Tag: demolishes

  • Ondo demolishes illegal structures at Owo

    Ondo demolishes illegal structures at Owo

    The Ondo State government yesterday said it demolished illegal structures at the Government Reserved Area (GRA) in Owo Local Government Area.

    Commissioner of Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development, Mr Solagbade Amodeni, spoke to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Akure, the state capital.

    Amodeni said the structures contravened the Urban and Regional Planning Decree 88 of 1992 and Section 9 and 17(7) of the Ondo State Building and Subdivision Regulations, 1984.

    He said: “The Control and Enforcement Unit of the Ondo State Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development carried out the demolition.

    “The structures were demolished because they blocked access roads in the GRA and did not follow approved plans.

    “The state government will continue to monitor building plans and demolish illegal structures.”

    The commissioner said GRAs were among some cherished schemes of government, adding that government will not allow the GRA to be disfigured.

    He said the demolition would deter people from erecting unapproved structures.

    According to him, town planners carried out the demolition in compliance with their rules and regulations.

    Amodeni urged prospective property owners to ensure that their building plans got approval.

    He said: “For the fact that you own the land does not give you total freedom to build anyhow on it. The GRA is a model in the state where law of planning and building is strictly followed.

    “We will continue with monitoring building plans and demolition of illegal structures in the state.”

     

  • 74 arrested as task force demolishes shanties

    The Lagos State Government has begun the demolition of illegal structures, shanties and containerised shops in Obalende to facilitate free flow of drains and canals.

    Seventy-four persons were arrested during the exercise for smoking and selling drugs.

    A statement by the State Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences (Enforcement) Unit (Task Force) said the 48 hours abatement notice served on the traders/occupiers the structures expired on Thursday.

    The government, he said, gave them another 48 hours grace to move before the demolition began.

    The statement said the activities of the traders, mechanics and people living around the fly-over was an eye-sore. They all dump refuse and used tyres into the canals and drains said the statement signed by the task force chairmen, Olayinka Egbeyemi, a Superintendent of Police (SP).

    Egbeyemi said over 120 illegal structures, shanties and containerised shops had so far been demolished; 20 vehicles abandoned under the fly-over were removed.

    He said those arrested would be screened before being taken to court.

    A man Mr Sunday Eze said he has been staying under the Obalende fly-over for over 17 years with his family.

    “I am 70 years of age and I have been living with my wife and three children under Obalende bridge since I left Abia State over 17 years ago”

    Eze, who said he did not have any relative in Lagos, hailed the government for giving him the grace to remove his properties before the demolition.

    A trader, Alhaja Bilikisu Adigun, said she had been trading and living inside a containerised shop under Obalende fly-over with her husband for over 23 years.

  • Lagos demolishes shanties at Oko Oba Abattoir

    The Lagos State Government has demolished all illegal structures and shanties in Oko Oba Abattoir and Lairage Complex in Agege in fulfilment of its promise to restructure the complex.

    Commissioner for Agriculture, Oluwatoyin Suarau, who led a team from his ministry and the Lagos State Task Force on Environmental and Special Offences (Enforcement) Unit on the exercise, said it was part of the on-going rehabilitation of the complex

    He explained that it was geared towards reformation of the red meat value chain system so as “to ensure that the processing of meat is done in a safe and healthy environment.”

    “These illegal structures and shanties aside being a blot on the landscape of the complex and harbouring miscreants, are contributing to the growing concern of health, environment and safety issues in and around the complex”, Suarau stated.

    While stressing that the government is not planning to chase away anybody from the complex as being rumoured by some butchers and cow merchants, the commissioner said that the state would not relent in its effort to improve the hygiene condition of the complex.

    He said: “I want us all to see this administration’s initiatives as a way of sanitizing and ensuring hygiene in the Red Meat Value Chain, we should not see this project as a government instrument to disrupt business activities at the complex”.

