FCT demolishes 137 illegal hostel blocks, hotels, others in Abuja

The Federal Capital Territory ( FCT ) has during the weekend demolished over 137 illegal hostel blocks, hotels and other buildings at Iddo Sarki, a community adjacent the main campus of the University of Abuja. 

A combined team of FCT Ministerial Committee on City Sanitation, Department of Development Control, Department of Security Services and other relevant agencies, carried out the exercise,  said to be in line with Ministerial directive to remove every contraventions and illegality within the nation’s capital. 

Chairman of the Ministerial Committee on City Sanitation,  Ikharo Attah, said that FCT Minister was angered by peoples  continued disregard for warnings, to stay away from local Chiefs who have  no authority to sell lands or transfer any valid title to buyers of such land, according to the provisions of the Land Use Act. 

Attah noted that exercise was a quick intervention to avert further distortion of the city’s development plans, as well as rescue desperate business men and women from economic waste.

He said, it was unfortunate that certain  people have continued ,  ignore timely warnings to venture into  land transaction with local Chiefs, without relevant government’s approval.

Attah stated that the millions of Naira invested in constructing the illegal hostle blocks and other developmental projects on the land, would have been properly directed, had they complied with  official procedures. 

He added that  the shortcut process undertaken by the investors had not only infringed heavily on extant laws, but distorted Abuja Master plan, while leading into collosal economic waste.

According to him, FCT Minister has avowed commitment to espousing investment in the city, but would not tolerate illegalities and disobedience to the provisions of the Land Use Act. 

He said:

” FCTA is pained about what is going on here. FCT Minister had briefed the Directors of Development Control , security services and DRTS, and had given us a matching order to stop what he termed as extreme illegality here.

” These people were taken advantage of the closeness of the University of Abuja to sell every available land here. You can imagine that someone here had built a house that run into hundreds of millions of Naira, without a proper approval,  but just based on ordinary agreement signed with the Chief on foolscap sheet , that for me is an aberration. 

” No one here has any allocation.  It is very sad and worrisome that Abuja is going this way. What the natives are telling people here is that if you buy land and build, before Development Control will come you would have recovered your money.

” The Minister has ordered that this place be cleared as a signal to people. Those who wants to build hostles for student can approach the administration and the University management and do it on building operate and transfer ( BOT ) or build,  operate  and own (BOO) arrangements with a proper allocation and development approval from government. 

” The Chiefs have denied that they never sold any land, while the buyers who insist they bought the land from the chiefs are now lamenting. We asked them to produce papers of approval, but none of them have done that. They said they bought the land between N2 million and N7 million. 

” We have done this, because we have the mandate to secure the city within the context of the Land Use Act .

Also speaking,  Acting Director,  the Department of Control, Garba Kwakur, disclosed that the land in which the illegal development was going on had been allocated to the Nigerian Navy. 

Kwakur further added that while the developers have no valid title to the land, the buildings erected on it had no approval. 

” All this area has long been allocated, part of this land has been allocated to the Nigerian Navy,  they have complained about encroachment.

” We have come here several times and sensitised them to stop this illegal development,  FCT Administration is not very happy with what is going on here.

” We have marked the illegal buildings several times,  and they were cleaned off. We have met with the Chiefs and youth leaders on the need to get permit before any expansion,  but they have not done that,  Kwakur said.