Tag: Wike

  • Wike reacts to trending video of sacked MD of AUMTCO

    Wike reacts to trending video of sacked MD of AUMTCO

    The minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, has said that no sentiment or emotion would be considered in his efforts to do the right thing in FCT.

    Wike said this in Abuja while reacting to a trending video on social media showing the staff of Abuja Urban Mass Transport Company (AUMTCO), crying over the sack of the company’s managing director.

    The MD and Chief Executive Officer of the company, Najeeb Abdulsalam, was among the 21 heads of parastatals, agencies, and companies of the FCT Administration that were sacked by the minister on Wednesday, September 27.

    Wike further explained that he would do the right thing in the interest of residents of the FCT and Nigerians at large.

    Read Also: We will complete some FCT road projects in 8 months – Wike

    The minister said: “That is why when I watch people on video, crying that somebody has been removed and that he has been doing well, but the question is if you have been doing well, where are the buses?

    “No sentiment, no emotions will be considered when we are doing what is right. We will do the right thing in the interest of the people.

    “If you like, carry 20 people, put a video, and cry as much as you want to cry, it will not bother us. What bothered us is the reality on the ground.”

    He advised political appointees to always prepare to leave office at any time because someone might come and want to have a total change.

    Wike said: “You are not a civil servant where you will say nobody is supposed to retire me because I am not up to the age of retirement.

    “Even as a minister, I can be relieved of my position now. You don’t need to cry; some other people will come and all we pray for is, let us get the best.”

  • We will complete some FCT road projects in 8 months – Wike

    We will complete some FCT road projects in 8 months – Wike

    The minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike at the weekend expressed confidence that some of the ongoing road projects in the FCT would be delivered within eight months.

    The minister gave the assurance after inspecting some of the projects in Abuja to see the level of progress.

    Some of the projects visited are the completion of Roads B6, B12, and Circle Road in Central Area and the rehabilitation of the Federal Secretariat, being handled by Julius Berger.

    The minister also inspected the construction of the southern Parkway from Christian Centre (S8/9) to Ring Road 1, being handled by Setraco, and the expansion of the outer Southern Expressway being handled by CGC.

    The project spanned from Villa Roundabout to OSEX/Ring Road 1 Junction, including four interchanges. 

    Wike equally inspected the full scope development of Arterial Road N20, from Northern Parkway to ONEX with spurs being handled by Gilmor Engineering.

    After the inspection, the minister expressed satisfaction with the quality of work, stressing that the renewed hope agenda of President Bola Tinubu was not propaganda, but a reality.

    He said: “So, sometimes it is good for you (journalists) to join us for inspection and see what we are telling the public, whether it is correct or just mere propaganda.

    Read Also: Wike to Italian govt: FCTA will partner on development, tourism, agriculture

    “The renewed hope agenda is not propaganda. It is the reality that Nigerians must see. So, I am very happy with what I have seen today. If you remember that on Monday, precisely, we were one month in office.

    “What we did in the city is to invite all the contractors so that we will be able to identify quick deliverables in the next eight months and inaugurate the projects.”

    Wike recalled that no contractor was on-site at the time he assumed office as the FCT Minister, stressing that all the contractors had left the sites due to non-payment.

    Expressing a deep belief in Tinubu’s renewed hope agenda, the minister said he had been reassuring Nigerians that there would be change: “and that change is what you are seeing today.

    “Virtually most major companies have gone back to the site – Julius Beggar is on-site; Setraco is on-site; CGC is on site and Gilmor is on site, just the ones we inspected today. 

    “Other companies are also on-site; even though we could not visit them today.

    “I am happy with B6 and B12, being handled by Julius Berger, you can see the quality of the job, and here we are (Arterial Road), being handled by Gilmor; you can see the quality of the job. We moved to CGC, you can see the quality of the job, and we have been to Setraco.

    “Overall, we want to say that we are happy with what they are doing, and we have planned out how they would be paid so that nobody will leave the sites,” the minister added.

    He expressed optimism that by the grace of God, in the next eight months: “all of us will begin to benefit in the construction of these very strategic roads”.

