Tag: Land grabbers

  • Dickson vows to treat land grabbers as criminals 

    Dickson vows to treat land grabbers as criminals 

    The Governor of Bayelsa State, Mr. Seriake Dickson, Thursday, warned persons encroaching on government land and property to desist or be treated as criminals.

    A statement signed by Dickson’s Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, said the governor gave the warning when the State Special Task Force on Identification and Recovery of Government Lands, led by Chief Ige Iboro Edaba submitted its report to him.

    Dickson particularly called on persons still assuming ownership of land after collecting compensation to steer clear from the property.

    He asked them to approach the Ministry of Land and Survey to report unresolved issues.

    He said: “I want to call on land owners to desist from re-entering lands in respect of which, compensation has been paid. If compensation has not been fully paid and the government has already started developing the land, then respect the rights of the government, because that is the property of everybody, including you.

    “You can approach the Ministry of Lands and Survey and then discuss with them, as to how they can complete the acquisition.

    “But, the solution is not to collect compensation money from government and then go back and sell government lands. We will treat those people as pure criminals that they are and we will begin the process of recovering all such lands.”

    Dickson, who promised to study the report, directed the ministries of Justice and lands and Survey to take measures in recovering all affected government land.

    Presenting the report of the task force, Edaba decried the level of encroachment on government land saying some land owners, who received compensation re-entered and in most cases re-sold such land.

    He cited some of the affected areas in the Yenagoa metropolis as, BYCAS at Elebele, Central Business District and Opolo Housing Estate, where government had acquired 200 hectares of land for which 70% had been re-sold.

    Edaba also stressed the need for all ministries, departments and agencies to acquire land, through the Ministry of Lands and Survey to promoting a centralized land acquisition system and expedite action on recovery of encroached lands.

  • Land grabbers kill plumber

    Land grabbers kill plumber

    Suspected land grabbers on Saturday murdered a plumber, Wale Taiwo at Magboro, an Ogun State community, off the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, it was learnt yesterday.

    The hoodlums were said to have stormed an uncompleted building near the Mountain of Fire and Miracles (MFM) prayer ground where the deceased was working and killed him.

    It was gathered that the bungalow building belonged to a Vice Principal at Kings College, who allegedly had a disagreement with the land grabbers.

    Although the woman was said to have built the house in 2013, the land grabbers were said to have stormed the property furious that work was ongoing while the owner was yet to ‘settle’ them.

    They allegedly hit the plumber with an iron on his head, killing him on the spot.

    According to the deceased’s brother, Muyiwa Taiwo, the hoodlums abandoned their victim in a pool of his blood and fled.

    He said the two labourers his brother contracted to work with him fled the scene.

    Taiwo said: “We believe the incident happened on Saturday because that was the last time he communicated with his wife. They spoke around 8am on Saturday when he wanted to confirm if there was environmental sanitation. It was the sanitation exercise that delayed him, otherwise, he would have left for Lagos that morning.

    “We heard that the Omoniles came to the site and they called the owner of the building. It seems the owner did not give them a good reply and they took it out on my brother who was just doing his job.

    “They hit him on the head, he fainted and died there. Even the labourers, two Abokis, who were working with him fled. We have gone there to remove his car and the car has been moved to the police station. The woman who owns the building did not come but her husband was with us.”

    A source said it was the victim’s family that discovered the body after his wife went to the owner’s college to get the address of the property.

    Said the success: “The deceased and the owner know themselves very well. The deceased used to be a teacher too before he got another job and left. So, it was the woman who contacted him for the plumbing job and while he was at it, the Omoniles killed him.

    “His wife came to the college and demanded for the address of the building. She was worried that she has not heard from her husband who was supposed to come back on Saturday. I do not really know if she went there herself or someone else did but that was how he was discovered dead and the police invited.”

    When contacted, the spokesman for the Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG) in-charge of Zone II, Muyiwa Adejobi confirmed the murder.

    He said: “I can confirm that a plumber was murdered there but I cannot day at the moment if it has to do with land grabbers. But be rest assured that the murderers won’t go unpunished.

    “The AIG, Abdulmajid Ali has vowed to deal with criminals in the zone and this is a capital offence. Investigation is on and the culprits will be fished out and death with.”

