Enugu Intl Airport: 6 landowners dead
360update
News,Nigeria
By Petrus Obi
News,Nigeria
By Petrus Obi
Six landowners among persons
whose houses were demolished and property acquired by the Federal Airports
Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) for the expansion of the Enugu Airport have been
reported dead, just as the legal battle for compensation continues to linger.
Yesterday, the Federal High Court in Enugu again adjourned ruling
in the matter, which had pitched the Enugu State Government on war path with
the former land owners at the Airport Hillview and Layout. Trial judge, Justice
D. V Agishi, adjourned the matter to November 19, 2012 when counsel to the state
government failed to appear in court. The move to upgrade the Enugu Airport to
international standard led to the acquisition of the land by the government in
2009, through the state Ministry of Lands, with a promise to compensate the
landowners.
Chairman of the Airport Hillview and Layout Landlords Association,
Mr. Emmanuel Onoh, told journalists after the adjournment that some of them who
started the fight had lost their lives. Said he: “We have since agreed to give
the land to government. It belongs to government, but we are saying that we
must be compensated and quickly. Already six people have died waiting for
government’s compensation. Two others are very sick due to the shock they
received from government’s acquisition of our land.
“Most of us are still very worried and our health is fast
deteriorating because we have not had money to buy another land equivalent to
what we bought the land at Airport Hillview and Layout to build the houses some
years ago. The landowners, under the auspices of Airport Hillview and Layout
Neighbourhood Watch, dragged the state government to court in 2010 when it
failed to redeem its promise to pay them compensation.
Counsel to the landowners, Mr. Nwabueze Ugwu, said it was not the
first time the matter was being adjourned, adding that the essence was to see
if the case would be settled out of court amicably. “Due to the nitty-gritty of
the case, we didn’t ask for judgment today.
If we had done, we would have been given. Between now and November
19, we would still wait and see if the government would be positive about it.”
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