    Some of the projects visited are the completion of Roads B6, B12, and Circle Road in Central Area and the rehabilitation of the Federal Secretariat, being handled by Julius Berger.

    The minister also inspected the construction of the southern Parkway from Christian Centre (S8/9) to Ring Road 1, being handled by Setraco, and the expansion of the outer Southern Expressway being handled by CGC.

    The project spanned from Villa Roundabout to OSEX/Ring Road 1 Junction, including four interchanges. 

    Wike also inspected the full-scope development of Arterial Road N20, from Northern Parkway to ONEX with spurs being handled by Gilmor Engineering.

    ReplyForward
  • Wike to Italian govt: FCTA will partner on development, tourism, agriculture

    Wike to Italian govt: FCTA will partner on development, tourism, agriculture

    The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, has said the administration of the FCT would partner with the Republic of Italy on sustainable city tourism and agricultural development.

    Wike stated this when the Italian ambassador to Nigeria, Stefano Leo, visited him in his office in Abuja on Friday.

    He said that he would personally visit the ambassador to discuss areas of mutual benefit for the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Republic of Italy.

    The minister particularly identified the development of Abuja as a sustainable city as one of the areas of interest, including tourism and agricultural development.

    “You know very well that Abuja has a very good landscape for agriculture and tourism development,” he added.

    Wike explained that the publication of the names of embassies and commissions owing ground rent was not targeted at anybody, but to improve Internally Generated Revenue (IGR).

    Read Also: Tribunal upholds Governor Eno’s election, strikes out YPP’s petition

    He added that the IGR would be utilised for the development of the city.

    He assured the ambassador that the FCT administration would make the environment comfortable for embassies and commissions to carry out their activities and for businesses to thrive.

    Earlier, Leo said that he was in the minister’s office to congratulate and wish Wike well in his new assignment as the Minister of the FCT.

    He recalled how impressed he was when he visited Rivers State in 2022, and expressed optimism that the minister would do better than he did in Rivers as a governor.

    “Having you here in Abuja means we can continue our very good cooperation. I will be glad to host you at the Embassy,” he said. 

    He said that Rome, the capital city of Italy, was at the forefront of tourism, adding that the country has huge plans to support sustainable city development and new ideas for green cities.

    “It will be a pleasure to follow your ideas to strengthen cooperation with you,” the Ambassador said.

  • Abuja is not Katsina, work for all Nigerians, Wike tells appointee

    Abuja is not Katsina, work for all Nigerians, Wike tells appointee

    Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike has advised the newly inaugurated FCTA’s Secretary, Social Development Secretariat, Ibrahim Aminu to shun divisive actions in the discharge of his duties, bearing in mind that Abuja is the Federal Capital and not Katsina where he hails from.

    Wike said appointees in FCT must always serve everyone irrespective of ethnic or religious background because Nigeria belongs to all.

    Read Also: Eid-el-Maulud: Wike urges Abuja residents to embrace peace, unity

    The minister stated that President Bola Tinubu was determined to restore hope to Nigerians by implementing people-oriented policies.

    According to him, appointees in FCT must work to support the President’s: “Renewed Hope Agenda” and also be prepared to account for their stewardship.

    Wike said: “Nigerians have lost hope, hence the need for the renewed hope agenda of Mr. President.

    “You must not serve only people from Katsina, but all Nigerians. Bear in mind that in the end you will be held accountable. Nigerians are tired of getting excuses all the time.”

  • Eid-el-Maulud: Wike urges Abuja residents to embrace peace, unity

    Eid-el-Maulud: Wike urges Abuja residents to embrace peace, unity

    The minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike has advised Abuja residents to always embrace peace and unity no matter the situation.

    In his message on the occasion of Eid-el-Maulud, the minister said it is a period to reflect on the teachings of peace, compassion, and unity on a significant day to mark the birth of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him).

    A statement issued on Tuesday, September 26, by the minister said: “It is with immense joy that I extend my warmest greetings on behalf of the FCT Administration, to all residents of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) on this auspicious occasion of Eid-el-Maulud. This significant day marks the birth of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) and a time when we reflect on his teachings of peace, compassion, and unity.

