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The Accidental Public Servant

Page 39

by El-Rufai, Nasir


  developable and the title-holders were persons of financial capacity evidenced by their

  generally expensive life styles!

  Notwithstanding the terms of grant requiring development within two years (unless there

  are practical physical or technical hindrances), these “big men and women” held on to

  Abuja plots that they were selling for tens and even hundreds of millions of Naira.[65]

  While these persons held on to these undeveloped plots, over 85,000 applicants for land

  (some as far back as 1980), remained in MFCT without any allocation. Indeed, we found

  that even staff of FCT had no plots of land allocated to them even though some have been in

  Abuja from its inception.

  The endemic corruption and the largescale distortion of the Abuja masterplan meant that

  our capital’s physical development suffered, rents were wildly inflated beyond the levels

  seen even in Lagos and Port Harcourt. A few connected speculators got rich. The fat cats

  did not even care to pay requisite ground rents to the FCT. The scam was well entrenched.

  In addition to the Land Administration and Resettlement Department, every department in

  the FCT system from Engineering to Development Control, and agencies like AEPB and

  Water Board were all engaged in the ‘allocation’, sub-leasing or otherwise alienating land

  with the attendant confusion, record-keeping nightmares and total disregard of the

  provisions of the Constitution, the Federal Capital Territory Act and the Land Use Act

  which vested the president’s delegated power by statute only in the Minister of the FCT

  and no other person or authority.

  Staff of the defunct Ministry of the Federal Capital Territory (MFCT), the FCDA and other

  FCT agencies all joined in the land speculation swindles. Multiple applications for land by

  staff in various names with passport photos obtained from States’ Pilgrims Boards were

  common. An example was when the EFCC discovered in the house search of a middle level

  staff of the MFCT, - Musa Audu - 132 land allocations in various names!

  Diversion of people’s allocations by MFCT staff, hiding of files to facilitate allocations of

  the same plot of land to more than one person (double allocation), and even the allocation

  of government-designated plots to individuals and companies were the order of the day.

  Federal civil servants lobbied and bribed to be posted to MFCT, and those posted returned

  the favour by facilitating allocations to those that posted them, and the cycle continued.

  Such allocations were then laundered via a “stock market” within FCDA premises – which

  by the way also provided trading floors for MFCT/FCDA contracts and employment

  letters, amongst others. The use of powers of attorney and deeds of assignment to launder

  and transfer these fraudulent allocations were the order of the day.

  The revelation of the extent of abuses in Kubwa land allocations by Musa Audu mentioned above

  shocked all of us in the MFCT. In a letter, reference CB: 3940/EFCC/FCT/ABJ/Vol.1/25, dated

  March 24, 2005, titled “Progress Report on Investigation Activities relating to Land Fraud involving

  Engr. Success O. Amuchie and 5 Others,” the EFCC named Musa A. Audu, the planning officer in

  charge of the Kubwa Resettlement project, as being in possession of 132 allocation papers in various

  names. Audu, Success and some MFCT staff involved were charged to Federal High Court by the

  EFCC in 2005. The prosecution had not been concluded by the time we left office.

  Nevertheless, we moved quickly to take immediate corrective measures with President Obasanjo’s

  strong support at all times, while seeking sustainable, longer-term solutions. Amongst other steps:

  We set up several committees consisting of outside and internal staff experts

  to study the problems observed above and make recommendations.

  We sought the assistance of the Police, ICPC and EFCC in the investigation

  of all valid cases of corruption in land matters. The FCT is one of the first

  ‘states’ to have a resident EFCC branch to handle such matters.

  We abolished all disparate departmental discretions in land matters and

  centralized all land allocation under the Minister’s Office supported by all

  the relevant technical departments.

  We established a Task Force to computerize the land register and all land-

  related records, and while the project was on for about 10 months; suspended

  new land grants, except the most critical commercial or public building

  needs.

  We ordered a review of development control regulations which had

  remained unchanged since the early 1990s. Consequently, in April 2007, the

  revised FCT Development Control Regulations 2007 were debated and

  approved by the FCT Executive Committee, and published pursuant to the

  FCT Act and Nigerian Urban Planning and Development Act.

  We gazetted two FCT Land Use Regulations pursuant to the Land Use Act,

  revising the ground rents, compensation rates and other land-related charges

  to encourage physical development in the territory. For instance, we lowered

  ground rents and development charges on industrial, recreational and

  agricultural land to encourage agriculture and other job-creating activities.

