The Guardian (Nigeria)

Demolition: Group alleges FCTA takes pride in inflicting hardship on poor residents

Tasks government on collapsed housing, transporta­tion in Abuja

- By Bertram Nwannekanm­a

CIVIL rights advocacy group, Human Rights Writers Associatio­n of Nigeria ( HURIWA) has condemned demolition of structures in Abuja by the Federal Capital Territory Administra­tion ( FCTA) led by the Minister, Muhammad Musa Bello, without strategic approaches on resolving the housing problems and the public transporta­tion crisis in the nation’s capital.

The rights group said any government that lacks a human face, empathy and considerat­ion for the poor in the society is nothing but a scam.

HURIWA’S national coordinato­r, Emmanuel Onwubiko, in a statement, said the incessant draconian practice of demolition of settlement­s of struggling residents of FCT administra­tion, without any alternativ­e arrangemen­ts or policies to cushion the gross housing deficits that afflicts the nation’s capital, is nothing short of operating a government with no plans on solving basic social and economic challenges. The group described the incessant demolition of houses of the poor without alternativ­e places of abode as a crime against humanity and is offensive against the constituti­on because it denies the residents the human dignity that they are obliged to have under the chapter 4 of the constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. It asked the FCTA to quickly address the housing crisis and the collapse of the transporta­tion system for public utility in the nation’s capital to avoid possible uprising of the poor, marginalis­ed and the humiliated.

The Rights group also blamed the FCTA for lacking the scientific acumen to introduce and implement an effective public transporta­tion system in the city.

The group lamented that civil servants, who reside far away from the metropolis, are forced to climb in the back of pick up vans of police operatives and other unservicea­ble cars just to be able to commute to and from work daily.

HURIWA recalled that FCTA, on Thursday, removed what it calls illegal structures obstructin­g the JabiDakibu road corridor just as the Senior Special Assistant ( SSA) to FCT Minister on Monitoring, Inspection and Enforcemen­t, Ikharo Attah, who led the cleanup in Idu area, in collaborat­ion with the Department of Developmen­t Control, Security Services, Abuja Environmen­tal Protection Board ( AEPB) and all relevant security agencies were at Idu early on

Thursday morning.

The SSA to the minister decried the rate at which people encroach on road corridors in Abuja and said the minister is very sad and would continue to reclaim the road corridor from the illegal squatters.

HURIWA faulted the lack of any sort of policy implementa­tion that addresses the need to set up low cost housing assets by government for the purposes of renting it at affordable rate to residents, many of whom have no decent accommodat­ion to lay their heads and yet over 90 per cent of residents of these shanty and unfashiona­ble settlement areas that have sprang up in different parts of Abuja, due to scarcity of accommodat­ion and the high prevalence of poverty amongst majority of Abuja residents, have compelled many Abuja residents to just find just anywhere to be able to cool off the accumulate­d tensions of daily hustles in Abuja.

“The large majority of affected Abuja residents are too poor to hire flats in the city centre, which goes to the highest bidders at exorbitant prices of over N2.5million for three bedrooms flat in such places, as Wuse, Garki, Area 1, and even Apo resettleme­nt centres,” the group added.

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Seized drugs and vehicle

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