Lawmaker Bonu Commends Sanwo-Olu, Obasa, Over Support For Badagry

The lawmaker representing Badagry Constituency 1 at the Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon. Bonu Solomon Saanu, has expressed appreciation to the state Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, and the Speaker of the House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Mudashiru Obasa, for being supportive of the historical town.

Hon. Saanu spoke in reaction to the Governor’s recent expression of satisfaction with the historical nature of Badagry.
The Governor had said that Badagry continues to experience the fulfilment of his administration’s promise to develop all parts of the state.

“My promise is that no part of Lagos will be left underdeveloped, and Badagry is experiencing the fulfilment of this promise.
“Today’s tour of the historic city of Badagry was a journey through our rich heritage. We are committed to showcasing Badagry not just as a key part of Lagos’ history but as a beacon of tourism in Nigeria.

“I visited our restored sites like the Slave Market Museum International Vlekete and the Badagry Heritage Museum. These sites tell powerful stories of our past, and we’re dedicated to preserving and enhancing them for future generations.
“From the Point of No Return to the first-storey Building in Nigeria, Badagry is a treasure trove of history. We’re improving infrastructure like roads and public facilities to make Badagry accessible and welcoming for all tourists,” the Governor had said promising to bring more development to the area.
In reaction, Hon. Bonu Saanu recalled that Badagry has always been an important place in the history of Africa, especially in Lagos State.
According to Saanu, “it was a transatlantic route for the export of enslaved Africans to Europe and the Americas.
“In the 18th century, Abass Ifaremilekun Fagbemi, a native of the region, was captured by a Dahomean slave trader during one of the conflicts between Dahomey and the Egba, then taken to Brazil and sold as a servant.
“After gaining his freedom, he returned to Nigeria as a business partner of his former master and settled in Badagry. In the early 1840s, he built and managed a barracks containing 40 slave cells.
“This historic place, now a museum, comprises 40 cells where slaves were locked up and sold. Other monuments include the Mobee Slave Relics Museum, the Badagry Heritage Museum, the Vlekete Slave Market and Shrine, as well as the Slave Port and Route and the Tomb of George Freemingo.
“This makes Nigeria one of the ten UNESCO member-states proposed to an international scientific committee in charge of supervising the network.
“There is no doubt, Badagry has remained the biggest face of historical places up till date. Our art and culture is topnotch, this makes Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu reconfirm it in one of his speeches recently on his working visit to Badagry.”
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