THISDAY

Abuja’s Illegal Occupants

Olawale Ajimotokan writes about the intrigues surroundin­g Galuwyi Shere, one of the settlement­s for relocated communitie­s in the Federal Capital Territory illegally encroached on by the police

- FCT Minister, Mallam Muhammad Musa Bello... should eject the police from Galuwyi Shere settlement

The Federal Capital Developmen­t Administra­tion (FCDA) has condemned the subterrane­an move of the Nigeria Police to acquire and convert Galuwyi Shere, a sprawling indigenous community settlement into a Mobile Police Barracks. THISDAY gathered authoritat­ively that the Public Building Department of FCDA is moving to oust pockets of policemen quartering in the estate.

Sited on a land measuring 900 hectres, Galuwyi Shere, a few kilometres from Mpape in Bwari Area Council, is a cluster of buildings, delineated into several blocks.

It is a landmark and considered a city on its own. There are over 2,000 houses in the settlement. The sheen of the corrugated roofs, often attracts curiosity of air travellers, making the final descent over Lower Usuman Dam into the Nnamdi Azikiwe Internatio­nal Airport.

The contract for Galuwyi Shere was originally awarded in 2006 and was projected to be completed in 2016.

However, when THISDAY visited, the estate, which is several kilometres from the city, it was found to be uncomplete­d and some occupied portions in abject state.

The link up roads are untarred. Also some of the buildings bear cracks while broken doors and windows are common features. Electricit­y to the settlement is generated through solar panels. Clean water is a scarce commodity.

It is ironic that in spite of being under renovation, it has a few occupants, including men of the Nigeria mobile police units.

Galuwyi Shere is the proposed housing to resettle the Abuja indigenous communitie­s in the northern flank of the federal capital city. The communitie­s include Utako Village, Mabushi, Jabi Samuel, Jabi Yakubu, Kpaduma, Zhilu (Zhidu), Gishiri, Magajipe, Kado 1 and 2 and Maje.

The relocation of the communitie­s by FCDA will be effected this year. Already, the Emir of Jabi Samuel has begged the authority to relocate his subjects as a long term solution to ease the escalating problems they are battling at the community they are currently living.

THISDAY learnt that the FCDA raised the eyebrow against the police occupation to mitigate another shortcomin­g that made it lose another specially designed indigenous resettleme­nt community at Jibi to the police.

The Jibi resettleme­nt, now christened MD Abubakar Barracks, is built on an area measuring 480 hectares of land. The estate along the Outer Northern Expressway, is made up of several units of prototype one bedroom apartments now occupied by the men of the police mobile units.

Shielded by mounds of rock, the community with several primary schools and a Nigeria Police Hospital that runs comprehens­ive medical checkup, an eye clinic, medical laboratory and maternity family plan, extends to the Water Lake Farm Estate.

THISDAY learnt that the Police used the inability of FCDA to complete the Jibi Estate on time as an excuse to trespass the estate meant for indigenous communitie­s.

But following a series of engagement­s, including payment of some amounts of money, a mutual agreement was reached between the police and FCDA to allow the police authority remain in Jibi.

It was gathered that the concession was brokered when Mohammed Abba Gana was the FCT Minister, following a report tendered by a resettleme­nt Task Force comprising officers from the administra­tive and finance units in the minister’s office.

The Director Resettleme­nt and Compensati­on FCDA, Baba Kura Umar, said the department was concerned about the fate of Galuwyi Shere and would not want the police to forcefully occupy the community as they did at Jibi.

“It is true that some policemen, including their officials, have occupied some parts of Galuwyi Shere. I am aware also that the FCDA Public Building Department is duly following up the issue to eject the police, who have been put on notice. We are conscious of what befell Jibi and want to ensure that Galuwyi Shere is preserved in the interest of the indigenous communitie­s. Very soon, the policemen squatting in Galuwyi Shere will be ejected because if we don’t do so, the tendency that they may covert it is very high,” Umar vowed.

Umar heads the department charged on behalf of the FCT Administra­tion and federal government to settle indigenous communitie­s found within the FCT.

The Public Building Department identifies the villages and enumerates the settlers through data gathering. The houses will then be taken upon completion.

Umar recalled that the immediate past FCT Minister, Bala Mohammed, petitioned the then FCT Police Commission­er, when the Department of Resettleme­nt and Compensati­on cried foul, when alerted by the Executive Secretary of FCDA, about the influx of Police to Galuwyi Shere some years back.

FCTA is embarking on the massive constructi­on of many units of resettleme­nt

It is true that some policemen, including their officials, have occupied some parts of Galuwyi Shere. I am aware also that the FCDA Public Building Department is duly following up the issue to eject the police, who have been put on notice. We are conscious of what befell Jibi and want to ensure that Galuwyi Shere is preserved in the interest of the indigenous communitie­s. Very soon, the policemen squatting in Galuwyi Shere will be ejected because if we don’t do so, the tendency that they may covert it is very high

In Galuwyi Shere, somebody formerly living in a small shack with all his family, will now be given three-bedroom with parlour, water system, everything to better their lives

schemes for the indigenous peoples whose community in the federal capital city are listed for demolition to allow for the modernisat­ion of the city.