  • Land grabbers murder plumber in Ogun

    Land grabbers murder plumber in Ogun

    Suspected land grabbers on Saturday murdered a plumber, Wale Taiwo at Magboro, along the Lagos-Ibadan expressway.

    The hoodlums were said to have stormed an uncompleted building situated close to the Mountain of Fire and Miracles (MFM) prayer ground were the deceased was working and killed him.

    It was gathered that the bungalow building belonged to a Vice Principal at Kings College, who allegedly had a disagreement with the land grabbers.

    Although the woman was said to have erected the structure in 2013, the land grabbers were said to have stormed the property furious that work was ongoing while the owner was yet to ‘settle’ them.

    They allegedly hit the plumber with an iron on his head, killing him on the spot.

    According to the deceased’s brother, Muyiwa Taiwo, the hoodlums abandoned their victim in a pool of his blood and fled.

    He stated that even the two labourers his brother had contracted to work with him fled the scene, abandoning the victim.

    “We believe the incident happened on Saturday because that was the last time he communicated with his wife. They spoke around 8am on Saturday when he wanted to confirm if there was environmental sanitation. It was the sanitation exercise that delayed him, otherwise, he would have left for Lagos that morning.

    “We heard that the Omoniles came to the site and they called the owner of the building. It seems the owner did not give them a good reply and they took it out on my brother who was just doing his job.

    “They hit him on the head, he fainted and died there. Even the labourers, two Abokis who were working with him fled. We have gone there to remove his car and the car has been moved to the police station. The woman who owns the building did not come but her husband was with us,” said Taiwo.

    A source said it was the victim’s family that discovered the body after his wife went to the owner’s college to get the address of the property.

    “The deceased and the owner know themselves very well. The deceased used to be a teacher too before he got another job and left. So, it was the woman who contacted him for the plumbing job and while he was at it, the Omoniles killed him.

    “His wife came to the college and demanded for the address of the building. She was worried that she has not heard from her husband who was supposed to come back on Saturday. I do not really know if she went there herself or someone else did but that was how he was discovered dead and the police invited,” said the source.

    When contacted, the spokesman for the Assistant Inspector General of Police  (AIG) incharge of zone II, Muyiwa Adejobi confirmed the murder.

    He said: “I can confirm that a plumber was murdered there but I cannot day at the moment if it has to do with land grabbers. But be rest assured that the murderers won’t go unpunished. The AIG, Abdulmajid Ali has vowed to deal with criminals in the zone and this is a capital offence. Investigation is on and the culprits will be fished out and death with.”

  • Nailing Lagos land grabbers

    Some years ago,well-known African Philosophy teacher 80-yearld old Professor Sophie Bosede Oluwole told the world about her anguishing experience at the hands of indigenous land speculators (land grabbers) popularly called omo-onile. She said she had bought a land in Lagos several years earlier. Trouble came when she wanted to develop it. Her account: “I bought my land 18 years ago. A fellow, who was six years old at the time now comes to me, saying his brother did not give him his own share of the money. I can’t understand whether he wanted to take his own share in the womb…Somebody would come and say ‘I was not around when you bought the land, pay me my own share”.

    Mamalawoas Professor Oluwole is fondly referred to, lived to tell the story. She was fortunate, unlike others who had more macabre encounters with the omo-onile. Some have been maimed for life. Others have died. Several more have been traumatized after having their land seized and resold without a kobo for compensation. Many more are locked in a cycle of unending court cases over trespass on their land that is taking forever to settle.

    Governments that have tolerated these vampires called omo-onile have violated the constitution that says government should protect life and property.

    So when last week Governor AkinwunmiAmbode of Lagos moved in to roll out a law nailing the nefarious activities of the miscreants, he met not only a popular demand, but also he adhered to the fundamental essence of government. He has continued to receive deafening applause for his action.

    The instrument, known as Lagos State Property Protection Law, will make the menace of land grabbing in Lagos a criminal act and a thing of the past. It stipulates a 21-year jail term for convicts. Ambode said: “The need for the law followed the fact that one of the issues that discouraged and hindered the ease of doing business in Lagos in the past had always been the menace of land grabbing.” He noted that a lot of would-be property owners encountered untold harassment from the exploitative land grabbers, declaring that the law now marked the end of the road for such people.

