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FEATURE: What Lagos Can Learn From Kenya, Morocco, Uganda’s Forced Evictions

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Across Africa, forced evictions continue to generate controversy as governments pursue urban renewal, environmental protection, and infrastructure expansion. From informal waterfront settlements in Lagos to forest communities in Kenya, the challenge remains the same: how to balance development priorities with the rights, safety, and livelihoods of vulnerable populations.

Findings by THE WHISTLER show that recent experiences in Kenya, Morocco, and Uganda offer policy lessons that Lagos State could study as it continues clearance exercises in several informal settlements.

Amnesty International defines a forced eviction as the removal of individuals or communities from the homes or land they occupy against their will, carried out without adequate legal protection or necessary safeguards.

“A forced eviction is the removal of people against their will from the homes or land they occupy without legal protections and other safeguards,” the rights group said in a 2011 report on Ghana.

Under international human rights law, according to Amnesty International, evictions should occur only as a measure of last resort, after all viable alternatives have been carefully considered. Even when eviction becomes unavoidable, it must follow strict legal and procedural standards. These include meaningful consultation with affected residents, sufficient prior notice, provision of adequate alternative housing, and compensation for losses incurred.

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It added that authorities must also ensure proper oversight of how evictions are conducted and guarantee access to legal remedies, including legal aid where required. Importantly, governments have an obligation to prevent evictions from leaving individuals homeless or exposed to further human rights violations.

Lagos Demolitions And Growing Debate

 

In Lagos State, thousands of residents in communities such as Makoko, Oworonshoki, Ilaje-Otumara, Owode Onirin, and Baba Ijora have been displaced under urban renewal and safety enforcement programmes. Authorities insist the actions are necessary to prevent disasters associated with unsafe settlements, particularly structures located under high-tension power lines and other hazardous infrastructure corridors.

Speaking at a press briefing, the Special Adviser to the Governor on eGIS and Urban Development, Dr. Olajide Babatunde, said the Makoko demolitions were part of a broader statewide safety initiative designed to prevent fire outbreaks, infrastructure failures, and related emergencies.

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He added that the state government had set aside about $2m since 2021 for the redevelopment of the Makoko waterfront and was working with international partners to mobilise additional funding.

“Clearing high-tension corridors is a safety requirement across Lagos State. The action taken in Makoko is consistent with what has been done in other communities,” Babatunde said.

“We need to do what we have to do. If we don’t, then we are endangering the lives of the people. However, we need to do it in a systematic way. We have to do it according to international conventions.”

Additional $8m is expected from the United Nations. He, however, noted that with shrinking funding to donor agencies and multilateral organisations, the state government is looking inward for a solution.

“Mr. Governor committed $2m for the redevelopment of the community, and we are expecting $8m in counterpart funding from the United Nations, but I am sure we all know what is happening today. There are funds that are no longer available to most of those donor agencies and multilateral organisations.

“And what we need to do is to look inwards, and this is why the Lagos State Government, together with our international partners, are calling on different donor agencies, the international community and various business organisations within and outside Nigeria to support us,” Babatunde said.

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Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu also defended the exercise, stating that evacuation notices had been issued more than two years before the demolition of structures built within the 150–250 metre safety corridor of high-tension power lines. According to the governor, the intervention was carried out in the collective interest of residents and did not target the entire Makoko community.

“People need to understand that it is a big city we are dealing with, and the emergency and safety of lives and properties are paramount that we need to prioritise. Of what interest would it be for the government to want to unduly demolish anybody’s property? What interest if it is not for the overall safety of the citizens we are talking about?

“A lot of the people have built shanties under the high-tension wire, and the regulation is that you need to clear between 150 and 250 metres away from the high-tension wire. We are not demolishing the whole of Makoko; we are clearing the shanties so they do not get to the Third Mainland Bridge and stay behind the high tension,” Sanwo-Olu said.

Despite these assurances, civil society organisations and community advocates have criticised the demolitions, arguing that they often occur without comprehensive resettlement plans or clearly defined compensation mechanisms.

Rights activist, Hassan Soweto, alleged that at least 53 people died during demolition-related incidents in Oworonshoki, Makoko, and Owode Onirin, while advocacy groups warn that repeated evictions are worsening urban poverty by pushing displaced residents into even more precarious settlements.