  These efforts led to far-reaching land reforms – at the time, arguably the most advanced in Nigeria –

  the fulcrum of which was the computerization of the Land Information System (LIS - the paper file

  records) and this was supplemented by satellite-supported Geographical Information System (GIS),

  the recertification exercise to sanitize the records, the updating of all pending land applications and

  the enactment of the legal framework to guide its design and implementation.

  Legal Basis for Land Reforms

  On 30th June 2004, almost a year after I assumed office, I sought President Obasanjo’s approval to

  recertify all titles to land in the FCT and related matters. These and other subsequent reforms in land

  administration and management led to the creation of the Abuja Geographic Information System and

  the gazetting of the FCT Land Use Regulations 2004 in the Federal Government Official Gazette No.

  15, Vol. 94.

  Everything we did that was described as “inconsistent” by the Yar'Adua administration was based on

  well considered recommendations of senior FCT staff. Some went out of their way to mislead our

  successors-in-office. Furthermore, each decision and action we took was guided by these laws, land

  use regulations, and development control guidelines. Throughout our tenure, I never operated outside

  these guidelines, nor did I ever go beyond the scope of my authority whether it had to do with

  allocation, revocation or re-allocation of any land.

  The legal grounds for revocation of title to land are listed in the Certificate of Occupancy. Any of the

  contraventions listed below could lead to the exercise of discretion by the Minister to revoke the

  title:

  non-payment of annual ground rent or such other revised rent

  non-payment of penal rents imposed by the Minister

  non-payment of rates (including utilities) etc.

  non-development within two years of grant

  No title was revoked during my tenure without being found in contravention of one or more of these

  conditions.[66] Moreover, these rules were applied blindly, without looking at the personality

  involved. Indeed, wh
en I directed that all plots in Asokoro Extension that had infrastructure that were

  undeveloped should have their titles revoked, the plot allocated to me in 1998 by the Mamman

  Kontagora administration was included and revoked accordingly. I never ever received the

  revocation letter because the FCT staff thought it was a mistake! It was not. I knew the particular plot

  allocated to me would be affected but still approved the revocation. It was reallocated to an applicant

  I do not know, and has since been developed by the new owners. President Obasanjo often told the

  story of how a plot of land belonging to him was similarly revoked, using the same neutral criteria.

  That was how we operated, applying rules to everyone, ourselves included, without favour or

  discrimination.

  Districts without ‘infrastructure’

  The existence or lack of ‘infrastructure’ does not affect in any way the ministerial discretion to

  revoke. This is because – (i) infrastructure is not mentioned as a condition precedent for development

  in the C of O, or in the regulations as fettering the minister’s discretionary power, and (ii) existence

  of infrastructure while an important input in the decision to revoke or not, is a matter of fact, not desk-

  based speculation of general application. As an example, the Central Area, Gwarimpa and Mabushi

  Districts have no comprehensive engineering infrastructure so no undeveloped plots allocated there

  may be revoked. However, the reality is that parts of these districts, depending on location, had

  adequate infrastructure and if an allottee has a plot in those areas, there was no general excuse not to

  develop.

  Clear examples of these are the FCT minister’s official residence in Gwarimpa-2 district. The

  Mabushi Ministerial Quarters and Federal Ministry of Works were located in Mabushi District and

  several buildings like the National Mosque, Federal Mortgage Bank and even the Federal

  Secretariats had been built in the Central Area – all districts ‘without infrastructure’. It makes no

  sense to argue that if a person has a plot in these districts, but near these facilities, and fails to

  develop, he could hold on to the title forever. With respect, this position is wrong in law and in fact.

  We were careful in revoking titles to land taking into consideration the surrounding facts, but fully

  applying the law. Though the regulations do not require this, we only revoked plots in districts

  without infrastructure when ground rents of years have remained unpaid and the special cases of “un-

  issued R of Os” below.

  Un-issued Letters of Offer (R of O)

  In the course of the recertification exercise, my attention was drawn to about 2,500 cases of missing

  files and un-issued letters of offer (or R of O in FCT parlance) – AGIS recommended that the cases

  and allocations be reviewed, temporary files created or existing files vetted and cleared, or

  otherwise cancelled based on available information. We took the decision to cancel some of them

  because many had no subsisting applications for title in FCT, several were suspicious allocations,

  and the beneficiaries had no valid addresses. Most of these plots under the "un-issued R of O" cases

  fell within the districts without infrastructure. There was really no way many of the allocations could

  stand scrutiny post-recertification and updating of all application records for land in FCT. The

  revoked plots were subsequently allocated to applicants with valid and subsisting applications. It

  was absurd for our successors to reinstate titles that were void in the first place – to persons that

  either never applied for land, or never bothered to update their applications when notified to do so!