Apart from Galuwyi Shere, there are currently three other resettleme­nt schemes under constructi­on by the administra­tion under FCT Minister, Malam Mohammed Musa Bello. The settlement­s are Wassa and Apo. The fourth mooted by the FCDA is called Anangada Resettleme­nt Scheme.

It is a two pronged project- a satellite town like Gwagwalada and Kubwa to feed the city-Anangada Satellite Town and Anangada resettleme­nt scheme existing side by side with other villages.

FCTA, late last year, flagged off the constructi­on of the Apo-Wassa dual carriagewa­ys, to link up the two settlement­s. The project expected to be completed in a time span of 12 months, will cost about N8.62 billion. The road that is part of the Outer Southern Expressway will pull up at Apo-Kashi Road.

The Apo resettleme­nt scheme will take care in phases of dwellers from Garki Village in the next few months and people living in Apo and Akpanjenya Villages along that axis.

The other one is the Wassa resettleme­nt scheme built on 700 hectares of land, to accommodat­e the original inhabitant­s along the airport axis. The villages include, Kuchingoro, Chika, Aleita, Piwoyi and Karomanjig­i. The villages at Chika and Aleita are to move in the first instance for the Abuja Technology Village along the Airport planned by donor agencies.

A background history to the resettleme­nt of indigenous communitie­s within the federal capital city will suffice.

The settlement communitie­s were conceptual­ised when the FCT was created in 1976.The new capital was an area where there were no settlement­s. The Akinola Aguda Panel and sub-committees that recommende­d the movement premised its report on the assumption that there were no settlement­s there. A team of consultant­s from the University of Ibadan, led by Prof. Akin Mabogunje, was later tasked to come out with how to resettle the communitie­s found to exist there.

Settlement­s inhabited by the indigenous communitie­s in Phase One of the federal capital city within FCT were earmarked for relocation. The settlement­s comprised Jabi, Asokoro, Maitama, Wuse, Garki, all the way to Lugbe.

But government chose to concentrat­e on some villages within Phase One, like Maitama and Asokoro, and stopped further because of limited finances. Villages in Maitama and Asokoro were moved to Kokoaba and New Maitama along Kaduna Road. New Karu and New Wuse were also created.

Utako and Jabi were not moved because of monetary considerat­ion but government allowed those it could not relocate to remain where they were until it had the means to start developmen­t in those areas.

By 1983, Kubwa and Ushafa were developed anew until government realised it could not keep pace with developing these communitie­s. That led to the idea of integratin­g the villages within the city centre. Integratio­n means, instead of being moved for developmen­t to continue, the villages be allowed to remain where they were.

It started in Garki with the urban part existing closely with the villages without running water and unplanned road.

Eventually it was realised that integratio­n was not an option as the whole thing became an eyesore.

The administra­tion of Nasir el-Rufai, considered the issue of resettleme­nt was becoming a time bomb and the delay from the period when they had not moved out of town, had hindered developmen­t as population kept expanding and the villages kept growing, while the amount of money voted to cater for them bludgeoned.

Subsequent­ly, he conjured the idea of resettleme­nt schemes, where they could relocate the communitie­s within the federal capital city given the cost of providing infrastruc­ture was becoming high within the FCT.

At the moment, living in GaIuwyi Shere could be a nightmare because the connecting road from Mpape is in bad shape. The situation could be compounded by the approachin­g rainy season.

But Umar said the contract for the road, soak away and internal reticulati­on are ongoing. Some of the houses which are dilapidate­d and destroyed by fire are also being renovated while provisions are in the master plan for amenities that will make life comfortabl­e for the resettled once they start moving those that need to move.

“In Galuwyi Shere, there are provisions for farms, workshops and skills acquisitio­n centre. We are trying to install a library, schools, clinics and a police post. We also have a big commercial area which is akin to the big Abuja commercial market, cultural centre, banks, fire station, women developmen­t centre, private primary school, day secondary school, district hospitals, central motor parks and open market because by nature, as people in the city, they need some time to adapt from what they were used to from a number of years. I am aware that the health and human secretaria­t is mulling contract for a clinic. There are some responsibi­lity for the area councils concerning markets,” Umar said.

He insisted the technical people at FCT Administra­tion ensured that the constructi­on of Galuwyi Shere conformed to the UN and World Bank global best practice standard on resettleme­nt.

“If you have seen Jibi, they are completely different from what you have in Galuwyi Shere. That Jibi model is like a barrack styled. Galuwyi Shere is modern 3-bedroom with all amenities in adherence to UN Article that if it is inevitable they are moved, it must be to a place which is better than where they are coming from. Go to Jabi Yakubu and see where they are staying. In Galuwyi Shere, somebody formerly living in a small shack with all his family, will now be given three-bedroom with parlour, water system, everything to better their lives.”

 ??  ?? Galuwyi Shere settlement...encroached on by the police
Galuwyi Shere settlement...encroached on by the police
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? MD Abubakar Barracks ,converted to mobile police barracks at Jibi (Dei-Dei)
MD Abubakar Barracks ,converted to mobile police barracks at Jibi (Dei-Dei)
 ??  ?? A section of Galuwyi Shere
A section of Galuwyi Shere
 ??  ?? Police barracks at Jibi
Police barracks at Jibi

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