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Trademore Megacity Estate Flood Crisis: Matters Arising
Kunle Daramola
Since the demolition of houses in the Trademore Megacity Estate in the Lugbe area of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) of Abuja, started in 2014, no one has been able to summon the courage to factually clarify issues on the dastardly act, as Prof. Mike Ozekhome (SAN) wrote in his recent letter to the Permanent Secretary of the FCT.
His expose unraveled, amongst others, the fact that most of all the insinuations or narratives about the flood crisis have been biased and tainted with falsehoods, half-truths and misinformation. Otherwise, how can it be explained that what was supposed to be the Lugbe Flood Crisis was dressed up and labelled Trademore Flood Disaster?
Surprisingly, just the following day, the latest flood crisis was celebrated in the media by prophets of doom, so-to-say, just as a TV station came on air with the story of the construction of a high-rise building going on side by side with the flooding still ravaging the estate.
Meanwhile, the residents were in deep agony and not even in any position to mitigate the crisis.
Come to think of it, since the homeowners took possession and moved into their houses in 2007, there is nowhere in the design or construction of the buildings, a high-rise building is sited or located other than the three and four-bedroom bungalows that adorn the estate to date. The question then arises: Who then is behind the malicious propaganda or vicious campaign to get the homeowners punished or deprived of their hard-earned houses?
Before then, the public knowledge of the flood crisis attracted lazy comments from the uninformed and perhaps, voodoo critics. Armchair commentators rushed to submit that the houses were built on flood channels, and the one that made the most unfortunate headline came from a professional that was supposed to know better if he had applied knowledge and diligence properly.
He likened the flood crisis to a “yearly water festival” and the FCT Administration (FCTA) hurriedly declared the Trademore Megacity Estate a “disaster zone.”
One may then ask: What informed the hatred, and the deliberate act? And, who wants to make things difficult for the residents of the estate, and have their lives snuffed out by unnecessarily destroying their hard-earned houses? Is it not a case of giving the proverbial dog a bad name to hang it?
We are told that flooding is caused by natural and human factors. Usually, the natural factors are in the form of heavy or torrential rains, ocean storms and tidal waves along the coasts. These are all true, but not applicable in the case of Trademore Megacity Estate where the developers have proved beyond reasonable doubt that human activities are the causative factors, and not building on flood plains as members of the public are being persuaded to believe.
The Trademore Megacity Estate took off in 2007 after the homeowners had completed payment and taken possession of their houses. It is on record that from 2007, the Estate never experienced flooding until eight years after; indeed in 2014 when other new estates started springing up in the Lugbe environment.
Upon investigation, the developers discovered that the flood channels passing through the surrounding estates had been sand filled for construction and the flood water diverted into the Trademore Megacity Estate.
Also, a dam at Aleita, an adjoining settlement, which usually collects flood from Pyakasa, Kuara, Dakwo, Duboyi, Gaduwa, etc., and which serves as a buffer to the flowing flood, had been erased due to the sand-filling and illegal land reclamation activities outside the Estate.
Again, the massive reclamation of the land outside the Estate culminated in a narrowing of the width of the water outlet after the estate. That distorted and disrupted the lateral flow of water and made flood to flow back into the Estate whenever there is a heavy downpour.
Given the foregoing, in 2004, the developers presented the ugly situation-but-findings to the FCTA through the Department of Development Control, making clear the causes of the flooding and calling for urgent and necessary intervention. In response, the Department of Development Control directed the developers to expand, dredge, and desilt the flood channels within the estate, which they happily executed under FCDA’s supervision.
Suffice it to say that the Trademore Megacity Estate witnessed two other flooding cases between 2015 and 2019, and the situation compelled the developers to privately commission a detailed investigation to find out the perennial causes of the flood and proffer solutions. The document produced was captioned, “2020 Developer’s Investigation To The Recent Flooding Of Trademore Megacity Estate And Surroundings,” and was presented to the FCTA for their information and necessary action.
Upon receipt of the document, the FCTA permitted the developers to expand the two-cell culvert in the estate to a three-cell type and that was speedily carried out. They also urged them to expand and dredge the canal before and after the culvert. Surprisingly, as the developers were executing the latter, the Development Control rolled in machines and demolished 35 units of houses in the estate, claiming that the houses stood on the flood channels.
As the demolition of houses in the estate turned into a ritual of some sort to the Department of Development Control, they again visited the estate in 2022 and marked over 60 units of houses for demolition without paying attention to the practical solutions put together and presented to them by the developers. It is worrisome that, as rumours have it, another 116 units of houses are in line for demolition as a result of the latest flood crisis in the estate.
What is the Department of Development Control up to regarding the future of the houses of the residents of Trademore Megacity Estate in Lugbe? And do they have a hidden agenda as the residents of the estate are speculating? One of them who pleaded anonymity said recently, “The allegations of building on flood channels, demolition of our houses and the FCTA sitting on the fence each time there is flooding in the estate, are symptomatic of a hidden agenda to take our lands and re-allocate them to themselves.”
It is very worrisome that since the advent of the estate’s flooding tragedy in 2014 occasioned by deliberate human activities, the Department of Development Control cannot be linked with any tangible or credible role in tackling the flood menace. In the matters of the Trademore Megacity Estate, Lugbe, the only language the Department of Development Control speaks and understands is demolition and demolition, and as at the last appraisal, 50 units of houses had been bulldozed.
The developers have been doing their best in supporting the homeowners and residents; fighting tirelessly with all the energy they could summon each time there is flooding, and practically, they commissioned an independent body to unravel the causes and solutions to the menace, culminating in the production of a working document that the FCTA has not implemented or acted upon.
The recent intervention of Senator Ireti Kingibe, representing the Federal Capital Territory in the Red Chamber, will definitely be seen by both the vulnerable residents and the beleaguered developers as a most timely and reassuring development. It is hoped that this amazon of a lady will not allow herself to be hoodwinked by anyone. She should rather painstakingly scrutinise the welter of documents that decisively prove that pulling down structures in Trademore Megacity Estate without an honest and compassionate understanding of the problem will amount to not only a miscarriage of justice, but also a futile exercise in shadow-chasing.
To that extent, we call on her to prevail on the FCTA to urgently halt the senseless demolition of houses in the Trademore Megacity Estate, Lugbe, and immediately implement the long-awaited and professionally produced document of findings put together by the developers, to arrest further flooding of the estate.
Anything short of that is a ruse and means the FCTA is unserious and has a hidden agenda.
Daramola writes from the Trademore Megacity Estate, Lugbe, Abuja