FG Gives Land Title Owners 60 days to Pay Ground Rents or Face Documents’ Revocation
The conference was themed, “Equitable Land Stewardship: Challenges of Land Administration and its Impact on Climate Change and Community Rights.”
Dangiwa said, “I want to use this occasion to address pertinent issues that are hampering the ability of government to maximise the revenue earning potential of its landed assets. The Federal Ministry of Housing and Urban Development is aware that several owners of its titled properties have failed to pay ground rent and other statutory charges to the ministry for several years now.
“This non-compliance has resulted in the loss of trillions of naira in revenue to the federal government. Under the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Tinubu, this cannot be tolerated, as this revenue is much needed to deliver the Renewed Hope Agenda to Nigerians.
The minister warned residents associations to comply with the terms and conditions outlined in their respective C of Os, threatening that failure to adhere to the requirements will attract appropriate penalties and sanctions.
He also highlighted the lack of formal land titles, which prevented landowners from accessing credit and leveraging their land as a financial asset, particularly in rural areas.
Others, he said, included limited access to land information; conflicting land laws and policies; inefficient dispute resolution mechanisms; corruption and land grabbing; as well as non-compliance with statutory obligations regarding government-owned land assets.
Dangiwa said the ministry was prioritising land governance issues and had taken significant steps, including ensuring the establishment of a new regime of revised rates for crops and economic trees that was fair, equitable, and provided adequate compensation to persons affected by government projects.
He added that the ministry was partnering with the World Bank to address Nigeria’s longstanding land registration challenges, with over 90 per cent of the land in the country still unregistered, leading to an estimated $300 billion in dead capital.
Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Dr Marcus Ogunbiyi, observed that equitable land stewardship called for a balanced approach to land management that took into account not only economic development, but also environmental protection and social justice.