    “The main objective of this law,” Ambode says, “is to ensure that our investors, business men and the general populace carry on their legitimate land-property transactions without any hindrance or intimidation henceforth…The Property Law will eliminate the activities of persons or corporate entities who use force and intimidation to dispossess or prevent any person or entity from acquiring legitimate interest and possession of property…”

    The government has followed it up with the establishment of a Special Task Force on Land-Grabbers and a Neighbourhood Safety Agency and Corps to assist the Police and other security agencies maintain law and order across the communities.

    Given the virulent operations of the land speculators also called ajagungbale and how they have killed, maimed, defrauded, and retarded investments, property developments and housing delivery in this state of close to 20million persons, many agree that this law had been overdue. They have a point, if we consider some salient statistics.

    The Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria said some years ago that Nigeria is in grave deficit of housing of about 18million housing units. Government (Federal, State and Local Councils) cannot fill the gap, as we thought they could with the Land Use Act which put ownership of all land in the hands of state governors. Even the so-called private sector mortgage system hasn’t been of help.

    Part succour lies only in individuals having unfettered access to land for housing in the communities. But there, the omo-onile chaps have ambushed this critical window of intervention. They present land titles which they alter or disown at will to swindle buyers. Then at various stages of building on your property they throw in more obstacles: You pay them huge sums for laying the foundation, for decking, roofing, erecting a perimeter fence, digging a borehole, for putting up any extension in your compound! At other times, as in the case of Sophie Oluwole, some other group of omo-onile surfaces to stop your project on the claim that there is a court judgement wresting ownership of the land from those who sold the land to you.

    Outlawing the activities of land grabbers completely as the Lagos State government has done is the answer to the nightmare the citizens have been subjected to all these decades. It is also in the interest of government because the authorities can now streamline the levies the land grabbers have been collecting into a tax regime to boost the revenue of government. The authorities must implement the law to the hilt. In the past, the people had been distrustful of government when it came to lifting such laws from the cold print and giving it prosecutorial teeth. The government should offer the people a new impression of seriousness in giving life to the law.

    The citizens also have a role to play if the law must work. The citizens would need to report omo-onile infractions to relevant agencies. Hotlines and social media contacts are needed for the public to reach the newly created operatives of the Neighbourhood Safety Agency and Corps.

    Law courts and the Police must be advised not to allow themselves to be compromised in cases patently meant to defraud property owners and thwart the spirit and letter of the new law. There have been occasions where security agents allegedly worked hand in hand with the land grabbers to perpetrate heinous acts.

    It is expected that with Lagos State taking this radical step of finally hemming in the land grabbers, its fellow South-west neighbours, notably Ogun which is on a new drive to boost investment and Internally Generated Revenue, will follow suit to save its citizens from the hoodlums euphemistically called omo-onile.

     

    • Ojewale is a writer in Ota, Ogun State.
  • Residents accuse police of conspiring with ‘land grabbers ‘

    Policemen attached to the Mobile Force (PMF) have been accused of aiding land grabbers to dislodge residents of Sapata community in Lekki from their homes.

    The residents, who cried out to the Acting Inspector General of Police (IGP) Ibrahim Idris as well as the Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for help, claimed that over 250 shanties were destroyed by suspected land grabbers allegedly accompanied by over 25 armed mobile policemen.

    According to a 97-year-old woman, Florence Oriyomi Oja-Okomo, the incident occurred on June 27, adding that those who led the policemen were two civilians she identified as Gbenga and Tokunbo.

    Mrs. Oja-Okomo, who claimed to have lived in the community for her entire life, said that they were not allowed to collect their properties.

    She claimed: “Over 250 families have been displaced by some powerful and wealthy people who came into our community with bulldozers. They demolished our makeshift homes.

    “This community has existed for over 200 years. My forefathers lived here and were fishermen. When I was growing up, this place was not accessible to vehicles. But now that development has come, different people have started struggling to take over our possessions.

