
Kaduna Gives Land to 80+ Families After 5-Year Fight
After a nine-year battle for justice, families who lost their homes in a 2021 demolition just received new land plots from Kaduna State's governor. The compensation fulfills a promise to right the wrongs of a previous administration that gave residents just three days' notice before tearing down over 80 homes.
Eighty families in Kaduna, Nigeria are finally getting the justice they fought nearly a decade to achieve.
Governor Uba Sani of Kaduna State just handed out land titles to residents of the former Malali Low-Cost neighborhood, whose homes were demolished in 2021 by the previous administration. The families received just three days' notice before bulldozers arrived.
Dr. Bashir Garba Ibrahim, Director General of Kaduna Geographic Information Service, presented the new land titles to grateful homeowners. He emphasized that the governor made good on his promise to investigate what happened and make things right.
The story began in October 2020 when the Kaduna State Development and Property Company gave residents a seven-day eviction notice. Families protested the impossibly short timeline and asked for their right to buy the land first. Officials shelved the decision temporarily, giving residents hope.
That hope collapsed in March 2021. A new three-day notice arrived, and when it expired, demolition crews destroyed over 80 structures. Families who had built their lives in that neighborhood watched their homes turn to rubble.

For nine years, these displaced residents kept fighting. They attended meetings, filed complaints, and refused to give up on getting compensation or new land. Their persistence finally paid off when Governor Sani took office and ordered a January 21 stakeholders meeting to review the case.
Alhaji Mohammed Auwal, chairman of the former Malali Low-Cost residents, thanked the governor on behalf of all the families. His voice carried the weight of nearly a decade of uncertainty and struggle.
The Ripple Effect
This resolution sends a powerful message beyond Kaduna. When governments demolish homes for development projects, displaced families often disappear into bureaucratic limbo for years or forever. These 80 families refused to be forgotten.
Their victory shows that persistence can move mountains, even when justice feels impossibly far away. It also demonstrates what happens when new leadership chooses compassion over convenience.
Dr. Ibrahim urged the beneficiaries to develop their new plots quickly and avoid reselling them. "We want you to become homeowners and contribute to the growth of our state," he told the gathering.
Other residents praised Governor Sani's people-centered approach. After years of feeling invisible, these families finally have leaders who see them as human beings deserving dignity and fairness.
The new landowners can now rebuild what they lost and create stable homes for their families again.
Based on reporting by Vanguard Nigeria
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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