    Suarau, who vowed that the government would not condone any act of illegality and harmful health practices at the abattoir or any other one in the state, said a Monitoring, Enforcement and Compliance Unit on Abattoirs and Slaughter Slabs has been established to ensure that products from abattoirs and slaughter slabs in Lagos meet the global quality, safety and compliance requirements.

    “The need to introduce forceful intervention to bring about healthy change in abattoir operations was what informed setting up of the unit and the responsibilities of the unit include monitoring of abattoirs and slaughter slabs in the state for improved operation”.

  • Task force demolishes 120 ‘illegal’ shops, structures

    Task force demolishes 120 ‘illegal’ shops, structures

    Lagos State Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences Unit (Task Force) operatives have demolished over 120 illegal shops and structures under high tension cables at Itedo area of Lekki Phase 1, Lagos.

    The demolition was carried out on Saturday after the expiration of a six-month notice served on owners and occupier of the structures, the agency said.

    The task force chairman, Olayinka Egbeyemi, a Superintendent of Police (SP), who led the operation, said the owners and occupiers got a reminder four weeks ago and had been compensated by government.

    According to him, radiation from high tension cables poses danger to human health and as such no government would put its citizens’ lives at risk.

    Egbeyemi said hoodlums and prostitutes hibernated in the structures.

    He urged both owners and occupiers of shops and structures constructed under high tension cables to immediately remove them as the demolition exercise would be extended to other areas.

    A trader, Mrs Efe Ada, from Benue State, claimed she relocated after getting the demolition notice.

  • Pain as NRC demolishes illegal structures

    Pain as NRC demolishes illegal structures

    These people (NRC officials) have finished me. There is nothing my children and I will eat again. As you can see, my source of livelihood has just been destroyed by the Railway Corporation. I don’t know where to start again. As I am talking to you, I don’t have anything again…We are not aware of any rent paid by the occupants of the illegal structures.

    So, everything has ended today,” Mrs Adijat Olowonyo, 76, uttered in hushed tone as she sat hopelessly on the rubbles of her wooden shelter demolished by a task force working on the orders of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC).

    Her son, Monsuru, 32, and three grandchildren, who lived in the shanty with her, burrowed through the debris to pick any valuable materials left under the heap of logs and plywood. Looking dazed and forlorn, Mrs Olowonyo, a petty trader, wept in silence as the bulldozer ripped through a row of shanties, leaving a trail of wreckage in a neighbourhood she has lived ‘comfortably’ for 35 years.

    “I don’t know where to go from here,” Mrs Olowonyo retorted when the reporter asked what her next move was.

    Apparently helpless, she said: “I knew this place does not belong to me, but I did not know I will leave railway line in this (embarrassing) manner.”

    Mrs Olowonyo, who is a native of Ifo Local Government Area in Ogun State, said: “I will return to my village.”

    Had she been given ample time to prepare for the demolition, she said she would have suffered minimal loss, because she would have moved her belongings out peaceably to a safe location. But, the notice was short, just as the loss she suffered was incalculable.

    This aptly described the tears, pain, agony and anxiety of residents of railway, following the demolition of illegal structures and shanties built along rail track. No fewer than 2,000 shanties have been demolished in the exercise, which began from railway corridors in Mushin to Yaba, Surulere, Oshodi, Ikeja, Iju-Ishaga, Agbado and Alakuko, among others.

    The demolition was carried out by NRC Committee for Removal of Illegal Structures led by Mr Anthony Ochuko Onyokoko.

    At Mushin axis, the demolition started at 8:00 a.m. when many of the traders were yet to open for business.

    The exercise is to pave the way for the commencement of the 155-kilometre Lagos-Ibadan standard gauge modern rail project of the Federal Government, which was launched in February by the Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo.

    Managing Director of the NRC, Fidet Okhiria, at a press conference said no “illegal structure” built within 50 feet from the railway line would be spared by the corporation’s bulldozers, pointing out that only property owners with valid documents would be compensated.

