Anxiety as Rivers moves to repossess DAAR Communications’ 866 plots of land

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Trouble is looming in Rivers State following ongoing moves by the government to seize 868 plots of land occupied in the state by the Daar Communications, a media outfit owned by a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), High Chief Raymond Dokpesi.

The large expanse of land located along the popular NTA Road accommodates the Southsouth operations of Daar Communications, owner of the African Independent Television (AIT) and the Raypower FM.

The House of Assembly had passed a resolution reversing the ownership of the land following allegations that it was wrongfully acquired by the media outfit.

The decision of the House was following the recommendations by the House Committee on Public Complaints, which considered the petition by Rumuokwashi, Rumuosi, Ozuoba and Alakahia communities, owners of the land in dispute.

Chairman of the committee, Evans Bipi, during his presentation of the report of the committee  on the floor of the House, said Daar Communications “failed” to provide the land documents of the said property.

The committee, therefore, recommended that the media outlet be allowed to use only the area it currently occupied.

The state Governor, Nyesom Wike, acknowledged receipt of the report from the  House of Assembly on the revocation of ownership of the land for not possessing requisite titled documents.

The governor said the days of Rivers being seen as a Father Christmas were gone, insisting that nobody could illegally acquire what belonged to the state.

Read Also: Rivers Assembly reverses Dokpesi’s 868 Daar Communications’ plots of land

Wike also directed the state Attorney-General to take appropriate action and act on the report.

But the International Society for Social Justice and Human Rights (ISSJHR) on Friday  called on the Rivers government not to politicise the land dispute.

The group said that the 868 plots of land was legally ceded to Daar Communications Plc during the administration of former Governor Peter Odili in 2001 with a condition that the company would give 70 per cent employment to the indigenes of the state.

The Chancellor of ISSJHR, Dr. Jackson Omenazu,  appealed to the government to reconsider its moves in view of the bad business weather forcing  companies to shut down their operations.

He said: “By our investigations, we were able to obtain useful documents of the Deeds of agreement between the state government under Peter Odili and Daar Communications.

“What that implies is that that land was genuinely ceded to the communications company and this present administration has no moral or legal right to dispute that”.

Jackson said within the period of acquisition, Daar Communications paid the sum of N86million into the account of the Ministry of Lands and the agreement was duly signed by the then Commissioner for Information and Communications in the state.

He maintained that if the dispute were not handled with care, it would jeopardise the employment of over 48 Rivers indigenes eking out their living from the company.

 

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