    “Eid-el-Maulud is not just a celebration of the birth of our beloved Prophet; it is an opportunity for us to come together as residents of the FCT to reaffirm our commitment to the values of tolerance, love, and kindness that he so tirelessly preached. It is a time for us to remember the importance of empathy and the virtues of togetherness that should guide our interactions with one another.

    Read Also: Northcentral APC warns Wike against actions inimical to party, region’s interest

    “In the Federal Capital Territory, we are fortunate to have a diverse and vibrant community that represents the rich cultures of our great nation. This diversity is a testament to the values of unity in diversity that our country holds dear. As we celebrate this day, let us remember that our strength lies in our unity, and our progress depends on our ability to live in harmony with one another.

    “I would like to commend the residents of the Federal Capital Territory for their unwavering commitment to peace and harmony. Your cooperation and respect for one another’s beliefs and cultures have been the bedrock of our peaceful coexistence. Let us continue to nurture this spirit of understanding and unity.”

    The minister urged all to extend a hand of friendship to neighbours, regardless of their background or beliefs, adding, “Let us open our hearts to those less fortunate and share our blessings with those in need. In doing so, we not only honour the teachings of the Prophet but also strengthen the bonds that hold our community together.

    “Permit me to take this opportunity to reaffirm the FCT Administration’s unwavering commitment to meeting our obligations to you, the valued citizens of the Federal Capital Territory.

    “We understand the importance of providing essential infrastructure and services to enhance your quality of life. Rest assured, we are dedicated to improving our city’s infrastructure, from roads to healthcare facilities and everything in between.

    “I would however, in the spirit of this special occasion, also call upon each one of you to meet your obligations to the government and society. Let us all contribute to the growth and progress of our beloved FCT. Obey traffic rules, pay your taxes, and participate actively in community initiatives. Together, we can make the FCT even better.

    “I also express my gratitude to the law enforcement agencies, healthcare workers, and all essential service providers who continue to work tirelessly to keep our city safe and functioning, especially during these challenging times.

    “May this Eid El Maulud bring you and your families peace, prosperity, and happiness. Let us remember the lessons of the Prophet Muhammad and strive to emulate his virtues in our daily lives.”

  • Wike wades into FCT NUGLE’s planned strike

    Wike wades into FCT NUGLE’s planned strike

    The minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike has waded into the crisis between the six area council chairmen and the Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees’ planned strike.

    This is coming as NUGLE had slated October 2nd, to embark on strike in solidarity with Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) that have been on strike since the resumption of schools in the territory for the 2023/2024 academic session.

    Briefing reporters on Tuesday, September 26, after a brief closed-door meeting with chairmen of the six Area Councils and officials of NUGLE, the minister disclosed that a committee has been set up to resolve the issues within two weeks.

    Wike said in the next 48 hours, all issues igniting grievances among the parties should be addressed.

    He said: “We have set up a committee to come up with modalities on how the problem will be resolved. We believe that NUGLE is satisfied with the arrangements put on the ground to resolve these issues. I believe that in the next 48 hours, NUGLE should do the needful because of the interest of the people.”

    Read Also: Northcentral APC warns Wike against actions inimical to party, region’s interest

    Answering questions from reporters after the meeting, the mandate Secretary of FCT Area Council’s Service Secretariat, Bitrus Garki said the issues bother around the 40% peculiar allowance, hazard allowance, and other deductions that the union was putting forward.

    Garki said the issues range as far back as 2006 but the current minister of FCT was concerned on how to address them and other challenges the Area Councils are facing.

    He said: “The minister has set up a 6-man committee comprising of all the parties involved. From our discussion with NUGLE, the union applauded the minister for his speedy intervention through his quick response to it letter.

    “We have agreed that the strike should call off the strike prior to the report of the committee, from the 10th of next month.”

  • Northcentral APC warns Wike against actions inimical to party, region’s interest

    Northcentral APC warns Wike against actions inimical to party, region’s interest

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) under the aegis of the Northcentral APC Forum has warned the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, against taking any actions that would be inimical to the interest of the party or the Northcentral region.