     

    Victims’ painful laments

     

    Before the demolition, the railway corridors were dotted with brick and wooden structures, which served as shelters for deprived families and vagabonds. The entire perimeter of the railway corridors used to be separated from the residential area by iron fence placed 50 feet away from the rail track.

    As human activities increased around the corridors, the iron fence was pulled down and shanties were raised along the track, leaving a dangerous distance of about four feet away from the rail track. Crimes also thrived in the neighbourhood, because it housed criminals and smokers of Indian hemp.

    Some of the residents converted the space for trading, building makeshift shops and kiosks. However, the residents did not just move to occupy the space illegally. They claimed the NRC gave them “informal approval” to build the structures along the railway corridors.

    Southwest Report gathered that some of the residents began living on the railway line in the early 1960s and paid regular rent and lease to the railway corporation.

    Pa Ebenezer Ogunyemi, whose three-room wooden shelter, was pulled down by the NRC’s bulldozer, claimed he usually paid rent to “designated official” of the corporation. In tears, Ogunyemi was hapless when the structures were pulled down by the NRC.

    A 39-year-old single mother of four, who identified herself as Iya Ibeji, said railway line became a new abode for her after she was ejected from her one-room apartment in nearby Akinbode Street. She said she paid rent to the railway corporation through a third party, which initially got NRC’s approval to build the structure.

    Iya Ibeji said: “I have been rendered homeless. There is no place in which my children and I will sleep again. Since my husband abandoned us many years ago, we have been surviving on the profit I made from my petty trade. I was ejected from a one-room apartment and I moved to this place some four years ago to start another life. Now that they have demolished everywhere, I don’t know where to go from here. I can’t afford to pay rent for a single room, because houses in Mushin are expensive.”

     

    Traders count losses

     

    Traders along the demolished railway corridors could not be consoled as they counted their losses. Mrs Kabirat Adeniji, 48, who operated a wholesale store of assorted drinks, rolled on the ground as her three concrete shops were pulled down by the bulldozer. She said she had recently stocked her shops with goods worth N500, 000.

    Mrs Adeniji, who said she rented the three shops 18 years ago, said: “These people (NRC officials) have finished me. There is nothing my children and I will eat again. As you can see, my source of livelihood has just been destroyed by the Railway Corporation. I don’t know where to start again. As I am talking to you, I don’t have anything again.”

    Mrs Bola Jacob, another trader, who opened a grocery shop in the railway corridor the previous week before the demolition, put her loss at N380, 000, because she did not have the opportunity to move her wares to a safe place.

    She said: “I moved to this place in early April, after paying two sets of rents; one to the landlord of the house which my shop is attached to and the other to a railway corporation official. If I had known the government is ready to demolish the structures on railway line, I would not have paid for the shop. I have lost close to N380, 000 worth of goods, because the demolition happened suddenly. I appeal to the government to help me, because I have lost everything I invested in the business.”

    Pelumi Aluko, a hairdresser, was lucky. She had moved all her machinery and other handy equipment out of the wooden shanty before the NRC’s bulldozer got to the spot. She, however, regretted paying rent to an NRC official days before the demolition.

     

    Fifty-Four-year-old

    mosque, churches gone

     

    While traders and residents lamented their losses, members of religious houses built on the railway corridors gathered to take stock of cost of the demolition. No fewer than eight churches, three mosques and two preparatory schools were reduced to rubbles in the exercise.

    Imam of a 54-year-old Orire Mosque demolished at Tinuola axis of the railway line, Alhaji Abdulazeez Ajetunmobi, said the mosque was built on the approval of the NRC.

    He said: “This mosque was built in 1963 and there was no prior notice for the demolition. We only saw the NRC officials a day before the demolition was carried out. They came to mark residential buildings and shops along the rail track for demolition. We were not told the demolition would be carried out the second day. Had we been notified, we would have started to relocate the mosque’s properties.