    “Currently, there is a matter in court between the Oja-Okomos and Ojomu families over land ownership. The worst part is that the people who came here to destroy our homes and chase us didn’t come from the Ojomu clan.

    “I was shocked when a group of policemen, led by Gbenga and Tokunbo, came with bulldozers to demolish our homes. We were told that a powerful family has bought the land, even as we are in Appeal court with the Ojomu family and Lagos State Government. Is it possible that a family could encroach on a land that is in the court? Who sold the land to them?”

    A retired policeman, Felix Oja-Okomo, said his grandfather discovered the place when it was a thick forest, accusing those demolishing their homes of being dishonest.

    Felix said: “The people demolishing our homes have not specifically told us who they are working for. This shows that those claiming to have bought this place are not honest. They are just land grabbers, assisted by a few powerful men in Lagos; by men, who believe that they can suppress the truth and take over other people’s properties.”

  • Police arrest alleged land grabbers in Lagos

    Police arrest alleged land grabbers in Lagos

    The police in Lagos Monday paraded three men alleged to be land grabbers.

    The suspects, Igbokun Ogunkoya, 40, Ayoola Ahmed, 20 and Lateef Alase, 44 were arrested on Sunday at Alade village in Ikeja.

    They were alleged to have forcibly entered and willfully damaged a property before detectives rounded them up based on tip off.

    But the suspects who denied the allegations against them, said they were contracted by the owner of the property, one Abayomi, to excavate an abandoned foundation.

    According to Ogunkoya who spoke on behalf of the three, he was a registered contractor and invited the other two to work for him after the said Abayomi contracted him for the job.

    “We are not land grabbers and we have never been. I am a contractor and I invited them to work for me. Ahmed was operating the tractor and Alase works for me. We started work there on Saturday. It was the owner, one Abayomi who gave us the job and that Saturday many policemen from the Special Anti-Robbery Sqaud (SARS) were on ground.

    “We worked on Saturday and returned on Sunday to continue work. There were three policemen there with us still. It was while we were working that some policemen came and said we were land grabbers. That we were not authorised to do that work. They arrested the policemen with us that they were on illegal duty but since then, we have not seen the three policemen,” he said.

    Parading the suspects, Police Commissioner, Fatai Owoseni said the command will use them as example against land grabbers.

    He said: “This is to demonstrate the command’s resolve to completely stamp out the madness of land grabbers. The law against land grabbing will be strictly enforced and the command will work in unison with the Taskforce established to contain the menace. The suspects will be arraigned in court.”

  • Lagos and the nuisance of land grabbers

    Buying a  piece of land in Lagos State and putting up a structure on same is usually a tall order, no thanks to the belligerent activities of land grabbers and land speculators popularly known as Omo oniles who make life unbearable for intending house owners through their frivolous demands. There have been many instances where unsuspecting buyers paid for land only to be told to come and pay again to reclaim their land, or settle some aggrieved family members who were not factored into the sharing formula of the previous payment. Omo Oniles simply have no regard for the law of the land as they have become a law unto themselves charging and fining prospective land owners’ different absurd bills as it pleases them.

    They also ensure the buyers are not free from their strangulating grip as they exact different fines on them, at every stage of the development of their properties. Prominent among such fines are foundation bill, lintel bill, decking bill, roof bill, fencing bill and a whole lot more. The value of such bills could sometimes be equivalent of the total value of the land or a little less depending on their scale of relevance and location of the property.

    In addition, they employ the use of force and threat in collecting these monies from their victims who are at their mercy with no option or defence. Some of their victims have had their structures demolished, as the Omo Oniles storm their sites in commando-like style, wielding harmful weapons and attacking the workers on site. Property owners are often mercilessly beaten up, wounded and forced to stop work until payment is made. Through this trend, land grabbers have successfully stalled the development of many projects.

    Consequently, in Lagos, individuals and organizations planning to put up structures have learnt to factor the cost of Omo Oniles into their expenditure. This has not only hindered development; it has also made individuals and organizations to consider relocating to neighbouring states where the activities of land grabbers are not so pronounced.

