Almost all the lands in Abuja has been allocated and those areas are well planned in the city master plan. You find those settlements within the city because the government have not resettled the indigenes in those communities to begin proper infrastructure construction. And when that is done those who owns the land comes to develop it as opposed to few coming before that time.
So when Abuja became the capital, all indigenes were asked to relinquish their lands and of course Govt will settle them. Some places where you still find the indigenes, lemme say the poor people, it means Govt haven't settled them yet.
Ohhh finally 💃
@@Sharonabraham. Finally!
Almost all the lands in Abuja has been allocated and those areas are well planned in the city master plan. You find those settlements within the city because the government have not resettled the indigenes in those communities to begin proper infrastructure construction. And when that is done those who owns the land comes to develop it as opposed to few coming before that time.
It's really interesting how it works in Abuja.
Great job broh
Thank you
Finally ❤❤
Finally
Look who’s back 🤭🤭
Long time bro but that's life
Facilitate what you can afford
True....
This is not talked about enough
Mehnnn
Real estate in Abuja is expensive
@@Sharonabraham. Ridiculously expensive
So when Abuja became the capital, all indigenes were asked to relinquish their lands and of course Govt will settle them. Some places where you still find the indigenes, lemme say the poor people, it means Govt haven't settled them yet.
@@ijeomanwokoro3955 well....we wait for the settlement
Una don too dey "investigate".
This happens in every major city in the United States. We have a name for it: gentrification.
Why though?