Safety Seat Limited

Safety Seat Limited Safety Seat Limited is an Occupational Health, Safety & Environment solution provider. We give suppo

We are SAFETY SEAT LIMITED
We are an Occupational Health, Safety and Environment Solution Provider. Safety Seat Limited seeks to be recognised as the preferred Management Consultancy in advising corporations, government agencies, multilateral and Non -governmental Organisations on how to ensure a Health, Safety, Security and Environment (HSE) compliant atmosphere, hence a safe place of work for em

ployees, contractors and visitors. We are committed to assisting organisations create, define and manage their HSE needs as well as other management concerns. At Safety Seat, we apply our extensive knowledge to help clients devise and implement strategies to the benefit of all significant stakeholders over the long term. With the entire economy in transformation, companies and institutions need to realign their brands and HSE parameters to fits and cater for new requirements from evolving markets. We do not believe in parading the most popular names in the industry, however, we have proven each time that a team of seasoned yet committed experts can deliver on each task beyond the client’s expectation.

THE VOYAGE By Professor Moyo Okediji About 30 years ago, I slept at the Murtala Muhammed Airport for four days. No, I wa...
26/10/2023

THE VOYAGE
By Professor Moyo Okediji

About 30 years ago, I slept at the Murtala Muhammed Airport for four days.
No, I was not a homeless vagabond.
I had bought the Nigeria Airways ticket to fly to the United States for a one-year sabbatical leave.
But when I arrived at the airport, I realized that my ticket was not honored, though I had bought it legitimately.
Whenever a plane was about to leave Lagos for New York, the NA officials posted a manifest list, and my name was not there.
They would ask me to wait for the next list.
This drama of “Your name is not yet listed, wait for the next manifest list” continued for four days.

I couldn’t leave the airport and return home because I lived in Ile Ife, and had bid my people goodbye for one year. They all expected I would be in NY already.
I was therefore forced to sleep by the door of the NA office at the airport, waiting for the release of the manifest list with my name on it.
I was not alone. There were hundreds of stranded passengers like me there—men, women, young, old, tall, short, thin fat—all sorts of people.

The Murtala Mohamed Airport was different then than what we have now.
There were no security officers. People drifted in and out in their hundreds. It was rowdy. There was no order of any sort. Food hawkers milled among the crowd of the stranded passengers like me, selling hot dogs, sandwiches, puff-puff, moin-moin, gala, meat pie, hamburgers, even rice and dodo.
People hawked sodas such as Cocacola, Fanta, Sprite and malt drinks.
The interior of the airport was packed like the Oyingbo market. There were also pickpockets and other fraudsters pulling fast tricks on unsuspecting victims.
I was hesitant to buy anything. I had changed all my naira to dollars at the rate of one dollar to three naira. But if I wanted to change my dollar back to naira, I could only collect one naira for my dollar at the airport, which would be a loss.

I was desperate when I got hungry. But someone was willing to give me two naira for a dollar, so I changed two dollars. I bought some moin-moin and coke.
The guys who helped me to change my money said I had no hope of traveling unless I was willing to bribe someone.
I was adamant. I wasn’t going to bribe anybody. It was my right to fly out, after all, I had paid for my ticket.
By day four, I lost hope of traveling out. I used my handbag as my pillow and reclined on the floor, to take a nap.
The young woman who slept a couple of feet away from me was also napping, snoring loudly. I asked her earlier, and she said she had been there for almost a week. She said she was ready at that point to accept the offer of a Nigeria Airways official who wanted s*x in exchange for helping her to get on the manifest list.

For how long I had been asleep I couldn’t tell, when I felt a tap on my shoulder. I opened my eyes. It was Segun Odegbami, the famous international soccer star, who played for the Green Eagles. I thought I was dreaming. I had met him through a friend, Tunde Fagbenle, and we had shared drinks at Fagbenle’s house in Lagos a couple of times.
I couldn’t refer to him as my friend, and I didn’t even know he would recognize me or remember my name.
I was a fat nobody next to a big star like him, someone for whom Ebenezer Obey had waxed an album, with the chorus, “It is a gooooal, Odegbami,” a bestselling song throughout Nigeria.
When I opened my eyes and it was him, I wanted to close my eyes back, thinking I was just dreaming.
But he spoke to me. “Moyo, what are you doing on the floor here?”
I quickly sat up, wiped my eyes, and smile at him. I narrated my story.
He shook his head, and said with a sigh, “That’s Nigeria Airways for you. I came to see someone off to London, and as I was leaving I happened to see you.”
“Na so we see am o,” I told him.
“Where is your ticket?”
I dipped my hand inside the pocket of my agbada, made out of new Ankara textiles. It had double as my daywear and my pajamas for four days. I retrieved the ticket and gave it to him.
He said, “Excuse me for a minute. Let me go and talk with them.”
Then he went inside the Nigeria Airways office, and within minutes he was back, with two young men.
“Moyo, are you ready to go now,” Odegbemi said, “because a flight is leaving in about fifteen minutes.”