    Speaking in Jos, the Plateau State capital, after an emergency meeting to assess the election tribunal judgements and how the APC has fared, the forum’s Chairman, Alhaji Saleh Mandung Zazzaga, said all hands must be on deck to ensure that the party performs well at the court, whether tribunal, appeal and Supreme Court.

    The chairman said reports suggested that some appointive office holders like Wike were still playing double games, since he is part of the APC by appointment, while he still remains a member of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), and that they gathered he is still backing the PDP in many of their endeavours and activities, particularly in the post election cases in the court.

    He said it is high time Wike came out clean and took a stand on the party he really belongs to, otherwise should his actions run contrary to that of the APC’s interest, they would not hesitate to initiate several actions against him, including legal action.

    Otherwise, he said, as someone who is holding an appointive position of the APC, a lawyer and someone reputed for doggedly fighting political-legal battles right from Rivers State, he (Wike) should come out strong and be seen to be supporting and strategizing for victory for the candidates of the APC in the courts, at least in the Northcentral Region, under which the FCT falls.

    Zazzaga further cautioned Wike against using his position as the FCT Minister to strategise for his 2027 presidential ambition as some people are peddling in some quarters, saying that their forum will be watchful to make sure that his loyalty to the nation, the APC and President Bola Tinubu is complete first, without engaging in any tactics for self interest.

    Read Also: Lesson Lagos can learn from Wike’s FCT

    Also the chairman advised Wike to be cautious in FCT demolition, land revocation and other administrative policies that will have negative outcome, as the North Central will be the first region to bear the brunt and take the full heat of any unpalatable occurence in the FCT.

    He said the region is already going through a lot of challenges, including security, and they would not want anything to further aggravate the situation.

    He called on the APC leaders, supporters and members to support their candidates pursuing legal post-election matters in the courts so that they would come out victorious.

    Zazzaga also urged Nigerians to support President Bola Tinubu, Secretary to Government of the Federation, George Akume, the ministers and those holding appointive positions so that they could excel in their responsibilities and deliver the dividends of democracy to the nation.

  • Earthquake Wike

    Earthquake Wike

    When he was appointed minister, this essayist announced Nyesom Wike a third-term governor. But few knew he would carry the halo of his state of provenance to his governance of Abuja. The man enters Abuja with expectations. A town where he never passed a night in eight years as governor will now give him a bed and a pillow.

     As Mister bulldozer of FCT, some feared his first stop was Atiku’s house. No dice. Others said, First stop PDP secretariat. When last week he became earthquake Wike, neither Atiku nor PDP was looking over the rubble of their palaces. They are probably the coward in Achebe’s Things Fall Apart who is looking at the ruins of the brave man’s house from the comfort of his window.

    But those whose lands went bust had exercised the fortitude of folly. The FCT minister gave them time to update their documents. He advertised them in the newspapers, including this one. They did not heed. Wike was not a man to bait. He acted and, like dominos, big names and small fell. The roll call was breathtaking. One of the big names was Peter Obi, the mister clean who has kept mute at the time of writing this essay on why he did not comply with the law. Others fell, too, including former governor Imoke, former Supreme Court Justice Niki Tobi. A corporate Bulldozer crumbled to the official bulldozer. That is, Julius Berger. This should not surprise anyone that Wike, in the early going, is the minister on the front perch. Politicians, moguls, celebrities, puny souls were lapped up.

    As governor, Wike was a man of shifting parts, often like a jigsaw puzzle. Even though a governor, you probably saw an entertainer. When an entertainer, he could become a philosopher. When he philosophised, he could come across as a fighter. When a fighter, at times you thought him a man of peace. Even as a man of peace, a pugilist is in the offing, like a tiger about to roar.  As we witnessed often, he strutted on project sites, under his hat and behind his dark goggles. He could become Al Capone but we knew he was not. He was just Governor Wike. Defiant, beloved, working.