    I could not quantify in cash the amount we lost after the mosque was pulled down. Only last month, we spent N2.5 million to renovate the mosque and carried out some capital projects. We bought new sound system and mordernised the ceiling. These cost the mosque’s worshippers millions. Everything is gone now.”

    Coordinator of a demolished Sunday school of a Pentecostal church adjacent to the mosque, Mr Israel Komolafe, said the exercise took the church by surprise. He said the church had been occupying the space for 16 years and had been paying monthly rent to NRC officials. He said the corporation did not give notice to vacate the space.

    Prophet Eri Atobatele whose Cherubim and Seraphim (Ijo Temidire) Church was marked for demolition said he paid N275, 000 six months ago to rent the property. He appealed to NRC not to demolish the church, since it is far from the rail track.

    Arguments ensued between the NRC officials and a septuagenarian, Pa Madamidola Aremu, whose property, leased to Cherubim and Seraphim Church, was marked for demolition. Aremu, who claimed to have Queen’s Conveyance approving the perimeter of the property, accused NRC of encroachment on his property. He threatened to sue the corporation if the property is demolished.

     

    Notorious crime spot pulled down

     

    The demolition is probably a blessing in disguise for those living around Mushin Train Station. What is known as HQ – a dangerous smokers’ spot – was pulled down during demolition. Until it was cleared, HQ used to be dangerous corner for unwary passersby. It was den of narcotics abusers, smokers of Indian hemp and notorious bandits, who carried out their nefarious activities in broad daylight.

    Southwest Report learnt that the Lagos police taskforce had cleared the crime site many times in the last 20 years, but the effort was not successful because of the connivance of property owners around the axis whose houses were used as safe haven to store the unlawful items.

    The clearing of HQ may have excited the residents and frequent passersby, but it may be a temporary relief until the NRC permanently barricades its corridors from the buildings around the axis.

     

    ‘They gave us short notice’

     

    The victims complained that the railway corporation did not give them enough time to remove their properties and relocate before the demolition. Some of them could not pick their belongings while the bulldozer cleared the illegal shanties and concrete structures.

    Southwest Report gathered that the occupants got notice to vacate the shanties less than 24 hours before the exercise was carried out. It was also gathered that the NRC officials were in the area the previous day to mark the illegal structures for demolition. It took many of the traders by surprise when the NRC officials led a contingent of riot policemen to carry out the demolition the following day.

    While they admitted the corridors belong to the NRC, the affected persons accused the corporation of insensitivity, saying NRC was wrong not to give them time to relocate after its officials collected monthly rent from them.

    Some of them said the NRC’s Station Manager in Mushin, whose name was identified as Mr Ojo, collected rent in cash on behalf of the corporation.

    Mrs Aluko, a hairdresser, said her shop was demolished a day after she paid N2, 000 to the NRC official as rent. She wondered why the occupants were not notified of the demolition before they paid the rents.

    In protest, some of the traders besieged the Mushin station of the NRC to get back the rents paid to Ojo, who allegedly ran away on sighting the crowd.

  • Lagos State government demolishes fishing community

    Bulldozers roared at the fishing settlement of Otodo-Gbame,near Lekki,Lagos State yesterday,demolishing houses in the area.

    The demolition which residents claimed took them by surprise was carried out under the supervision of mobile policemen and officials of the State environmental task force.

    Dwelling houses and shops went under the bulldozers,leaving thousands homeless.

    Megan Chapman, co-director of Justice Empowerment Initiatives (JEI), a community-based legal and empowerment organisation, which represents the residents of Otodo-Gbame, said at least 4,598 people will be affected by the  demolition.

    “There was absolutely no notice whatsoever. They just showed up this morning,” she said,pointing out that JEI only last week  commenced a court-ordered mediation with the state government.

    “As you are probably aware there is a case going on right now between 15 waterfront communities including Otodo-Gbame in which JEI is representing the community as counsel. The Lagos State High Court gave an interim ruling on the 26 of January saying that this type of demolition without an opportunity for people to find alternative shelter or without provision of alternative shelter constitute cruel and degrading treatment.

