By Pius Awunah

Winning Clause Nig. Ltd., the developer of Plot 67, Cadastral Zone C05, Kafe District, has maintained that victims of the recently cleared Kuchibedna community in Gwarimpa district were compensated on three separate occasions but they refused to vacate the land despite four court rulings ordering them to vacate.

Lawyer to the company, Mr. Marx Ikongbeh who revealed this on Thursday,November 20,2025,while speaking with journalists during the enforcement exercise carried out by the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA),said the developer was allocated the land in 2011 under the Abuja Mass Housing Programme.

He said that on arrival at the site,the company met a small cluster of about 20 houses, which the developer engaged the residents and paid compensation with an agreement that they would relocate.

“Compensation was paid not once, not twice, but three times — 2011, 2015, and 2016.

“Yet, despite these payments and multiple court judgments, the occupants refused to move”,he revealed.

The lawyer noted that after the first compensation, the community took the matter to the FCT High Court, which in a 2016 judgment held that the natives had no further legal claim and declared them trespassers.

Despite this ruling, the company continued discussions on humanitarian grounds as the settlement continued expanding, largely due to natives selling parcels of land to non-natives.

Ikongbeh added that a fresh suit filed by the community after the second round of compensation was dismissed as an abuse of the court process.

He said the village chief, Mr. George Gozebo, originally the first plaintiff, had reportedly sold his own property and left, only to return later to build again on the estate land.

With continued resistance from the community, the company sought enforcement once more.

“In 2021, the FCT High Court reaffirmed the company’s ownership and directed the FCT Minister to take possession and hand over the land. The villagers appealed,” he added.

According to the Counsel, the Court of Appeal’s February 2025 judgment finally settled the matter, upholding the company’s ownership and directing the community to vacate while mandating the FCT Minister to ensure vacant possession.

He stressed that the ongoing removal exercise is backed by four separate court judgments — three from the High Court and one from the Court of Appeal — all declaring the settlement illegal.

Ikongbeh disclosed that beyond the earlier payments, the community requested money for traditional rites to “relocate their ancestors,” which the company also paid in 2016 under an agreement mediated and documented by the Sa’peyi of Garki.

“Despite all these payments, they refused to leave and instead expanded, selling land illegally to non-natives who built without any approval,” he stated.

However,the residents through the Village Head of Kuchibedna, Mr. George Gojewo refuted the company’s claims and described the demolition as shocking and unlawful.

Gojewo said that the residents were not served with a prior demolition notice by the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) or any government agency.

Also, the head of the Hausa community in the area,Abdullahi Shuaibu,faulted the compensation claim, stating they were unaware of any compensation paid to the victims.

The community maintained that a long-standing court case with the developer was still ongoing when the demolition occurred.

The Public Complaints Commission (PCC) in the FCT has since intervened to halt the ongoing demolition and is demanding due process from the FCT Development Control.

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