    When he entertained, we were amused. When he philosophised, we mused. When he governed or came with projects, his fans emoted. When he fought, others felt like taking off their gloves with him or against him. When he mounted a peace offensive, some took offence while many were happy for a hug. As Mister Project, he lay brick after brick. He slammed asphalt on highways. For every cement he plastered, It appeared he was burying his foes beneath.

    He was a governor who some first saw as quicksand but later understood that he was marching his state on a firm footing. He marched, his people behind and beside him as he mounted projects, fought political wars, galvanized a people, united them and sometimes made his state, Rivers, the centre of the universe. He brought on the political platform a peculiar view of the social contract.

    This was his dimension of what philosophers like Locke and Rousseau crafted as social contract. Wike’s social contract did not come only in the soaring terms of a formal agreement between the governed and governor.

    Read Also: North Central APC warns Wike against actions harmful to party, region

    He had his election. He was voted and sworn in. He gave an inaugural speech. He took on the epaulettes of office. He had guards, motorcade, powers. But that was a technical social contract. Everyone in power must have it.  It gave his mandate the starchy air of the letter of the law. But the sort that Wike projected is a rare form of contract between the governed and governor. It is the contract of the impulse, the contract of the heart. In one word, the bond of the psyche.

    That was in evidence when he was launching a project and he burst into a rhetoric:  As e dey pain dem, e dey sweet us.  He burst into a song. He became the first governor to be a song writer. He had no filter of a producer or contract. Out of a spontaneous blaze of poesy and lyricism, he entertained not only those who attended the event. He had encased in the hearts of a nation an album of politics. Children sang it. Parents launched it as missiles at their neighbours. It became a chorus in lovers’ spats. They invoked it in local quarrels, in evocations at church, in the fights of the Holy Spirit against the devil. But from a song that was meant to remind us of the G-5 or Integrity Group, Wike had turned an intra-party feud into a cause celebre, a grudge match into an hour of artistic genius.

    We saw that in his desire to satisfy every aspect of Rivers State in his work of the heart. He built schools, courts, hospitals, stadiums. He understood as an Ikwerre man the need to traverse the ethnic groups, moving to Ogoniland, Kalabariland, Andoni, et al, embracing each land, and reminding them that he was not a governor as bigot. He had a kaleidoscope of interests.

    As if to stress that, he also popularised the phrase, Inye ne ba, inye ne ba, which showed that the world must be lived in mutual understanding.

    But it was all for Rivers State, even when he made forays on the national stage. He ran for president, and it seemed he was on the cusp of winning his party, the People’s Democratic Party’s, nomination, when a gang-up derailed a fait accompli.

    He started a war that many saw as patriotic. Why would the party not play fair, why would it not be faithful to an agreement? In a nation wracked by sectarian and regional suspicions, why would his party impose a sectional idea. Why would the PDP make Abubakar Atiku, a northerner, its flag bearer after all the southern governors had agreed that it must go south. Again, the party said it would not remove Iyorchia Ayu as party chairman, presenting both party candidate and chair from a section of the country.

    It was the principle of fairness that thrust him on the front burner of national politics, launching the Integrity Group, and its missiles as a party that did not know how to make peace.

    It was here that Wike, in all his eight years, showed his mettle as a man, guile as a politician and strategy as a leader. The party had sleepless nights, saying he only had one vote. He was disposable. He was not a factor. He was a sour grape. He was in his last career lap in politics.

    That was how he was able to make a bond with the nation the way he made a bond with his people in Rivers. He did not do it as a gentleman. He did not do it as a compromiser. He lifted principle over a flimsy pact. He did not succumb like a victim to a rapist.

    In the end, he won. He won for principle. He won at home, sweeping the state for his PDP, while letting the world know that PDP in the centre broke because they broke the basic law of organization: faith in the rules. He gloated over PDP loss in the centre, while the local chapter swept the governorship, senate, House of representatives and the state house of assembly.  

    Some gripe that he is a PDP man in APC government. APC says he is welcome. He sits in an extraordinary position of being a PDP man from a honeypot state with an APC sympathy. If some people are losing their lands, others are losing their party because of this man. The former loss may not equal the latter. Whatever the case, Earthquake Wike rumbles so some may grumble.