“This wasn’t a normal arrest, in the sense that you arrested someone because they have cases or charges they need to answer to. I was abducted in order for the Commissioner of Police and his men, in their own words, to teach me a lesson for exposing the brutality of the police in different communities where demolitions have been taking place — brutality in the form of the killing of at least 53 people in Oworoshoki, Makoko, and Owode Onirin,” Soweto told THE WHISTLER.

He was recently arrested following his protests against demolition exercises in communities including Makoko, Owode Onirin, and Oworoshoki.

Justice & Empowerment Initiatives (JEI) co-founder, Megan Chapman, said years of engagement with the Lagos State Government on alternatives to forced eviction had produced limited results, alleging that communities that participated in collaborative planning efforts were later demolished.

“We have spent the last few years trying to build engagement with the Lagos State Government around alternatives to forced eviction. The last two years, the same Government has systematically destroyed nearly every community that put its hopes and efforts into participatory planning toward a win-win partnership, defaulting instead to mass land grab in service of powerful private interests,” she told THE WHISTLER.

Kenya Conservation Policies And Indigenous Land Rights.

Source: The Whistler

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Govt launches war on land fraud, illegal evictions

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The government has warned that the growing wave of land-related crimes across the country, caused by unscrupulous land agents, fraudulent transactions, and family inheritance disputes, is increasingly undermining investment confidence and tenure security.

Lands Minister Judith Nabakooba said the persistent rise in land offences is eroding public trust in the land administration system and slowing down wealth creation efforts, especially in both urban and peri-urban areas.

“The trend is mainly being contributed to by unscrupulous land agents, overzealous administrators of estates, forgeries of land transaction documents, absentee landlords and tenants who disregard their obligations, and this has hurt investment and wealth creation, necessitating immediate coordinated intervention,” Ms Nabakooba said.

She explained that many of the disputes occur in high-risk settings such as unregistered customary land, contested ownership, inheritance wrangles, and large-scale land transactions where verification systems are weak, bypassed, or manipulated by actors familiar with legal loopholes.

Despite Uganda’s existing legal safeguards, including Article 237 of the Constitution, the Land Act, the Succession Act, and the Mortgage Act, officials say enforcement gaps continue to be exploited.  Data from the ministry’s Sustainable Urbanization and Housing Programme report shows that the level of digitised land services has increased from 45 percent to 82 percent, significantly improving efficiency and reducing delays in service delivery.

 The same report indicates that the time taken to conduct a land search has reduced from five days to one day at physical offices, and to as little as five minutes through online platforms. Processing times for land transactions such as transfers and mortgages have also dropped from 15 days to about 11 days, marking progress in service delivery reform.

In addition, systematic land demarcation and certification efforts have expanded, with surveyed land parcels increasing from 66,148 to 469,656. Certificates of Customary Ownership have also risen significantly from 9,325 to 80,898, reflecting government efforts to formalise tenure systems and reduce disputes in customary land areas.

 To curb illegal evictions and related abuses, government introduced Administrative Circular No. 1 of 2025, which tightened procedures governing evictions nationwide. The directive requires that no eviction be carried out without the involvement of District Security Committees in consultation with the Ministry of Lands.

“Eviction or demolition shall only be carried out between 8am and 6pm, and no eviction or demolition shall be carried out during weekends or public holidays. Each demolition shall be carried out in a manner that respects and upholds human rights and dignity,” Ms Nabakooba said.

 Beyond enforcement measures, the ministry says it is pushing broader reforms aimed at strengthening governance and reducing fraud.  These include allowing tenants to deposit nominal ground rent (busuulu) with the Uganda Revenue Authority in cases where landlords are absent or refuse payment, alongside plans to deploy blockchain technology and artificial intelligence in land transactions.

Also mass land titling to resolve boundary disputes is being undertaken.  “Government remains committed to ensuring social justice and harmony in land ownership, and all stakeholders must comply with established legal procedures. All Resident District Commissioners should remain vigilant in maintaining law and order,” Ms Nabakooba added.

 However, concerns remain about enforcement at district level, particularly in high-conflict areas where vulnerable groups continue to face intimidation and forced evictions.  Mr Twaha Ssembalirwa, a legal expert from Atlas Advocates, said the rise in land-related crimes reflects weak enforcement rather than a lack of legislation.

“Uganda has a fairly robust legal framework on land, but the challenge lies in enforcement. Corruption in land transactions is mostly among the big wigs in most of the cases we handle, plus low public awareness, especially among people dealing with customary and unregistered land,” he said.

