A former Federal Commissioner for Works and Housing, Femi Okunnu, on Tuesday expressed sadness over the current status of the Federal Secretariat in Lagos and other abandoned asset of the federal government in the state, urging that the asset be returned to the state government for effective and proper usage.
Mr. Okunnu, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, spoke at Lagos House in Ikeja while presenting the report of a Special Committee which he chaired, set up by Governor Akinwunmi Ambode on federal government asset in the state.
He said the whole of Ikoyi, Banana Island, Osborne Foreshore, Festac Town, Satellite Town, Trade Fair, among others belonged to Lagos State Government, and title of the lands were vested in the Lagos State governor, urging the federal government to hand over the asset to the state government.
Mr. Okunnu said the issue of Federal Secretariat in Ikoyi was particularly saddening to him for the fact that it was during his tenure as Federal Commissioner for Works that the structure was constructed.
“Federal Secretariat gives me sadness because I built it when I was the Federal Commissioner for Works,” he said.
“The land upon which the secretariat is situated is part of the Crown land now State land. The title is vested in Lagos State but when he was Governor of Lagos State, Brigadier General Omobola Johnson (Rtd) agreed to release that land to federal government when they wanted to build Federal Secretariat.
“Today, I don’t like to pass through that side because it gives me sadness anytime I see it in the current state.
“It is not only the quarters but the land on which many of these buildings in the areas are situate. In our committee, we have tried to argue that the whole of Ikoyi with the boundary at Lagos Canal standing between Ikoyi Island and Lagos Island, title to the whole of the Island is vested in the government of Lagos State when Lagos became Crown Colony. The whole of Ikoyi including Osborn Foreshore, Banana Island, and others belong to the State Government,” Okunnu said.
Mr. Okunnu said the title to the whole of Festac Town was vested in the Government of Lagos State and that the Federal Housing Authority, FHA, remained the tenant of the state government, same as Trade Fair.
“Lagos State Government acquired the land of the Trade Fair site but federal government took over the land and gave a promise to pay the state compensation which was to be paid to the original owners of the land, but that compensation was not paid. Today, the Trade Fair has been turned into market far from the original purpose intended,” he said.
“Satellite Town too is vested in Lagos State. It is the federal government which should prove title to any land which it claims to own in Lagos State, but I will like to urge the federal government to return the lands to the state government,” Mr. Okunnu said.
He said during the course of the committee’s findings, several government agencies were contacted including Federal Ministry of Works, Power and Housing, as well as Ministry of Defence, among others, expressing optimism that the state government and the federal government would find a lasting solution to the issue.
“We hope that discussions between Lagos State government and federal government over federal government lands and state lands within Lagos, as well as over disuse or surplus lands which federal government especially Defence and Prisons are still occupying in Lagos, and are now surplus to requirement, will be held to settle this palaver once and for all,” Mr. Okunnu said.
Responding after receiving the report, Governor Ambode commended members of the committee which included another Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Femi Falana; Partner of SimmonsCooper, Victoria Alonge, among others, for the efforts put into the report, saying that their passion in ensuring that the state government recovers its lands, buildings as well as disputed quarters were very much appreciated.
He said the report came at a time the state government was in dire need of space for developmental projects that would improve the socio-economic wellbeing of its residents in line with the realities of present times, adding that such projects, when embarked upon, would help to reflate the economy and improve the GDP of the state.
“It is our hope that this initiative will put an end to the long-standing dispute between federal and Lagos State governments over the federal government disused lands and buildings and disputed quarters in various parts of the state which are no longer in use for the purposes for which they were originally released to the federal government,” Mr. Ambode said.
“We are hopeful that this report will get favorable response from the federal government especially given the fact that the Honourable Minister of Works, Power and Housing, Mr Babatunde Fashola (SAN) was a passionate advocate of this issue during his tenure as the Governor of Lagos State and is also now a representative of Lagos State in the federal cabinet.”
Besides, Governor Ambode directed members of the committee to move further by mediating between the state and the federal government on how the asset would be released to Lagos State.
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