  • Lesson Lagos can learn from Wike’s FCT

    Lesson Lagos can learn from Wike’s FCT

    Sir: Well over 8,000 property owners owe Land Use Charge in FCT amounting to several trillions of naira according to the recent newspaper advertisements. This statistics are staggering especially considering the near insolvent state of the economy both at the national and the subnational levels.

    It beggars belief that a nation being owned by corporate and private entities most of whom are well to do by virtue of their ownership of assets in the FCT would rather resort to borrowing binge to the extent that national debts have surpassed the manageable threshold.

    The most pathetic case is that of Lagos State which has more landed properties and built assets clustered across the landscape and has now added the Eko Atlantic to the state’s real sector frontier.

    Lagos IGR though higher than that of most states in the federation is still abysmal judging by the cosmopolitan taxonomy of its revenue base, the demographics of its population and the industrial amplitude of its landscape.

    Lagos revenue if well calibrated should compete neck and neck with the non-oil receipts from the rest of the 35 states put together. However this has never been for lack of deliberate policy to reform land-use and turn thousands of redundant assets into revenue streams.

    One example of revenue gap that could transit Lagos from being the most indebted state in the federation to a more competitive financial hub exemplifying the exceptional economy of California in the United States is the revenue receipts from Land Use Charge.

    There is no doubt that just like in FCT, the logistics and the enforcement of land use charge in Lagos are very problematic with corruption as one of the bane of its success. This is however the turf of a determined and a result oriented governor or a minister willing to transform the ecosystems of governance.

    With the just announced revocation of over 600 undeveloped parcels of land in the FCT, many of which have been left fallow for decades, the minster of FCT, Bar Nyesom Wike has just put the FCT on a development trajectory that is in tandem with the rest of the world.

    Coming home to Lagos, Section 9 of the Lagos Land Use Charge Law of 2018 states as follows:

    (1) The owner of a property or occupier of a lease of less than ten (10) years is liable to pay Land Use Charge in respect of a taxable properly.

    (2) The Occupier holding a lease of ten (10) years and above is liable to pay Land Use Charge in respect of any taxable Property.

    The holder of a certificate of occupancy is deemed to have accepted the terms and conditions attached to it, which are enforceable against himself and his successors in title. These include:

    •Payment of penal rent for breaching any covenant or condition such as failing to effect improvements on the land or alienating the land or any part thereof without the consent of the governor. (s. 5(1e and f))

    •Payment to the governor for any unexhausted improvements of the land existing on the land at the date of entering the occupation. (s. 10(a))

    •Payment of rent as prescribed under the act from time to time. (s. 10(b))

    Read Also: UPDATED: Wike revokes 22 allocations, gives 3-month grace to 21 embassies, 168 others

    •Allowing the governor or his agent access to the land for purposes of inspection during the daytime. (s. 11)

    •To maintain in good and substantial repairs all beacons or other landmarks defining the boundary granted under the certificate of occupancy and in default shall be liable to bear the expenses of doing same. (s. 13)

    •The land covered by the certificate of occupancy cannot be alienated without the prior consent of the governor, otherwise, such alienation shall have no effect. (s. 22).

    It is indeed a consternating oxymoron that successive administrations in Lagos State have watched the extant provisions observed in their breach. 

    This executive laxity is akin to giving owners of oil wells the right of ownership in perpetuity even when there are no attempts to explore crude oil that can trigger productive value chain in the oil sector.

    Just like crude oil, interests in land are known to yield intrinsic value chains where their multiplier effects lead to appreciable job creation, poverty alleviation, expansion in housing delivery and so forth.

    This complacent approach of Lagos State Government to what is the mainstay of the economy has encouraged land speculators to drive the price of land and buildings beyond the reach of buyers, developers and other players in the productive sector.

    Wike having initiated the process of putting these racketeering in abeyance in Abuja, we hope Lagos state would be dutiful enough to follow suit otherwise Lagosians would be left to believe that land administration in Lagos is an intractable conundrum left at the mercy of racketeers and disruptive spectators.

