Lagos: Demolition of Monkey Village, an Attack on the Poor, Children’s Education – CEE-HOPE

Press Statement

A non-governmental organisation, the Centre for Children’s Health Education, Orientation and Protection (CEE-HOPE) has criticised the Lagos State Government for the demolition of Monkey Village, an informal housing settlement in the Opebi area of the state.

Monkey Village’s children savour the ICT centre donated by CEE-HOPE during the recent commissioning in their community

On December 31, 2020, truckloads of policemen and thugs descended on the community and with the aid of graders and bulldozers, pulled down houses, displacing more than 400 persons, including children. Many of the residents who had gone out for the day had their homes demolished with their belongings inside. An ICT Centre and youth hub, with several computers, library, and other gadgets, built in the community by CEE-HOPE was also pulled down with intact in the building. Pleas by community members who had the key to the centre to retrieve the materials were ignored. CEE-HOPE’s water project in the community was also to destroyed. Several members of the community were also brutalised by the government-sponsored thugs, according to community sources.

A Monkey Village resident, Mrs. Adesewa Owolade, at the site of her former house, downcast

After several denials by the Lagos State Ministry of Environment, the Lagos State Task Force office and other official quarters, the Lagos State Ministry of Physical Planning & Urban Development came up with a statement on Sunday, January 3, 2021 accepting responsibility for the demolition exercise carried out on December 31, 2020, in Monkey Village. They gave “reclamation of wetland” as the reason for the forced eviction exercise.

CEE-HOPE’s ICT centre demolished by Lagos State Government

But in a statement on January 4, CEE-HOPE faulted the action of the Lagos State Government which it described as “crude, autocratic and a gross violation of all known laws and guidelines guiding the handling of such matters world over” which has not only displaced 400 persons (currently homeless) but also endangered the educational dream of more than 200 of the community’s children.

The ICT Centre after the demolition on Dec. 31, 2020

“It is indeed a crying shame that the biggest news out of Lagos every single year would revolve around the savage treatment of the urban poor,” said CEE-HOPE’s founder/Executive Director, Betty Abah.

Children at the site of the former ICT centre

“From Maroko, Makoko, Badia East, Iluibirin to Otodo-Gbame, and now Monkey Village, it is the same pattern of the gross abuse of the human and shelter rights of the urban poor, when Lagos is not the only state in Nigeria and when Nigeria is not the only place where we have slum settlement or indeed where the urban poor exists. Yet, the most painful for us was the destruction of educational facilities funded by private individuals and for the most vulnerable of children, and in a country with the highest number of out-of-school children, at a time of a global pandemic and during a national recession.”

Displaced Monkey Village residents

According to CEE-HOPE, the latest statement from the government was part of the layers of lies bandied by the Lagos State Government in the last few days to cover up the atrocity committed against the poor residents of Monkey Village. From claiming it was a take-over of a land under contest in court, to saying it was a hide-out for hoodlums, it has now framed a wetland narrative.

Water project for Monkey Village Community by CEE-HOPE–also demolished

“But whatever it is, how come there was no prior notice to the residents to at least take out their few belongings before they were crushed by the graders?” the statement noted.

Nowhere to go: Monkey Village residents still at the community with nowhere to go to

According to Abah, Monkey Village sits on about 10 plots of land which belongs to about seven individuals. The individuals then gave out the land to the residents pending when they are fully ready to develop the place and each land is overseen by some members of the community who are well known to the landowners. She stressed that the people are therefore not illegal occupants neither have they ever been served any evacuation notice.

Stranded residents

Now that an agency of the Lagos State government has finally come out to admit culpability in the entire fiasco, CEE-HOPE is therefore demanding the following:

  1. An apology to the community members for the gross violation of their rights, including the failure to follow due process by duly serving them formal notice.
  2. Compensation of every one of the community members for lost personal and household belongings.
  3. Relocation of the victims of this arbitrary forced eviction as guaranteed by the UN provision on Housing Right.
  4. Compensation of CEE-HOPE for the destruction of its multi-million Naira ICT Centre/Youth Hub and water project in the community.
  5. A promise by the government to end all such arbitrary actions especially with regards to the urban poor in future engagements, commit to meaningful engagement of informal housing residents rather than the usual use of brute force, commit to upgrading of such settlements as is the current practice across the world rather than forced eviction which pushes the poor into worse levels of vulnerability.
  6. That the Lagos State House of Assembly institute hearings into the incident, with a view to addressing the issue and unearthing the personalities and real reasons behind this reckless, inhuman and lawless action which has been ongoing in this state unhindered, and which exacerbates the suffering of the poor and is in violation of the state’s supposed duty as the hope of the poor and vulnerable.

Pictures: @CEE-HOPE

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