  Failure to Re-certify Titles

  By the time we left office, we had revoked 5,604 plot allocations due to the failure of allottees to

  come forward for identification and recertify titles. The logic behind recertification is similar to a

  nation changing the design, name or colour of its currency, but not the face value. In my lifetime,

  Nigeria has gone through this more than once. It is necessarily a time-bound exercise designed to

  expose, for instance, staff of MFCT that acquired plots in fictitious names, senior public servants

  with land ownership not declared in their asset declaration forms, ‘big men’ - money launderers and

  those hiding the proceeds of corruption, and so on. Our conclusion at the end of the exercise was that

  most of those who failed to come forward had something to hide and largely fell amongst one of the

  suspicious classes mentioned above. There were genuine cases like lost certificates, deaths of title-

  holders and estate issues, delayed registration of assignments and powers of attorney that were

  considered on a case-by-case basis after the expiration of the deadlines, and only on the

  recommendations of AGIS.

  It was, therefore, tragic that the Yar'Adua administration decided to reopen recertification and made

  it ‘a continuous exercise’ - not only an absurdity, but a violation of gazetted regulations and

  accordingly, unlawful. The decision suited the corrupt and fraudulent title-holders amongst FCT staff

  and other elite just fine as they had a fresh opportunity to launder their fraudulent titles. It also created

  a fresh onslaught of litigation between the FCT and new allottees since many of the 5,604 revoked

  plots had been allocated to new allottees that then held valid and subsisting titles over them. Surely,

  anyone could see that this was a self-serving decision that only legitimized years of land racketeering

  in the FCT for the benefit of a few, but it was done by our successors-in-office.

  One of the land issues we had to deal with concerned the category of plots known as ONEX site

  yards. ONEX refers to the Outer Northern Expressway – the main road from Suleja-Kubwa coming

  into Abuja up to Maitama District. The plots adjoining this road were provided to contractors doing

  work in Abuja as ‘temporary site yards, renewable every five years’ – they were not meant to be

  permanent titles. No city worth its salt grants plots of land along the principal access to construction

  companies with their heavy equipment, and increased risks of accidents and attendant pollution. The

  Department of Urban and Regional Planning drew my attention to this and recommended the

  withdrawal of all offending titles and the re-planning of the whole corridor.

  While the plots were to serve as temporary site yards, many of the allottees built without

  development permits and in contravention of the terms of their grant – with the result that the area was

  littered with mixed-use developments, factories, etc. contrary to the “site yard” land use authorized

  by the FCT. The temporary allottees, mostly FCDA contractors, were assisted by staff of the

  Engineering Department to get away with this illegality. We, therefore, took the decision to revoke the

  titles and relocate those in gross contravention, while upholding those that were compliant with the

  land use for the corridor. We granted some of the construction companies alternative plots in Idu

  Industrial District and directed them to relocate. What remained uncompleted was the relocation of

  those who violated the Master Plan, that is those assisted by FCDA Engineering Department to

  convert the temporary allocations to 99 year leaseholds, which ought to be reversed. Any re-

  consideration would be a disservice to the efforts to preserve the serenity
of the main highway of

  entrance into our nation’s capital. Sadly, our successors again reversed all these decisions, for which

  the city will pay a heavy price in the future.

  Accelerated Development Programme (ADP)

  The ADP was one of the initiatives approved by President Obasanjo to enable commercial

  developers of land have easier and cheaper access to land for development in Abuja. The programme

  sought to ensure that land was allocated directly to the developer [eliminating the middle-man

  syndrome] and the development is required to be conducted within a specified timeline. The terms

  and conditions for the grant were the result of consultations and focus group sessions internally and

  with outside investors. The conditions attached vis-à-vis the equivalent open market value of the

  plots on offer clearly confirms the programme’s attractiveness.

  The conditions, though strange to those used to discretionary allocation of commercial plots in Abuja,

  were, therefore, not stringent by any reasonable commercial standard. The programme was initially

  marred by the misconduct of some of the officers charged with collating applications for the PPP

  Technical Committee to make recommendations for my approval. We undertook investigations and

  dismissed the erring employees. A revalidation exercise was subsequently conducted to ensure the

  validity of the title-holders and ascertain any contravention of the terms of offer. By the time we left

  office, many of the plots – nearly half were at advanced stages of being developed, and some had

  even completed the buildings which the programme targeted for development.

  We also moved against government agencies that were illegally converting land to unintended uses.

  We revoked titles to residential plots allocated to government agencies for residential purposes that

  no longer needed them, subdivided and allocated them to various applicants for land.

  Many rushed to subdivide and share out the plots to their senior officers, while others sought to

 

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