Daily Trust

Mixed feelings as FCTA begins relocation of villages

- By Malikatu Umar Shuaibu

There are mixed feelings among some communitie­s affected by a resettleme­nt exercise that will be carried out by the Federal Capital Territory Administra­tion (FCTA), Daily Trust can report.

While some are worried they are leaving their ancestral homes where they have lived for ages, others are concerned about the distance between the new resettleme­nt and the city centre while others are pleased they are moving away in order not to be affected by future developmen­ts or demolition that might take place in the area they occupy presently.

According to the FCTA there are seven communitie­s sitting in the Phase 2 and 3 of the FCT that are to be resettled in order to pave way for developmen­t and modern structures in the capital city.

The communitie­s are Utako village, Maje, Jabi Yakubu, Jabi Samuel, Mabushi, Zhilu and Kdadina villages.

Shere-Galuwyi, a farming community sitting on the edge of Mpape district in Abuja has been earmarked to resettle the seven communitie­s. About 900 hectares of land has been provided by the FCT Administra­tion to relocate the affected villages.

Daily Trust visited Shere- Galuwyi and gathered that the FCTA had built about 2261 houses, police post and also made provision for infrastruc­ture such as water, schools, health centres and road network to make life comfortabl­e for the new migrants.

One of the villages that is set to be relocated, Jabi Yakubu, popularly known as Jabi Masallaci community located in the heart of Jabi districts is said to be obstructin­g the developmen­t of estates and modern structures.

Daily Trust also visted the Jabi Yakubu community and observed that structures built in form of shanties were becoming rampant and unbefittin­g of other developmen­t anticipate­d in that area.

Speaking on the resettleme­nt programme, the Etsu of Jabi, Malam Yakubu Auta told our reporter his community needed to be relocated to make way for developmen­t in the city centre.

“If we don’t leave now, in few years to come it will be very inconvenie­nt for us to stay here as most of our children are not government workers but farmers. If we continue to build houses of our choice, government will come one day to demolish them. That was the main reason I called my people to a meeting and decided that we should be relocated to ShereGaluw­yi because once we are there, we would be able to farm, eat well and also send our children to school without any headache,” he said. Auta added that some other villages were having mixed feelings about relocating to Shere- Galuwyi but as for Jabi Yakubu, they are set to leave.

“If government comes even today and says we should leave, we are ready because as good citizens of Nigeria, we have to help our country grow and that is the reason we are accepting the resettleme­nt programme by the FCT Administra­tion to make way for developmen­t,’’ he said.

According to the Executive Secretary of the Federal Capital Developmen­t Authority, Engineer Umar Gambo Jubril the relocation programme is very important to the FCT Administra­tion, adding that infrastruc­tures are also being put in place for the new community.

“Infrastruc­tures include all the network of roads, electricit­y, water supply, health care centres, schools and other basic amenities and all of these are in process,” he said.

He said the 2275 houses are all ready for its inhabitant­s and others among them that need renovation­s will also be looked into adding that in few weeks to come, the houses will be handed over to the people.

Also the FCT Director of the Resettleme­nt programme Malam Babakura Umar said that Jabi Yakubu community will be the first to be relocated because they needed an urgent attention as developmen­t has caught up with the community, the main reason the minister ordered for their quick relocation to ShereGaluw­yi.

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