I didn’t need to say yes. My eyes said it all.
The two young men picked up my luggage.
Odegbami gave me a hug and wished me bon voyage.
The two young men led the way with my luggage—just a suitcase and my hand luggage.
They took me to the back of the airport, and there was a Peugeot 505 waiting for us.
They loaded my luggage in the boot and drove me down the tarmac to the huge aircraft about half a mile away.
From a persona non grata, I instantly transformed into a VIP, driven on the tarmac like a departing president.
Nobody checked my luggage for any contraband. Everything was loaded directly on the plane and I was given the luggage tags.
I walked to my seat and sank into it. I couldn’t help but notice that the plane was less than half full.
There were empty seats everywhere when the plane took off. Yet, there were scores of people waiting at the airport, denied their right to fly, after paying their fares.
I remembered the poor woman snoring next to me on the floor at the airport.
Tears began to fall from my eyes.
“If they ever see me again in that godforsaken country,” I swore silently, “they should cut off my head.”

⚫ Moyo Okediji is a professor of Art History at the University of Texas, Houston , United States of America.

My view: The decay in the system didn't just start today..... Deep sigh

01/09/2017

Happy Eid El Kabir to all our Muslim clients. God bless you as you celebrate. Remember Safety first...

05/01/2017

Happy New Year Everyone... God bless you all.

02/01/2016

Happy New Year Everyone...Welcome to 2016!!!

27/12/2015

Compliments of the season. Remain Blessed. and

01/11/2015

Happy New Month! Welcome you all to November. Stay +ve and remember SAFETY FIRST. Do have a blessed week ahead.

30/10/2015

TGIF! Always remember, SAFETY FIRST! Do have an awesome weekend ahead.

This is a must read for all HSE managers, Coordinators, Supervisors and advisors.Feel free to comment.Regards....
28/07/2015

This is a must read for all HSE managers, Coordinators, Supervisors and advisors.

Feel free to comment.

Regards....

As a result of little attention paid to the management side of skills development, here is a list of seven things that safety managers do wrong in building respect with employees.

Full Health Safety & Environment Gap analysis. The process through which an organization compares its actual performance...
27/03/2014

Full Health Safety & Environment Gap analysis. The process through which an organization compares its actual performance to its expected performance to determine whether it is meeting expectations and using its resources effectively. Gap analysis seeks to answer the questions "where are we?" (current state) and "where do we want to be?" (target state).

27/02/2014

QTV is reporting that at least 4 people have been killed in a gas explosion near Doha's Landmark Mall.Meanwhile, an Al Fazaa police officer told Doha News that there were actually "lots killed".

27/02/2014

This morning a gas cylnder exploded at Hala Istanbul Restaurant near Landmark Mall. the explosion ignited a fire, while it was at the petrol station it was far away from the petrol tanks.Many photos of the accident scene have been circulating on social media, and suggest that many people were seriou...

04/02/2014

Funny how immigrants think at times.
For some time now, some insurance telemarketers have been calling, trying to sell me auto insurance. When I got tired of their incessant calls I decided to stop getting angry with them so I came up with a crafty way of dealing with these calls.
As expected around 6pm call comes in, an American starts to pitch me new insurance rate.
Me: I'm sorry, I do not drive a car again I commute on a bicycle.
Agent: Oh nice you going green! We appreciate your effort for the envorinment. have a nice evening sir.
Today phone ring and Indian insurance agent starts the pitch...
Me: Oh I do not drive a car anymore
Indian Agent: Oh I'm so sorry for your loss.. I am truly sorry.
I cut in: Wait! Why are you sorry, what's wrong with not owning a car?
Agent: I am just sorry for whatever happened.
At this point I'm trying so hard to hold my laughter while explaining it's for the environment.

Endereço

12 Land Use Road, Maple Wood Estate, Oko Oba, Agege
Lagos
23401

Notificações

Seja o primeiro a receber as novidades e deixe-nos enviar-lhe um email quando Safety Seat Limited publica notícias e promoções. O seu endereço de email não será utilizado para qualquer outro propósito, e pode cancelar a subscrição a qualquer momento.

Entre Em Contato Com O Negócio

Envie uma mensagem para Safety Seat Limited:

Compartilhar