The Guardian (Nigeria)

Lagos hunts for Dolphin’s under Bridge ‘ landlord’

• Squatter claims paying N250,000 yearly for room • Lagos victim of its success, Omotoso says

- By Eniola Daniel

LState government has started a manhunt for the presumed landlord of 86 rooms built under the Dolphin Estate Bridge, Ikoyi, on Lagos Island.

This followed allegation­s that he collected N250,000 yearly for 12×10 rooms from occupants.

This came 24- hours after the Lagos State Commission­er for Environmen­t and Water Resources, Tokunbo Wahab circulated the videos of eviction of occupants makeshift structures.

In the video circulated on Wednesday, it was revealed that there were 86 rooms under the bridge with the tenant paying N250,000 yearly for a 10×10 and 12×10 rooms.

The enforcemen­t team of Lagos State’s Ministry of Environmen­t and Water Resources on Wednesday May 1, 2024 removed all structures, including a container utilised for various illegal activities, from beneath the Dolphin Estate bridge.

While sharing the videos,

Wahab said: “A total number of 86 rooms, partitione­d into 10×10 and 12×10, and a container used for different illegal activities were discovered under the Dolphin Estate Bridge.

“They have all been removed by the enforcemen­t team of the Lagos State Ministry of the Environmen­t and Water Resources.”

Speaking on the situation, the state’s Commission­er of Informatio­n, Gbenga Omotoso said several arrests were made during the exercise and they are being investigat­ed.

“We are looking for the socalled landlord who collected money from these people and gave them there,” he said.

Omotosho said the place was discovered by a mobile police officer who was jogging in the area and heard noise and decided to check under.

He said: “We always tell people to expose such things. The government builds a project and after a while, people started vandalisin­g it. “Governor Babajide SanwoOlu always encourages people to own the project because it’s for them and report people vandalisin­g it. As a Ministry, we go about to inform residents that they should let the government know if they find anything untidy.”

Asked about lack of affordable houses in the state and its implicatio­n on residents, the commission­er said: “Lagos is a victim of its own success; Lagos is the smallest state in Nigeria in term of landmass but it’s the most populated with 25 million inhabitant­s and that is why we are telling Lagosians to obtain Lagos State Residents Registrati­on Agency ( LASRRA) so that we will have the data and cater for them in terms of education, housing and others.

“Since Mr. Sanwo- Olu came in, he has commission­ed more housing projects for thousands of people, but no

matter what we do, the challenge will be there. “The Ministry of Housing is doing a lot and one of them

is to ensure no landlord takes more than one year’s rent and we are trying to organise stakeholde­rs to ensure that people don’t get unduly punished while searching for accommodat­ion in Lagos and ensure that their rights are protected.”

Also reacting on why it took so long to discover the place, spokespers­on for Lagos State Police Command, Benjamin Hundeyin, said: “If we go and arrest drug barons today, the question you will now ask is why we didn’t discover them before now. The important thing is that we have dislodged them. You can’t discover everything in one day, so, it doesn’t matter.”

Meanwhile, Head, Public Affairs and Advocacy Unit, the Lagos Environmen­tal Sanitation Corps ( LAGESC), Ajayi Lukman, said the agency will sustain the enforcemen­t and drive out those living under Lagos bridges.

 ?? ?? Some properties of illegal occupants during the enforcemen­t
Some properties of illegal occupants during the enforcemen­t

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