Lagosians spend over N1bn on parties monthly –Govt
Lagos State Government says residents of the state spend over N1bn on parties and entertainment every month.
Commissioner for Local Government and
Chieftaincy Affairs, Mr. Ademorin Kuye, said this on Thursday at the
briefing of the ministry in Alausa, Ikeja.
Kuye, while responding to a question on
the validity of Merriment Tax being collected by local governments in
the state, said the figure was a product of a recent research conducted
by the state’s Ministry of Economic Planning and Budgeting.
He said the benefits of entertainment
industry had not been fully utilised in Lagos and the country, adding
that taxes that should accrue to the government were spent on social
gatherings.
He said, “There is merriment tax in the
constitution; it’s part of the rate local governments can collect. We
have not utilised the benefit of the entertainment industry in this
state.
“Over N1bn is spent monthly in Lagos
State on entertainment. We have the records to confirm this and these
people, how many of them pay taxes? The money goes into drinks, wine,
food and aso-ebi and nobody wants to pay anything to the government.”
Kuye said those clamoring for autonomy
for local governments were not sincere but were only pushing for it to
score political points.
He said, “The position of the government
is that the clamour for LGs’ autonomy is not with sincere intention
because it will not benefit the local government. I have challenged
people to find out if that is what the people want. Those clamouring for
it are doing so for political reasons.”
He said the state government was in full
support of tenure elongation for local governments to give them more
time to carry out their constitutional responsibilities.
He flayed a suggestion that the state
electoral bodies should relinquish the right to conduct local government
elections to the Independent National Electoral Commission.
He said such an idea negated the tenets of federalism which the country was practising.
The commissioner said the government
recognised 319 obas and chiefs and had been doing a lot to improve the
welfare packages of the traditional rulers to restore the traditional
and cultural values to the state.
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