    “The court ordered the state government to go into a mediation with us.

    “We started the mediation process last week and it is still on-going and we were supposed to report to the court at the beginning of next month. The court also ordered that the parties should maintain the status quo until the ending of the mediation and the subsequent judgement of the court. So this in direct violation of the court order,” she said.

    Amnesty International said residents “are being forcibly evicted and their homes destroyed by bulldozers as security services used tear gas and live bullets to clear the area.”

    The human rights group,in a statement issued by  its Nigeria researcher,Morayo Adebayo,said: “The eviction, which is ongoing at the time of writing, is being carried out in direct violation of a court ruling issued in January specifically prohibiting it. Residents were not served any notice prior to the forced eviction which came as a total shock.

    “The scene at the moment is chaotic and dangerous for the thousands who live in the Otodo-Gbame community. The military and police are out in full force and are using tear gas and live bullets to disperse the residents. There are four bulldozers ripping through the settlement.

    “This brutal and illegal act flies in the face of human dignity as well as a High Court Ruling that prohibited the eviction taking place and instructed the authorities to instead seek a settlement with the affected communities.  The Lagos State Government should ensure that the families who have been rendered homeless this morning are given emergency relief including adequate shelter, water, food and any medical care they may require.”

    Julius Oladele, who along with his wife and two children, is a resident of Otodo-Gbame said:

    “Almost all the houses in the community have been demolished, the only ones left are those on the water. They did not allow anyone to take their properties. They are chasing people away. My own house was destroyed this morning before I could rush back from work.”

    Amnesty International called for an immediate end to the eviction.

    It also asked  the authorities to respect the court ruling which prohibits them from carrying out forced evictions in waterfront communities.

    There was no immediate response from the Lagos State government.

  • Bello demolishes kidnappers hideout

    Bello demolishes kidnappers hideout

    •Governor on right track, says aide

    Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello yesterday stormed Okene to demolish buildings used by suspected kidnappers, terrorists and robbers to perpetrate their crime.

    The governor was accompanied by the Commissioner of Police, Wilson Inalegwu, and heads of other security agencies.

    Two of such structures have so far been demolished – one in Oyunkoko, Okene council, belonging to a suspected kidnap kingpin, Alhaji Tijanni Bakare, and the notorious Ahlul-Sunnah Mosque in Inike, which was reportedly hijacked in 2015 by Boko Haram members and used as an operational base.

    At the demolition, Bello vowed to implement the Anti-kidnapping, Robbery and Terrorism Law to the latter. He warned those harbouring criminals to repent or have their structures pulled down.

    CP Inalegwu said it would no longer be business as usual for criminals operating in any part of the state.

    “This is a strong message to kidnappers and hoodlums to change their ways; they should work hard and earn a decent living.

    “We want to make Kogi safe so that residents and travellers will not have the fear of being kidnapped,” he said.

    Governor Bello has been described as “well prepared for 21st century leadership” as he strives to become the best governor ever in the history of the state.

    His Director General on Media and Publicity, Kingsley Fanwo, who addressed reporters yesterday, said those who think Bello is an ‘accidental governor’ are bereft of how he has developed his leadership skills over the years.

    According to Fanwo, events of the last 13 months are beginning to “sound an unmistakable death knell on the politics of the pot for the few”, insisting that Bello’s achievements, in just over a year in office, showed his intent to break records, affect lives and become the “best ever” in the history of the state.

    He said: “I am sure the American Ambassador was impressed by what he saw in Kogi, and most importantly, the hunger in the eyes of the governor to put the state on the right track. “American Ambassadors don’t go everywhere; they go to where there is the right drive for development and human empowerment. The significance of his visit has dawned on those who never believed in what we are doing. They have been forced to look at us and appreciate what the governor is doing to develop the state.”

