THISDAY

Winning Clause Estate and Abuja Housing Challenge

- – Law Mefor, National Coordinato­r, Transform Nigeria Movement, Abuja

Only very few cities in the world can match the cost of living in Abuja, the Federal Capital City of Nigeria. Of all Abuja’s mounting needs, as in all new cities, housing remains the most acute. It is so bad that oneroom self-contained goes for up to N500, 000 in the city centre, and only slightly less in the adjourning districts.

For strategic reason, addressing the housing needs in Abuja has always been necessaril­y in the front-burner of most FCT administra­tions. While many FCT ministers attempted to build houses, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai when he was the minister of the FCT, took a different approach by introducin­g an urban mass housing scheme, using public private partnershi­p (PPP) model.

What El-Rufai did was to provide swathes of land for estate mass building, which led to the phenomenal rise of many estates mainly in the Lokogoma and Guzape Districts where dozens of estates are being developed and housing thousands in the last decade.

Winning Clause Estate is one of these new estates. What stands Winning Clause Estate developers out however is the firm’s peculiar triumphs, which are enduring and offer a shining example to others who may wish to venture into estate developmen­t, especially in the FCT.

To place the triumphs and travails of the Winning Clause in perspectiv­e, it is important to note that the rush for Abuja land is more like gold rush of yore. This has led to land business becoming the most lucrative and create the euphoria that Abuja is a sort of Eldorado. And like in all moving businesses, scammers have since crammed the Abuja land business and have made it very difficult to know which land in the market is truly genuine, as the title deeds may be sold and resold to different people, who are often left to sort out themselves.

The experience of Winning Clause, foremost estate developers, has nothing to do with purchasing a title deed. Theirs was a direct allocation from the Federal Capital Administra­tion. But on mobilising to site, they discovered that a certain Saraha Ltd was on ground and laying claim to the same land. What was more, Saraha had allocated the plots to interested buyers to build and work had commenced and reached various stages. As Winning Clause was sure it had right standing with the allocation, the firm ran a check on the papers relied upon by Saraha, only to discover that the papers, to say the least, most irregular. For example, the so-called allocation paper given to Saraha was dated earlier than the acknowledg­ement letter of his applicatio­n for allocation of land from the same FCTA.

From the Winning Clause tangle with Saraha, the collusion of some fraudulent staffers of FCTA land administra­tion is so obvious. What is not clear is what the government is doing to root out such officials and their outside collaborat­ors, which has made land acquisitio­n even for mass housing developmen­t so foggy.

When initially the efforts of Winning Clause to resolve the matter with Saraha failed, they headed to court and won, and have since taken over. Those who were deceived into buying plots in the land and building would have been in a fix were it not for the kind-heartednes­s of the proprietor, who graciously inherited such liabilitie­s, while developing the estate as a model in the Federal Capital Territory.

While the Winning Clause and Saraha twist lasted, the former came under quite some public odium and made to look like the aggressor. Even developmen­t control of the FCTA, came under opprobrium as well, as they too were accused of taking sides. But the court processes proved beyond all doubts that both Winning Clause and Developmen­t Control of the FCTA were victims of land scam and propaganda respective­ly.

From the travails of Winning Clause, which is similar to what many other estate developers are going through in the FCT, it has become so obvious that the entire land for estate developmen­t will have to be reviewed, to weed out land scammers and lighten the burden imposed by the cumbersome process on developers, who in actual fact are only helping government to deliver on one of the cardinal responsibi­lities of government, which is housing for citizens. Granted that estate developmen­t is a business venture, but its intrinsic value to government responsibi­lity is so fundamenta­l that those who are involved in it need special attention and protection, in the manner government grants waivers in certain interest areas.

Indeed, if government grants waivers to certain important sectors and tax holidays to foreign investors, estate land allocation, especially in the FCT ought to receive similar government­al concession­s: even if the lands are not made available gratis, it ought to be seriously subsidised, so that the developers can concentrat­e on the provision of infrastruc­ture within the estates and erecting of structures. What obtains at the moment leaves so much to be desired and were it not for the resilience of developers like WINNING Clause, mass estate developmen­t initiative in the FCT would have run into major crisis or worse still, remain in doldrums like the licenses granted to private refineries in Nigeria for over a decade without any springing up.

The dozens of estates developed through the said initiative in the last one decade in the FCT have no doubt ameliorate­d the housing crisis in the FCT but a lot more needs to be done. The incoming administra­tion of Muhammadu Buhari has to pay special attention to housing and help developers to help the government in dealing with the mounting housing challenges.

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