Residents of Banana Island Estate in Lagos at the
weekend disrupted an attempt by the Nigerian Army to take over the estate’s
children’s playground and the adjoining recreational area to create an access
to an Apple island being promoted by some private groups working with the Nigerian
Army’s Properties Limited (NAPL).
The first indication of trouble was noticed last Friday
when a detachment of soldiers was sent to the elite estate to take position at
the estate gate as well as the piece of land which had been earmarked for the
estate’s boat club house.
According to the estate residents, “The men brought
down signs erected by the residents’ association and erected another sign on
the property.
“Early the next day (Saturday), another set of
soldiers and mobile policemen arrived on the estate early in the morning
ostensibly to secure the estate ahead of the planned visit by the Chief of Army
Staff, General Tukur Buratai.
“When the army chief arrived few minutes after
noon, he was met by a delegation of angry residents and property owners who
denounced the invasion by soldiers and went on to painstakingly presented their
case.
“The protest by the residents who were vocal, was
peaceful during the entire period the army chief spent in the estate.”
Chairman of the residents’ association Charles
Ubosi, expressed surprise that the army and its representatives sought to
forcibly enter the estate, take over private property and then build an access
to a massive development of 43 hectares of land to emerge from the waters off
the estate.
He said while the residents of the estate were
asleep, a detachment of soldiers took position in some locations in the estate
without any consultation with property owners.
Ubosi said: “If allowed, the army will go ahead to
build a highway and thoroughfare right in the middle of the estate, deny
children of their playground, and open the estate to yet un-estimated
environmental degradation that will follow the displacement of water from a
patch as massive as 43 hectares.”
Burutai, who apparently had not been properly
briefed, was accommodative and refrained from going ahead with the elaborate
arrangements that had been made for him by leaders of NAPL.
The army boss assured the residents and property
owners that the army will not forcibly take any private property and then
directed his men to seek an alternative access to the planned island.
As a mark of respect for the concerns of the
property owners and residents, Burutai stopped short of cutting the tape that
had been provided for him to inaugurate the Apple Island project and signal the
formal commencement of work.
He also directed his men to put back the estate sign
that they had removed.
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