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Alaba building demolition: No ethnic colouration to decision, says LASG

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The Lagos State Government has debunked insinuations that the recent demolition of some buildings in Alaba International Market was targeted at Igbo traders, noting that it was purely an exercise to save lives from distressed buildings.

Gbolahan Oki, general manager of the Lagos State Building Control Agency (LABSCA), made the clarification on Saturday during an on-the-spot assessment of the market.

Oki visited the market alongside Kehinde Osinaike, his counterpart in Lagos State Physical Planning Permit Authority (LASPPPA), and the seven-member committee set up by Babajide Sanwo-Olu, the governor.

The recent demolition of shops at the market was alleged to have been targeted at businesses owned and operated by the Igbo in Lagos.

In order to douse the tension between the Igbo and Yoruba in the state, Hope Uzodinma, Imo governor, and Sanwo-Olu set up a committee to strengthen the relationship between the two ethnic groups.

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During the assessment, Oki explained that the demolition was to enforce building regulations and prevent building collapse.

He said most of the demolished buildings lacked permits and necessary documentation.

“All we are after is that the lives of traders and other Nigerians are extremely important to the Lagos state government,” Oki said.

“I have seen people painting buildings that are dilapidated, that are not good. It is not painting that makes a building new. Our lives are more important.”

Oki urged owners of distressed buildings marked for demolition to remove them within two weeks to prevent disaster.

He said there is no ethnic colouration to the decisions of the government “whose only motive was to prevent building collapse, to ensure safety of lives of the traders and other Nigerians”.

“My mandate is to remove anything that is dilapidated, that is harmful to the people that even own it,” he said.

He noted that Sanwo-Olu set up the committee to look into the demolition without causing disaffection among the traders at the market.

He said LASBCA officials were usually prevented from enforcing laws by people who failed to get building plan approvals or those who did illegal conversion of their properties

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