Daily Trust

How demolition displaced 103 UniAbuja students at Iddo

- By Abubakar Sadiq Isah

At least 103 students of the University of Abuja staying off campus at Iddo Sarki along Airport Road, Abuja, were displaced following a demolition exercise carried out by the Developmen­t Control of the Federal Capital Developmen­t Authority (FCDA) on Saturday.

Aso Chronicle reports that Iddo Sarki community, which harbours the largest number of students of the university, is about 130 metres away from the permanent site of the institutio­n.

Aso Chronicle observed that the demolition exercise was led by a combined team of the Department of Developmen­t Control, FCT ministeria­l committee on city sanitation and Department of State Service (DSS).

A 200-level student, Samuel Ebuka, who was one of the affected students, said he and his course mate contribute­d N80,000 each to rent an apartment in the community.

He said, “I was at the main campus on Saturday when my roommate called me that there was demolition going on, so I rushed to join him to move our belongings out of the house.”

He said he could not afford to pay N120,000 for a bed space at the main campus and so decided to join with his colleague to rent a single room.

Another student affected by the demolition, Felicia Abraham, said, “Thank God, I was at home when they started the demolition, so I quickly moved my belongings out of the house to one of my course mates who is also renting in the village cos her apartment was not affected.”

Miss Abraham claimed that she was compelled to stay off campus because of the stiff competitio­n in acquiring a bed space in the hostel.

Aso Chronicle observed that some newly completed self-contained houses were demolished during the exercise.

The Chairman of the Ministeria­l Committee on City Sanitation, Mr Ikharo Attach, while reacting about the demolition, said the FCT Minister, Muhammad Musa Bello, was enraged by people’s repeated disregard for warnings to stay away from local chiefs that had no authority to sell land or transfer any valid title to buyers of land.

He said the demolition exercise was a fast interventi­on to avoid further distorting the city’s growth plans and to save desperate business men and women from financial ruin.

Also, the acting Director of Developmen­t Control, Garba Kwakur, said the land on which the illegal developmen­t was ongoing had been allocated to the Nigerian Navy.

Kwakur said, “All the affected areas at Iddo Sarki have been allocated to the Nigerian Navy and they have been complainin­g about illegal building of structures there. We had gone there several times and sensitised the residents to stop illegal building of houses but they refused and the FCT Administra­tion is not happy with the structures some people are erecting there. We marked the illegal buildings several times and they used paint to clean it off.”

The spokesman of UniAbuja, Habib Yakub, said the issue of insufficie­nt hostel accommodat­ion was not peculiar to the institutio­n.

He said, “Even though I am not aware of this issue of demolition exercise at Iddo Sarki you are talking about, but the issue of shortage of hostel accommodat­ion is not peculiar to University of Abuja.”

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