     

  • Lagos demolishes shops under power cable

    Lagos demolishes shops under power cable

    Lagos State has demolished  235 illegal shops and 125 containers at Igbara market, Jakande, on Lekki-Epe express road.

    It was carried out on behalf of the government at the weekend by the Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences Unit (Task Force).

    The exercise was in continuation of demolition of structures under high tension cable.

    The Task Force Chairman, Olayinka Egbeyemi, a Superintendent of Police, called on market leaders to enforce government’s directives on structures on high tension cables across the state.

    Egbeyemi, who was present to supervise the demolition, said the exercise should not be seen as punitive, but should be viewed from Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s  efforts geared towards saving lives and property.

    He enjoined market leaders in local governments and local council developments to support government by educating traders of the imminent danger in trading under high tension cables.

    Egbeyemi said high current flowing between these high tension cables with its intermittent sound poses imminent danger to people’s health.

    He confirmed that a seven-day notice was  served on shops owners and traders before the demolition was carried out, stating that no responsible and responsive government would tolerate any trading activities under such dangerous condition.

    Spare Parts Traders Association chairman at the market Mr. Ugo Onuha said they have been operating in the market for more than 20 years.

    He stated that the market was constructed by Igbara community, which comprises of three families: namely, Lawal family, Balogun family and Badanu family.

    He said the families collected N3,000 to N5,000  from those selling inside container shops. Others, who trade inside brick shops, paid N10,000 to N20,000 monthly.

    Onuha and his deputy Mr. Lazarous Obina pleaded with the government to construct low medium market for traders as those constructed by private developers was beyond their reach.

    A representative of Lawal family, Mr. Lateef Lawal, said since the government served the seven-day notice, the community started looking at a possible relocation of traders to a new land.

  • Task force demolishes 45 shanties at Iba

    The Lagos State Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences Unit (Taskforce) yesterday demolished 45 shanties at LASU round-about in Iba area of Lagos

    A statement by its Public Affairs Officer Adebayo Taofiq, said demolition notices were served on occupants of the shanties on May 2 to remove their goods and possessions.

    The Task force chairman, Olayinka Egbeyemi, a Superintendent of Police (SP) had attributed the traffic gridlock on the road to the shanties.

    According to him, miscreants used the shanties as hideout, therefore necessitating the demolition of the structures.

    “After the demolition, LASU-Iba road that had been experiencing traffic gridlock was clear because those patronising the illegal traders could not do their business as usual.

    “Even residents around the area were jubilating during the demolition because the area would be free from activities of miscreants who usually unleashed terror on them at night”, he said.

    Egbeyemi warned members of the public against erecting shanties on road set-backs, walkways, drainages and canal setbacks, adding that government will no longer condone any illegalities across the state.

  • Govt demolishes 32 buildings in Zaria

    •El-Rufai begins land recovery

    Thirty-two illegal buildings were yesterday demolished on the premises of Alhudahuda College, Zaria.

    This is part of Kaduna State government’s efforts to recover government land in state-owned institutions.

    Governor Nasir El-Rufai had given an ultimatum to owners of such property and last weekend reminded them that the deadline would end on Wednesday (yesterday).

    Supervising the exercise, the General Manager, Kaduna State Urban Development Authority (KASUPDA), Mrs. Saratu Hassan, said 32 houses were affected.

    She said the government did not promise to compensate owners.

    Mrs. Hassan said the government would not rescind its decision.

    She said the demolition team would soon move to other areas where there were illegal structures.

    Her words: “The Kaduna State government has saddled our department with the responsibility of demolishing illegal buildings on government land.

    “This is why we are here at Alhudahuda College, Zaria to begin the demolition of illegal structures. When we finish, we will move to other areas.”

    Armed security personnel were on ground to guard officials of the agency.

    Owners of most of the affected buildings, before the arrival of the demolition squad, removed their valuables.

    There was no trouble in Zaria, but in Kaduna there was tension as houses on school and hospital land had been marked for demolition by KASUPDA.