    The activities of land grabbers are not only illegal, but anathema to society, development, peace and progress. They speculate on land with little or no recourse to land use laws, as they engage in the illegal sale of government land to unsuspecting individuals. They sometimes even dispossess people of land that are legitimately bought from the government. They also sell lands with no proper planning or cognizance of a mapped out environmental outlay, this is especially so, with new satellite settlements in the suburb of the state. Some houses within such locations don’t have a pathway for movement as other houses have been erected on their path; more appalling, some are built under high tension wires.

    Although some of the notorious Omo Oniles are known but the society is helpless in dealing with them. To stem the tide of Omo Oniles nuisance, there is a need for accurate and efficient record keeping were the history of every property is preserved and conscientiously kept and protected. The courts are congested with land cases because landed properties are not properly documented.

    It is not in doubt that the state has recorded enormous loss to the unlawful activities of these hoodlums, most of whom are layabouts, opportunists and exploiters who go about rubbishing the image of the state. It is in order to decisively tackle this nuisance that the Lagos State Government recently inaugurated a Task Force to check the menace of land grabbers in the state.

    The Task Force is saddled with the task of reducing to the barest minimum activities of individuals or corporate entities that use force and intimidation to dispossess or prevent people or organizations from acquiring legitimate interest and possession of property acquired through the state government or private transactions. The force is also empowered to co-ordinate the efforts of various agencies of government charged with enforcing the state government rights over lands in Lagos; and to work with all security agencies to ensure enforcement of state government and private property rights in Lagos State.

    The state government has vowed to deploy the full force of the state and the law to tackle the issue permanently, noting that the havoc and chaos being caused by land grabbers would no longer be tolerated. Consequently, henceforth any person who uses physical force, threats or arms to dispossess people of their legitimate property will be treated as a criminal in accordance with Sections 52, 53 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, which stipulates a two-year jail term for any person found to have forcefully entered or dispossessed a legitimate land owner of his property. According to Section 281 of the criminal law, land is part of items that can be stolen.

    A few days back, the Lagos State House of Assembly made good its promise to move against the threat of Omo Oniles in the state. The House passed a bill to prohibit forceful entry and illegal occupation of landed properties, violent and fraudulent conduct in relation to landed properties in Lagos State and for connected purposes into law. If found guilty, by the provisions of the bill, land grabbers, popularly known as Omo Oniles will face a maximum 21 years and minimum of five years imprisonment respectively. The bill, passed at its plenary, after scaling through Third Reading was later sent to Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for his assent. The passage of this bill into law is, no doubt, a massive step towards a lasting solution to the activities of the land grabbers in the state.

    It is heart-warming that the state government is coming up with the legal and institutional framework to tackle the menace of Omo Oniles once and for all. A society that thrives on lawlessness cannot attract meaningful development and growth. The citizenry, especially masses who daily struggle to make ends meet would, without a doubt, benefit from this renewed attempt to sanitize the land sector in Lagos State. Meanwhile, it is crucial that the state government demonstrate sufficient political will to follow through this fresh process in order to repose the citizenry’s confidence in the rule of law.

    On its part, the citizenry must brace up to fully support the government in this new bid to restore law and order into the society.

    Aruya is of the Features Unit, Ministry of Information & Strategy, Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos.

  • Lagos and the nuisance of land grabbers

    Buying a  piece of land in Lagos state and putting up a structure on same is usually a tall order, no thanks to the belligerent activities of land grabbers and land speculators popularly known as Omo Oniles who make life unbearable for intending house owners through their voracious frivolous demands. There have been many instances where unsuspecting buyers paid for land only to be told to come and pay again to reclaim their land, or settle some aggrieved family members who were not factored into the sharing formula of the previous payment. Omo Oniles simply have no regard for the law of the land as they have become a law unto themselves charging and fining prospective land owners’ different absurd bills as it pleases them.

    They also ensure the buyers are not free from their strangulating grip as they exact different fines on them, at every stage of the development of their properties. Prominent among such fines are foundation bill, lintel bill, decking bill, roof bill, fencing bill and a whole lot more. The value of such bills could sometimes be equivalent of the total value of the land or a little less depending on their scale of relevance and location of the property.

