A
protracted land dispute between first lady, Patience Jonathan, and her
predecessor, Turai Yar’adua, would have been unnecessary if Mrs.
Yar’adua had not, with the help of a former FCT minister, Adamu Aliero,
cornered a government plot to herself
Months
after an Abuja High court ruled on the contentious plot, located in the
Central Business District of Abuja, in Mrs. Yar’adua’s favour, PREMIUM
TIMES has received testimonies from former senior members of the Umaru
Yar’adua administration, and has reviewed a document, indicating that
the plot was originally allocated for the construction of an office for
the African First Lady Peace Mission, AFLM, as Mrs. Jonathan argued in
court
.
One
senior member of that government, well informed about the allocation,
said Mrs Yar’adua’s decision to retain the plot for her personal project
against the initial plan, triggering months of legal spat with the
current first lady, smacked of “greed”. “It was a well-known fact that
the (AFLM) project started under Yar’adua, but when the man died and his
wife wanted to leave, she turned the land over to herself,” one former
official said.
“How
she did that is nothing but greed. It was a government plot that ended
up as her personal property like many other things when she realized her
husband’s tenure had come to an end,” he said. The court battle that
lasted more than a year began after Mrs. Jonathan became First Lady in
2010, annulled the allocation, and reverted the plot to its original
purpose, the AFLM, this time, under her supervision.
In
court, while Mrs. Yar’adua portrayed herself as a victim of power play,
and prayed the court to return the ownership to her organization, Mrs.
Jonathan’s team put up an argument highlighting the land’s original
tenure. Regardless, she lost the case in a ruling delivered by the Abuja
High Court in June. But the officials who spoke to PREMIUM TIMES,
citing the document, back Mrs. Jonathan’s claim. “For once, the woman
has a good case here.
But
since they think everybody is Jonathan’s enemy, they refused to call up
people who should be the real authorities on that case; to give
testimonies in court,” one of our sources said. PREMIUM TIMES has
obtained the original architectural design of the building by Julius
Berger dating back to 2009 when Mrs Yar’adua was First Lady. Mrs
Jonathan’s husband was vice president at the time.
A
spokesperson for Julius Berger, Clement Iloba, said he could not
immediately confirm whether the construction company was in charge of
the actual construction of the secretariat since the company handles
designs for other companies as well. The disputed land was to host the
AFLM’s secretariat, an African Union initiative led by Nigeria, which
began while Mrs. Yar’adua was first lady. Much of the funding for the
project was to be provided by Nigeria.
But
the project was speedily converted to host Mrs. Yar’adua’s personal
initiative, Women and Youth Empowerment Foundation, WYEF, after it
became clear she was leaving office with the death of her husband in
early 2010, the officials speaking on the condition of anonymity, said.
For
the several months the case lasted, Mrs. Jonathan and her legal team
laboured to make that point stick in court, but repeatedly failed, just
as administration’s officials, including the current FCT minister, Bala
Mohammed, failed to win public opinion over on a case that appears
simple and straightforward.
Those
efforts appeared to have largely suffered after the Jonathan
administration approved a huge N4.2 billion for the construction of the
building- a decision that triggered public anger about the project.
“This
is a government that builds a house for the vice president for N16
billion but has no money for important things. Approving that amount for
the AFLM, which many saw as the First Lady’s personal project, was one
suspicious move that made her fail in public opinion first, then court,”
one source said.
The
National Assembly eventually blocked that spending proposal.
Ironically, it was the question of funding that delayed the takeoff of
the project under Mr. Yar’adua. PREMIUM TIMES found that the project was
initiated by former FCT minister, Aliyu Modibbo, for the AU project,
but was delayed after President Yar’adua insisted on sourcing for its
financing outside of government.
Months
after, when Mr. Yar’adua finally approved a plan for a fundraiser to
finance the project as suggested by aides, his health crisis had crept
in, eventually ending his presidency.
Mr.
Modibbo declined to comment for this story. He simply directed all
questions regarding the matter to his successors. Mrs. Yar’adua cornered
the plot for herself before leaving office by asking Mr Modibbo’s
successor, Adamu Aliero, to re-award the plot for her use.
A
close loyalist of the first family, Mr Aliero promptly obliged. After
Mrs. Jonathan took charge in May 2010, redressing that illegality became
one of her first calls. As well, the new minister, Mr Mohammed, heeded
her call, setting off months of a bitter legal spat between both sides.
An
attempt at a negotiated settlement out of court failed repeatedly after
Mrs. Yar’adua rejected offers to exchange the plot for another in the
city, saying the alternative plots offered her were either too small, or
too remote from the city centre. One of her lawyers, Innocent Lagi, did
not respond to our calls for comment on this new findings on the
matter.
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