Review of the Land Use Act
- By Our Reporter
- Published March 15th, 2009
- Editorial
-
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There is no doubt that land
is the most vital ingredient of national socioeconomic development of a nation.
Land is wealth no matter its nature or conditions. No land is ever without its
purpose. This is because on it depends every economic activity. How a community
or country utilizes land determines the level and kind of economic development
that takes place in that community or country. The history of land utilization
and development in
The main fault of the Land
Use Act of 1978 was that it transferred title and ownership of land from
individuals and communities to the governors who hold the land in trust but
many of whom have been known to have abused the power and privileges conferred
on them by the Act. It also made acquisition of land by individuals and
corporate bodies for commercial and economic development purposes extremely
difficult.
Despite all the cries and
agitations for review of the Act, the federal government obstinately refused to
embark upon such review exercise. To further worsen the situation, the federal
government placed the Act under the 1999 Constitution thus making it extra
difficult to review and amend it because any such review and amendment will
have to go through the same process as stipulated for the review and amendment
of the Constitution itself.
It is therefore
heart-warming that President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua has considered it imperative
to call for a fairly comprehensive review of the Act by sending 14 Amendment
clauses (titled Land Use Act (Amendment) Act 2009 or the Constitution (First
Amendment) Act 2009) to the National Assembly for this purpose. The proposed
bill seeks to vest ownership of land in the hands of those with customary right
of ownership, and also enable farmers to use land as collateral for loans for
commercial farming to boost food production in the country. The bill also seeks
to restrict the requirement of the Governor’s consent to assignment only which
will render such consent unnecessary for mortgages, subleases and other land
transfer forms in order to make transactions in land less cumbersome and
facilitate economic development. It is noteworthy that since the Act came into
being this is the first time such a comprehensive amendment is being proposed.
We also note that this amendment is coming exactly thirty one years after the
Act came into existence. There is no doubt that the Act has become
anachronistic and moribund and has been long due for appropriate review and
amendment.
This is why the National
Assembly must look very critically at the proposed amendments sent to it by
President Yar’Adua. The National Assembly must also expedite action on the
review of the Act. Time is of essence here especially against the background of
the national race to achieve Vision 20:2020.
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4 Responses to "Review of the Land Use Act" 
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said this on 28 Mar 2009 10:25:07 PM UTC
THE USE OF LAND IN NIGERIA
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said this on 30 May 2009 7:11:28 PM UTC
this article is timely and solves a lot of problems.
keep the good work on |
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said this on 02 Apr 2010 7:44:13 PM UTC
It's a perfect one.quite enlightening
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said this on 07 Apr 2010 2:58:48 PM UTC
A master piece.
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