    In addition, they employ the use of force and threat in collecting these monies from their victims who are at their mercy with no option or defense. Some of their victims have had their structures demolished, as the Omo Oniles storm their sites in commando-like style, wielding harmful weapons and attacking the workers on site. Property owners are often mercilessly beaten up, wounded and forced to stop work until payment is made. Through this trend, land grabbers have successfully stalled the development of many projects.

    Consequently, in Lagos, individuals and organizations planning to put up structures have learnt to factor the cost of Omo Oniles into their expenditure. This has not only hindered development; it has also made individuals and organizations to consider relocating to neighboring states where the activities of land grabbers are not so pronounced.

    The activities of land grabbers are not only illegal, but anathema to society, development, peace and progress. They speculate on land with little or no recourse to land use laws, as they engage in the illegal sale of government land to unsuspecting individuals. They sometimes even dispossess people of land that are legitimately bought from the government. They also sell lands with no proper planning or cognizance of a mapped out environmental outlay, this is especially so, with new satellite settlements in the suburb of the state. Some houses within such locations don’t have a pathway for movement as other houses have been erected on their path; more appalling, some are built under high tension wires.

    Although some of the notorious ‘Omo Oniles are known but the society is helpless in dealing with them. To stem the tide of Omo Oniles nuisance, there is a need for accurate and efficient record keeping were the history of every property is preserved and conscientiously kept and protected. The courts are congested with land cases because landed properties are not properly documented.

    It is not in doubt that the state has recorded enormous loss to the unlawful activities of these hoodlums, most of whom are lay about, opportunists and exploiters who go about rubbishing the image of the state. It is in order to decisively tackle this nuisance that the Lagos state Government recently inaugurated a Task Force to check the menace of land grabbers in the state.

    The Task Force is saddled with the task of reducing to the barest minimum activities of individuals or corporate entities that use force and intimidation to dispossess or prevent people or organizations from acquiring legitimate interest and possession of property acquired through the state Government or private transactions. The Force is also empowered to co-ordinate the efforts of various agencies of Government charged with enforcing the State Government rights over lands in Lagos; and to work with all security agencies to ensure enforcement of State Government and private property rights in Lagos State.

    The state government has vowed to deploy the full force of the state and the law to tackle the issue permanently, noting that the havoc and chaos being caused by land grabbers would no longer be tolerated. Consequently, henceforth any person who uses physical force, threats or arms to dispossess people of their legitimate property will be treated as a criminal in accordance with Sections 52, 53 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, which stipulates a 2year jail term for any person found to have forcefully entered or dispossessed a legitimate land owner of his property. According to Section 281 of the criminal law, land is part of items that can be stolen.

    A few days back, the Lagos State House of Assembly made good its promise to move against the threat of Omo Oniles in the state. The House passed a bill to prohibit forceful entry and illegal occupation of landed properties, violent and fraudulent conduct in relation to landed properties in Lagos State and for connected purposes into law. If found guilty, by the provisions of the bill, land grabbers, popularly known as Omo Onileswill face a maximum 21 years and minimum of five years imprisonment respectively. The bill, passed at its plenary, after scaling through Third Reading was later sent to Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for his assent. The passage of this bill into law is, no doubt, a massive step towards a lasting solution to the activities of the land grabbers in the state.

    It is heartwarming that the state government is coming up with the legal and institutional framework to tackle the menace of Omo Oniles once and for all. A society that thrives on lawlessness cannot attract meaningful development and growth. The citizenry, especially masses who daily struggle to make ends meet would, without a doubt, benefit from this renewed attempt to sanitize the land sector in Lagos State. Meanwhile, it is crucial that the state government demonstrate sufficient political will to follow through this fresh process in order to repose the citizenry’s confidence in the rule of law.

    On its part, the citizenry must brace up to fully support the government in this new bid to restore law and order into the society.

    Aruya is of the Features Unit, Ministry of Information & Strategy, Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos.

  • Father of five killed as land grabbers attack community

    Father of five killed as land grabbers attack community

    Barely six months after a strange disease ravaged the community, leaving no fewer than 25 children dead, Otodo Gbame, one of the ancestral homes of the Egun, is yet again under siege.

    Otodo Gbame is located in Ikate near Elegushi Estate, Lagos.

