Lagos Waste Wars: Tokunbo Wahab Serves Chinedu a Steaming Plate of Roast — No Cutlery Included
What started as an online policy debate about Lagos sanitation ended with one man arriving for an argument and leaving with an environmental impact assessment. The Trojan Beast has the full scorecard.
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Ishola Adebiyi
Investigations Editor, The Trojan Beast
LAGOS — The battle over sanitation, urban order, and social media narratives took a fresh turn this week as Lagos State Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources, Tokunbo Wahab, appeared to deliver a pointed response to critics questioning the state's environmental enforcement policies.
What started as another online debate quickly transformed into what observers are calling a "masterclass in digital counterattack."
According to social media watchers, Chinedu had attempted to challenge the Lagos government's environmental policies, only to find himself on the receiving end of a response that many described as "hotter than a LAWMA refuse compactor at noon."
The Commissioner's Reputation
Tokunbo Wahab, known for his direct communication style, has become one of the most visible members of the Lagos cabinet — regularly posting enforcement actions, drainage clearance operations, environmental prosecutions, and sanitation updates with the energy of a man who has personally inspected every blocked gutter in the state.
Critics often accuse the ministry of being too aggressive. Supporters argue that Lagos, a city of over 20 million residents, cannot function without strict environmental regulations. Both sides agree on one thing: Tokunbo Wahab does not come to the internet unarmed.
The Exchange
In the latest exchange, supporters of the commissioner joked that Chinedu arrived for a policy debate but accidentally attended a roast session.
""He came to argue. He left with an environmental impact assessment.""
— Social media commentator, widely shared on X
""Tokunbo Wahab didn't just reply. He recycled the argument.""
— Another commentator, also widely shared
Meanwhile, residents watching the online exchange appeared less interested in the politics and more interested in one recurring question: "Is the drainage blocked or not?"
The Bigger Picture
Lagos's waste management challenge is not a joke. The megacity generates an estimated 13,000 tonnes of solid waste daily. LAWMA, the Lagos Waste Management Authority, operates under enormous pressure to keep a city of 20 million people from drowning in its own refuse.
The commissioner's aggressive social media presence is, in part, a deliberate strategy — using public accountability and visible enforcement to deter illegal dumping, open defecation, and environmental violations that have long plagued the city.
Whether that strategy is working is a legitimate policy question. Whether Chinedu was prepared for the answer he received is a different question entirely.
Trojan Beast Satirical Verdict
As the dust settles — and the refuse trucks continue their rounds — The Trojan Beast presents the official scorecard of the Lagos Waste Wars, Week of June 2026:
🟢 Tokunbo Wahab: 3 — Arrived with receipts. Departed with receipts. Left none on the floor.
🔴 Chinedu: 0 — Came with confidence. Left with an environmental impact assessment and a citation.
🦟 Mosquitoes: Disappointed — Were hoping the drainage debate would end in a stalemate and more standing water.
🌊 Lagos Floodwater: Under Investigation — Declined to comment. Currently occupying three streets in Lekki.
🍿 The Internet: Ate popcorn. Requested seconds.
One thing remains clear: in Lagos, waste management may be serious business — but social media has found a way to turn it into prime-time entertainment.
The drainages are still waiting to be cleared.
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About the Author
Ishola Adebiyi
Investigations Editor, The Trojan Beast
Ishola Adebiyi leads investigative and breaking news reporting at The Trojan Beast, covering security, politics, and accountability journalism across Nigeria.