He famously
claims to be “just doing his job”. But in a land where politicians are known
for doing anything but, that alone has been enough to make Babatunde Fashola,
boss of the vast Nigerian city of Lagos, a very popular man.
Confounding
the image of Nigerian leaders as corrupt and incompetent, the 51-year-old
governor has won near-celebrity status for transforming west Africa’s biggest
city, cleaing up its crime-ridden slums and declaring war on corrupt police and
civil servants.
Next month,
he will come to London to meet business leaders and Mayor Boris Johnson’s
officials, wooing investors with talk of how he has spent the last seven years
building new transport hubs and gleaming business parks.
Yet arguably
his biggest achievement in office took place just last week, and was done
without a bulldozer in sight. That was when his country was officially declared
free of Ebola, which first spread to Nigeria three months ago when Patrick
Sawyer, an infected Liberian diplomat, flew into Lagos airport.
Health
officials had long feared that the outbreak, which has already claimed nearly
5,000 lives elsewhere in west Africa, would reach catastrophic proportions were
it to spread through Lagos. One of the largest cities in the world, it is home
to an estimated 17 million people, many of them living in sprawling shanty
towns that would have become vast reservoirs for infection. To make matters
worse, when the outbreak first happened, medics were on strike.
Instead, Mr
Fashola turned a looming disaster into a public health and PR triumph. Breaking
off from a trip overseas, he took personal charge of the operation to track
down and quarantine nearly 1,000 people feared to have been infected since Mr
Sawyer’s arrival.
Last week,
what would have been a formidably complex operation in any country came to a
successful end, when the World Health Organisation announced that since Nigeria
had had no new cases for six weeks, it was now officially rid of the virus.
“This is a
spectacular success story,” said Rui Gama Vaz, a WHO spokesman, who prompted an
applause when he broke the news at a press conference in Nigeria on Tuesday.
“It shows that Ebola can be contained.”
The WHO
announcement was a rare glimmer of hope in the fight against Ebola, and even
rarer vote of confidence in a branch of the Nigerian government, which was
heavily criticised over its response to the abduction of more than 200
schoolgirls by the Boko Haram insurgent group in April. As a columninst in
Nigeria’s Leadership newspaper put it last week: “For once, we did not
underachieve.”
For Mr
Fashola’s many supporters, it is also yet more proof that the 51-year-old
ex-lawyer is a future president in the making, a much-needed technocrat in a
country dominated far too long by ageing “Big Men” and ex-generals.
“He is the
best governor we have ever had,” said Odun Babalola, a Lagos-based pension fund
portfolio manager. “He’s made a lot of progress in schools, railways, and
infrastructure, and unlike a lot of politicians, who are corrupt, he’s a good
administrator.”
True, the
successful tackling of the Ebola outbreak was not Mr Fashola’s doing alone. For
a start, the doctor’s strike that was under way when Mr Sawyer collapsed at
Lagos airport turned out to be a blessing in disguise. Rather than being taken
to one of Lagos’s vast public hospitals, where he might have languished for
hours and infected numerous fellow patients and staff, he was instead admitted
to a private clinic. There he was seen by a sharp-eyed consultant, Stella
Adadevoh, who spotted that his symptoms were not malaria as had been first
thought.
She then
alerted the Nigerian health ministry, and along with other doctors physically
restrained Sawyer when he became aggressive and tried to leave the hospital to
fly to another Nigerian city. Her quick thinking help stop the virus being
spread more widely, but also cost her her life: she caught Ebola herself while
treating Mr Sawyer, and has now been recommended for a national award.
But even by
the time Mr Sawyer had been isolated, the virus was already on the loose.
Knowing that he had passed through one of the busiest airports in west Africa,
health officials had to try to track down every single person who had
potentially been infected by him, including the other passengers on his flight.
The list started at 281 people and grew to nearly 1,000. as eight others whom
he turned out to have passed the virus to subsequently died.
That was
where Mr Fashola stepped in. He broke off from a pilgrimage to Mecca, flew home
and then helped set up an Ebola Emergency Operations Centre, which spearheaded
the mammoth task of monitoring all those potentially infected. A team of 2,000
officials were trained for the task, who ended up knocking on 26,000 doors. At
one point the governor was being briefed up to ten times a day by disease
control experts. He made a point of visiting the country’s Ebola treatment
centre, a way of communicating to the Nigerian public that they should not
panic needlessly.
“Command and
control is very important in fighting disease outbreaks, and he provided
effective leadership,” said Dr Ike Anya, a London-based Nigerian public health
expert. “He also said exactly the right things, urging for the need to keep
calm. Regardless of whether you support his politics, he has been very
effective as a governor and I would be happy to see him stand for leadership.”
Born into a
prominent Muslim family but married to a Christian, Mr Fashola trained as a
lawyer and went into politics after being appointed chief of staff by the
previous Lagos governor, Asiwaju Tinubu, a powerful politician often described
as Mr Fashola’s “Godfather”. But while he has long enjoyed the backing of a
political “Big Man”, is his role as a rare defender of Nigeria’s “Little Men”
that has won him most support.
Once, while
driving through Lagos in his convoy, he famously stopped an army colonel who
was driving illegally in one of the governor’s newly-built bus lanes, berating
him in front of television cameras.
“The bus is
for those who cannot afford to buy cars,” he said. “I want a zero tolerance of
lawlesness, and those who don’t want to comply can leave our state.”
It was one
of the first times Nigerians had ever seen a civil servant confronting a member
of the security forces, whose fondness for committing crime rather than
fighting it has long contributed to Lagos’s legendary reputation for
lawlessness.
Armed
robberies – sometimes by moonlighting police – used to be so common that few
people ventured out after dark. Foreign businessmen would routinely travel with
armed escorts, and the few willing to live there would stay mainly in a
heavily-guarded diplomatic area called Victoria Island, a rough equivalent to
Baghdad’s Green Zone. Add to that the suffocating smog, widespread squalor and
regular three-hour traffic jams, and it was no suprise that the city had a
reputation as one of the worst places in the world to live.
Today, much
of the problems remain. But members of the vast Nigerian diaspora say they now
notice big changes whenever they go back. “When you return you see an absolute
difference – things have improved 100 per cent,” said Nels Abbey, a
London-based Nigerian journalist and businessman. “Traffic is not what it used
to be, bus lanes have been introduced, and it feels a lot safer. Fashola has
been like a Tory mayor for Lagos – he is trying to make it attractive to the
well-off.”
Source-www.telegraph.co.uk,
written by their Chief foreign correspondent,
Colin Freeman
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