    The community is facing attacks  from an alleged land grabber, Mr Wale Adebanjo  and the Sand Sellers Association, Lekki Zone 8, allegedly spearheaded by his brother, Wasiu.

    The feud over sand dredging activities between Sand Sellers Association, Lekki Zone 6, Otodo-Gbame community and Sand Sellers Association, Lekki Zone 8 resulted in the death of one of Otodo Gbame Community youth, Isaiah Aiforji, The Nation learnt.

    The late Aiforji, a fisherman, was a father of five.

    He was reportedly shot by some uniform gunmen that came with Wale three weeks ago.

    According to eyewitnesses, the deceased was going about his normal routine when some policemen came with Wale in a speed boat to the shores of the community to arrest some people.

    Some residents approached them while they were about to arrest Aiforji, the armed men allegedly shot him (Aiforji) in the leg as they were leaving.

    An eyewitness simply identified herself as Esther said: “We were seating here in the afternoon around 2pm when they came in a speed boat. They were four men and one woman. When they came out of the boat, they saw the man (Aiforji) there. They dipped their hands into his pocket and started rough handling him, dragging him. Some guys around then began to salute the officers as a show of respect but they did not heed. They pleaded with them not to take him away but they eventually dragged him to the boat and shot him. We don’t know who they are.”

    She lamented that it wasn’t clear to her why the people in the community were perceived inferior to own land at the axis. She urged the government to intervene, saying “the same way they are land-owners; we are equally land-owners.”

    A bricklayer Hunukon told The Nation that the killing was a calculated plan to terrorise them in order to flee the land. He said efforts to save the victim proved futile as he bled to death on the way to the hospital.

    He said: “That day, I was working when I saw policemen approaching. As they got to the shore, they approached the deceased, grabbed his cloth and wanted to take him away but their action caught peoples’ attention. So everyone moved closer, wondering what happened. Then the policemen began shooting in the air to scare people; but a man called Habeeb still went near them, asking why they wanted to take him away. They didn’t fight the policemen but when they realised the crowd was increasing, they left the man, started their speed boat and shot him in the leg. His leg bone was dislocated and the bullet tore his flesh. He died while being rushed to the hospital.  And it’s basically because of sand dredging issue.”

    A fellow fisherman said: “Every day, the Itedo community people, where Wale does land agent business, come with uniform men to terrorise the people in our community, Otodo Gbame. There was a day they came and threatened to burn all the houses in the community. But now, they come with Agbero people (hoodlums) very often to disrupt our fishing activities. Whenever they come and they see people going on their own, they attack them.

    But the land in question is not Itedo’s land; it belongs to Otodo Gbame. Their own land is far off. They have been disturbing us for about two years but the threat was intensified from the beginning of this year. When they came, they were led by Wale, a land agent. We don’t go fishing again; we just stay back. Leaving our wives and children at home is even a risk we take because we are worried they can come anytime and attack the community, kill our children and burn our houses.”

    According to Jonathan Zosu, reports made to the nearest police station were treated as inconsequential on several instances.

    Zosu said: “We have reported the case to the nearest police station at Ilasan in Ikate severally but they don’t respond. What they do is to transfer our case to Panti in Yaba, Lagos Mainland. There is no form of protection here. 95 per cent of our people here are fishermen. We want the governor to look into this issue. Our lives are not safe.”

    The community chairman, Hennu Solomon told The Nation that the community had sought several ways to resolve their differences with their neighbour but was unsuccessful.

    “We wrote our the Itedos that we don’t want the incident that happened between us and the Eleguishi’s to repeat itself. They were invited to the office of the public defender, they refuse to come the first, second and third time. Then, we had to write them for a peaceful resolution, but they refused to turn up until this year when they came, bringing one Wale. He doesn’t live in Otodo Gbame neither does he live in Ikate. He comes from outside, all the way from Ibeju. Then he came and told us there was a woman who bought land from the Itedos and that he was the one that fought for the woman to get the land. Initially, he said two plots of land, later they came back to tell us it was twelve plots of land. They came and sold a part of our land to somebody claiming that the Itedo people’s land extended here, but their land did not extend here by any means. They are tenants of the Eleguishis and that is how they have been selling their land and ours,” he said.

