Veteran Nollywood actor Yinka Quadri has added a new title to his decades-long résumé, having been formally inducted as a special marshal under LASTMA’s “Special Traffic Mayor” initiative of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority.
The ceremony took place at LASTMA’s headquarters in Oshodi, where the agency’s general manager, Olalekan Bakare-Oki, personally decorated the actor and presented him with the official special marshal kit, formally welcoming him into the fold of citizen-ambassadors tasked with championing road discipline across the state.
For Quadri, born Alhaji Akanni Olayinka Quadri and a fixture of the Yoruba film industry since the 1970s, when he co-founded the Afopina Theatre Group before going on to lead the Odunfa Caucus, the appointment marks an unusual but fitting extension of a public profile built over nearly five decades on stage and screen.
With his decades-long career in the Nigerian entertainment industry, Quadri is expected to lend his voice to road safety campaigns and promote compliance with traffic laws among Lagos residents.
The induction is not an isolated gesture but part of a deliberate strategy by LASTMA to broaden its reach beyond its uniformed officers.
The Special Marshal and Special Traffic Mayor programs are among the initiatives Bakare-Oki’s leadership has renewed focus on, providing a platform for respected individuals to serve as ambassadors for traffic discipline and civic responsibility.
The agency maintains that effective traffic management requires collaboration between enforcement officials and members of the public, particularly in a densely populated metropolis like Lagos.
The move echoes a similar push last year, when LASTMA inducted no fewer than twelve media practitioners drawn from print, broadcast, and digital outlets as traffic mayors, an effort GM Bakare-Oki described as necessary given the state’s cosmopolitan nature, its small land size, and the resulting pressure of high vehicular movement.
By bringing figures of Quadri’s stature into its fold, LASTMA appears to be betting that celebrity goodwill can succeed where enforcement alone has struggled, using recognizable faces to nudge Lagosians toward safer, more orderly conduct on some of West Africa’s most congested roads.
Whether Quadri’s new “mayoral” mantle carries any formal traffic-enforcement authority remains, notably, a ceremonial and advocacy role rather than a statutory office, a distinction worth keeping in mind as the title makes its way through headlines and social media in the days ahead.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Yinka Quadri’s induction is a ceremonial advocacy role, not a government office he’s now a “Special Marshal” under LASTMA’s Special Traffic Mayor program, using his celebrity status to promote road safety and traffic compliance, not to enforce traffic laws himself. It’s part of a broader LASTMA strategy of enlisting public figures as ambassadors to improve Lagos’s notoriously difficult traffic situation.

















