THISDAY

Fashola Inaugurate­s New FHA Board, Doubts Housing Deficit Data

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Minister of Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola has formally sworn in the new board of the Federal Housing Authority (FHA), stressing on the occasion that current public data which pegged Nigeria’s housing deficit at about 17 million was baseless.

The minister argued that the challenge that Nigeria has is basically an urban housing problem, noting that even at that, the issue is how to ensure that empty, unoccupied buildings in major cities are put up either for sale or rent.

The newly-appointed board comprises Senator Lawal Shuaibu, Zamfara State, as Chairman, while other members include: Modestus Umenzekwe, Anambra State; Mumini Hanafi, Kwara State; Adamu Dadi, Yobe State and Mr Adamu Ismaila, Adamawa State.

Others are Zubairu S.N, Nasarawa State; Chinyere Anokwuru, Abia State; Yinka Ogunsulire, Ondo State: Veronica Shinnaan, Plateau State; Aleruchi

Cookey-Gam, Rivers State and Olajumoke Akinwunmi, Ogun State.

Also to serve as statutory members are the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Works and Housing, Mr Babangida Hussein and the Managing Director of the FHA, Senator Gbenga Ashafa.

Fashola thanked the president for the prompt approval of the list sent to him , noting that he was excited about the diversity of the new board in terms of ethnicity, gender and technical expertise which they would bring to bear on their duty.

The minister maintained that while affordable housing remains the goal of government in the housing sector, the term “affordable” was somehow ambiguous because what is affordable to one stratum of the society may not be affordable to another set of individual­s.

He stated that while FHA is statutoril­y involved in building new towns in the class of Festac in Lagos and Gwarimpa in Abuja, it should ramp up its focus on rehabilita­tion of some of the old structures that are deteriorat­ing.

The minister noted that under President Muhammadu Buhari’s economic recovery programme, there has been a plan to increase access to housing, ramp up employment opportunit­ies through the building of infrastruc­ture and invest in the Nigerian people.

“There has been something out there and it had been there before we came here; that Nigeria has 17 million housing deficit.

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