    He further noted that it was incorrect for people to assume that the Egun were not qualified as Lagosians, saying “The community has been existing for over 300 years with our own tradition. We have our structures, ethics and deities here. We are Ogu by tribe and Ogu people are from Badagry. As you know Badagry is one of the earliest divisions in Lagos State. We have the Ogus, the Ekos, the Ikejas, the Epes and the Ikorodus. And that is what constituted the state today. And from the history of Lagos State, nobody will say an Ogu person is not a Lagos Indigene. They are rewriting our history.”

    “When the land was N500, N1,000, nobody thought of pursuing the people. When the land was in mud and bushy, nobody came but now that the land is open, they want to lay the poor fishermen off and sell the land to the big men in millions,” he added.

    He appealed to government to intervene and salvage their belongings.

    “We want the government to wave into the matter. Let justice prevail. Let proper investigation be carried out in fairness,” he said.

    The deceased’s uncle Abel Aiforji, said his brother’s children are additional burden for him.

    He said he needed help to cater for them.

    The deceased’s son, Amos, a junior secondary school pupil said:  “I was inside my aunt’s shop when a man ran here to tell us. I just started weeping. My dad was a good man. Whenever he came, he normally gave us money. I really wish he is here. You know God is the one to judge everything. I pray He judges the perpetrators. We need help. My uncle can’t afford everything for his children and us as well.”

    One of the accused, Mr Wasiu Adebanjo, debunked masterminding the murder of Aiforji.

    Wasiu said: “I don’t have anything to do with them and I am not the person that sent anybody to kill anyone. If you see me, you will know I don’t have the wherewithal to acquire land in Ikate.

    “What happen was they stole someone’s land and the person has been at loggerheads with them. It was when the police went to the community to arrest the person involved that they started dragging with them. That was how one of them got shot. It was not me. I am a sand seller just like others. The case is already in Panti station.”

    The accused land agent, Wale was not reached as he didn’t pick his call.

    Police spokesperson Dolapo Badmus, a Superintendent (SP) said the command was not aware of the case but will investigate it.

  • Commissioner: Govt’ll now treat land grabbers as criminals

    Commissioner: Govt’ll now treat land grabbers as criminals

    LAGOS State Government will, henceforth, treat those who grab other people’s land as criminals, Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice Mr Adeniji Kazeem said yesterday.

    He was inaugurating a five-man Special Task Force to curb the activities of land grabbers aka Omo Onile at the state secretariat in Alausa, Ikeja.

    The task force’s terms of reference include: “to reduce to barest minimum the activities of persons or corporate entities who use force and intimidation to dispossess or prevent any person or entity from acquiring legitimate interest and possession of property acquired state government or private transactions; to coordinate the efforts of the various agencies of government charged with enforcing the government rights over land in Lagos and to work with all security agencies to ensure enforcement of government and private property rights in Lagos State”.

    Kazeem said the government raised the task force because land grabbers have caused havoc and unrest in different parts of the state by dispossessing legitimate land owners of their properties, thereby stifling commercial activities in the state.

    “It is, therefore, important that the government not only identifies the effects of the problems being perpetrated by these unscrupulous elements on commercial activities and peace of the citizenry but also find lasting solutions to the menace”, he said.

    The task force, the commissioner said, would ensure protection of investors and maintain law and order adding, “this by implication will encourage the verification of legal claimsý through litigation rather than resorting to violence”.

    Kazeem described land as an asset and title, security “And therefore, anybody who uses threat of arms or physical threat to dispossess people of their legitimate property will be treated as criminals.

    The task force members are a deputy director in the Ministry of Justice, Mr. Akinjide Bakare who will serve as alternate chairman in the absence of the Attorney-General; representative of the Commissioner for the Environment Dr. Afolabi Abiodun, representatives of the Lands Bureau Olayinka Adebayo and Faiq Abou, Chief Security Officer to the governor Mr Saheed Kassim, Commander Governor’s Monitoring Team Mr Ganiyu Adebowale, a representative of the Commissioner for Physical Planning. A worker in the ministry, Ms Mosunmola Balogun is secretary.