    • Bukola Ajisola, bukymany@yahoo.com 
  • UPDATED: Wike revokes 22 allocations, gives 3-month grace to 21 embassies, 168 others

    UPDATED: Wike revokes 22 allocations, gives 3-month grace to 21 embassies, 168 others

    The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, has revoked 21 plots of land in Abuja’s Central Business District (CBD).

    A revocation notice signed by the Permanent Secretary in the FCT Administration, Olusade Adesola said the minister took the decision, “in the exercise of the powers conferred on him under Section 28(5)(a) & (b) of the Land Use Act 1978”.

    He said the lands were revoked “for continued contravention of the terms of development of the Right of Occupancy to wit non-development.”

    Some of the allottees affected by the revocation include Lowe Lintas, Tourist Company of Nigeria, Coscharis Motors, CFA Motors, and Chidol Properties among others.

    In another statement, the Director of Information and Communication in the FCTA, Muhammad Sule, said the minister has approved a three-month grace period for 189 titleholders, who have obtained Building Plan Approvals but are yet to commence development of on their property.

    The statement read: “The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, (FCT), has graciously approved a grace period of three months from the date of this publication for the under listed titleholders who have obtained building plan approvals to commence development of their plots; failure of which their titles shall be revoked for continued contravention of the terms of development of the Right- of –Occupancy.

    Among those given the three-month grace are 21 embassies, and 168 others.

    Some of the diplomatic missions are the Embassy of Ireland, the Embassy of France, the Canadian High Commission, and Embassy of the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Embassy of Turkey, and Embassy of the Peoples Republic of Angola, the Embassy of the Republic of Korea, Embassy of Philippines and Tanzania High Commission.

    Others are the Embassies of the Syrian Republic, Iran, Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, Italy, Thailand, Algeria, Trinidad and Tobago, Cote D’Ivoire, Argentina, Togo, Indonesia, and several government agencies including those of the FCT Administration.

    Read Also: Wike revokes lands of Udoma, Ufot Ekaette, Imoke, 162 others in Abuja

    Equally given a three-month grace are the Abuja National Mosque Council, Abuja National Mosque Management Committee, Daily Times of Nigeria, Elf Petroleum, Access Bank, Federal Housing Authority, Adamu Ajuji Waziri, Isa Yuguda, Eyitayo Lambo, Abba Gana, Mohammed Abubakar Rimi, Nigerian Navy, Gamji Construction Limited, Lagos State Liaison Office, Nigeria Customs Service, John Kennedy Opara, Federal Fire Service and a host of others.

    Accordingly, the affected property owners are to do so within the stipulated period or have their title revoked in line with the provisions of the law, said Sule.

    He said the gesture has only been extended to both individuals and corporate organizations who have shown the desire to develop their property by obtaining Building Plan approvals but are yet to start proper development on their property situated within the Federal Capital City FCC.

    He added: “Similarly, public institutions that have land titles within the Federal Capital City but are yet to develop same, have also been given a grace period of three months to commence development in order to avoid sanction.

    “Thus, the Minister has extended this gesture to 189 property owners due to their desire to develop the property by obtaining Building Plan Approvals which is a prerequisite for the development of any property in the Federal Capital Territory.

    “The owners of these plots were exempted from revocation because they have already demonstrated firm commitment towards developing their property by obtaining necessary documents from the FCT Administration.

    It urged the affected property owners to take advantage of the Minister’s gesture and develop their plots as published in some National Dailies, in line with the terms of the Offer of the Right- Of- Occupancy.

    “The FCT Administration, therefore, appealed to the affected Public Institutions who have been allocated plots within the FCC to commence development of their plots, failure of which their titles shall be revoked for continued contravention of the terms of development of the Right of Occupancy.

    “The plots in these categories belong to individuals and corporate organizations, as well as Public Institutions who have continually failed to keep to the terms of the agreement as contained in Section 28(5) (a) & (b) of the Land Use Act offering and conveying of the Right of Occupancy”.

    The land revocation is in addition to the ones published last Friday where form governors, lawmakers and other highly places personalities were affected