he finishes on record time.”

He said the legal year provides an opportunity to collectively reaffirm commitment to pursue justice as well as continually improve the administration of justice in the state.

Abiodun said the outgoing year witnessed the resilience and dedication of the judiciary system despite unprecedented challenges confronting the nation, adding that the judiciary has, however, remained the beacon of fairness, integrity, and independence.

“As we all know, the judiciary is the bedrock of democracy, the pillar that upholds justice, equity, and fairness, which safeguards our rights to freedom and ensures the stability of our society.

“The commencement of the new legal year offers the chance to reiterate the importance of justice in society, a time for introspection on the ethics of the profession, principles of justice, and commitment to serving the public good,” the governor said.

The maintenance of law, order, and administration of justice, Prince Abiodun emphasized, is intricately linked as essential to ensuring healthy politics and achieving a just society.

He expressed the hope that members of the state judiciary would individually and collectively fulfill their constitutional roles, just as he expressed confidence in their unwavering commitment to uphold the rule of law, ensuring justice and safeguarding the rights of every citizen.

“I am confident that Law Officers will continue to perform their duties with the highest level of professionalism and dedication in alignment with the state government’s vision of a fair, just, and equitable society, free from anarchy and tyranny,” the governor noted.

In a sermon titled “Let Justice Flow,” the Archbishop of the African Church, Most Reverend Solomon Ojumu, stressed the need for judges to always deliver impartial judgments while judicial officers should also ensure quick dispensation of justice, as justice delayed is justice denied.

Taking his text from Amos 5, verses 21-23, the clergyman noted that there are injustices in the land as people are oppressed by the powerful in society, adding that as the last hope of the common man, judges ought to be champions of the poor by delivering sound judgment to all manner of people regardless of their social status.

Archbishop Ojumu called on Nigerian leaders to do the needful to reduce suffering in the land as there is hunger and desperation among the poor due to the sins of the few elites.

The Chief Judge of the State, Hon. Justice Mosunmola Dipeolu read the only lesson of the service taken from Romans 12, verses 9-21.

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