Okun-Ajah community decries looming demolition of 2,000 homes for coastal highway

Lagos-Calabar

The Okun-Ajah community has cried out to the Federal and Lagos State governments over alleged illegal variation to the contract of the controversial Lagos-Calabar coastal highway route which has put about 2,000 homes in the area at risk of imminent demolition.

The community through its traditional ruler, Baale Sikiru Olukesi Okanlawon, and its secretary, Balogun Kamorudeen, alleged that this “injustice and injury” is about to be inflicted on them by the Ministry of Works.

The 700-kilometre stretch of road infrastructure, which will take eight years to complete, will cost N15 trillion. The pilot phase of the construction has started at the Eko Atlantic City. It will terminate at Lekki Deep Seaport. Already, N1.06 trillion has been released for the project.

The 10-lane highway will cost N4 billion per kilometre, and would be the first of its kind in Africa, said Minister of Works, David Umahi. But many property owners and communities have accused the ministry of unfair and sometimes outright illegal delineation of property to be demolished for the construction.

The community, in a statement yesterday, called on President Bola Tinubu, Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, lawmakers representing Eti-Osa Local Council of Lagos State, and the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), among others, to come to its rescue.

It said: “Sometime in the year 2006, the Okun-Ajah community was granted a Certificate of Occupancy (C of O) over their communal land in Okun-Ajah. The Survey Plan attached to the C of O clearly depicted the portion of the communal land earmarked for the then proposed coastal road.

“Knowing fully well that that portion of their land had been committed to a federal project, members of the community avoided building on the right of way earmarked for the coastal road. The Minister of Works, however, changed the original road alignment because many people had illegally built on the right of way. The second road alignment was much more relatively free from building development as only five houses had been erected on that road alignment while the rest of the route was vacant land.


“Surprisingly, the Minister of Works has again changed the second road alignment because some of the owners of the five buildings and the vacant lands on that road alignment are influential personalities. He has now redirected the road alignment to the residential part of Okun-Ajah community which will lead to the demolition of over 2,000 houses, including our ancestral homes and our Oba’s palace.

“The pertinent question that we want the Minister of Works to answer to the whole nation is why should the houses of over 2,000 people who did not build on the age-long right of way be destroyed because the minister wants to save five houses and vacant lands? Why?

“The action of the minister is certainly not in the interest of peace, order, and good governance of Nigeria in general and Lagos State in particular, as envisaged by Sections 4 and 5 of the Constitution of Nigeria. This is the reason the Okun-Ajah people are calling on Nigerians to prevail on the minister to reconsider his proposed action.”

The Okun-Ajah people called on President Tinubu to urgently investigate the circumstances leading to the alleged jettisoning of the second road alignment which is much more free of building development, and the adoption of the third road alignment which will lead to the demolition of over 2,000 houses and the Baale’s palace.

It also urged the Inspector General of Police and the National Security Adviser not to allow law enforcement agents “to be used to inflict harm on the people of Okun-Ajah because our people are prepared to defend their community against the proposed onslaught of the minister.”

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