Original Source: monitor.co.ug

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Agroecological farming: EAC Bill moves to Parliament to establish a regional legal framework to protect and promote sustainable farming and food systems.

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Hon. Gideon Gatpan Thoar, Chairperson of the EALA Committee on Agriculture and Natural Resources, presenting during a plenary sitting of the Assembly.

By the Witness Radio team.

The East African Legislative Assembly has taken a critical procedural step toward introducing the EAC Agroecology Bill, 2026, as the Chairperson of the Committee on Agriculture and Natural Resources was formally granted leave from the House to draft and table the proposed law.

The move marks the Bill’s official entry into the legislative process, which could significantly impact regional farmers, policymakers, and civil society by reshaping food systems and governance across East Africa.

The Bill aims to empower smallholder farmers and promote inclusivity by embedding agroecology into law across the East African Community, fostering hope for a more sustainable future for these farmers.

In an interview with Witness Radio, the Chairperson of the Committee on Agriculture and Natural Resources in the East African Legislative Assembly (EALA), Hon. Gideon Gatpan Thoar, described the Bill as a long-overdue effort to give legal backing to a system already practiced by millions of farmers across the region.

“The purpose of this bill is to establish a regional legal framework to mainstream agroecological farming,” the Chairperson said, emphasizing that the law seeks to move agroecology from policy discussions into enforceable regional commitments.

The proposed law draws from the 13 FAO principles, integrating indigenous knowledge, cultural practices, and scientific innovation to strengthen its regional relevance.

“We want to promote practices that are consistent with our people, that are known to our cultures and traditions, and integrate them with science. There must be co-creation and inclusivity, especially for smallholder farmers,” he explained.

This framing positions agroecology not just as a farming method, but as a knowledge system shaped by communities themselves, challenging dominant agricultural models often driven by external actors.

The Bill emerges amid the ongoing expansion of industrial agriculture supported by global corporations and financiers, which may resist the shift towards agroecology. Understanding how the Bill will navigate or counteract this resistance is crucial for stakeholders concerned about regional agricultural transformation.

Despite this well-developed narrative, smallholder farmers remain the highest food producers. Yet the Chairperson acknowledged this imbalance of power, noting that agroecology faces stiff competition.

“There is a big fight from conventional agriculture. Big corporations are sponsoring data; they have a lot of money, and they have subsidized it,” he said.

Rather than banning industrial agriculture, whose adverse impacts on both smallholder farmers and the environment are evident, the Bill introduces a different strategy, one centered on protection and choice. It seeks to create legal and economic space for agroecological farmers, many of whom have historically been marginalized.

“We are not forcing a transition. We are creating a situation where there is choice and support for those who have been left behind, mainly women, youth, and smallholder farmers,” He clarified. This approach aims to foster hope and confidence that the new law will support sustainable options for all farmers.

The proposed law will also avoid the usage of highly hazardous pesticides and synthetic fertilizers, instead relying on ecological processes.

“We are very keen on highly hazardous agrochemicals… agroecological farmers will not be using them,” the Chairperson stated, emphasizing that support systems will drive the transition, fostering optimism for farmers’ sustainable options.

Uganda recently ordered the phase-out and restrictions on several commonly used agricultural chemicals, citing risks to human health, the environment, and the country’s ability to compete in the export market. The Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Industry, and Fisheries (MAAIF) said the decision was made after its Agricultural Chemicals Review Committee reviewed the chemicals and their “safety, trade, and national interest concerns.”

The Ministry said in the letter, “The actions and decisions made by the government are based on concerns for safety, trade, and the national interest.” Alpha-cypermethrin, atrazine, butachlor, dimethoate, and propanil are some of the chemicals that will be phased out. Importation will be banned right away, and the chemicals will be completely removed by the end of 2026.

While several East African countries already have agroecology strategies, such as Uganda’s NAS and Kenya’s strategy, these lack enforcement mechanisms. The regional Bill aims to establish binding compliance measures that will guide and harmonize national laws, ensuring effective implementation across the region.

“The regional law will be an anchor, reflecting in national systems to foster trust and regional unity,” the Chairperson explained, encouraging confidence in the legislative process.

The legislative process is ongoing, with the Bill expected to undergo drafting, committee review, and public consultations before a final vote, likely within several months.

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African women are rising for climate justice and reparations on the inaugural continental day of action.

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By the Witness Radio team.

 

Today, April 15, 2026, hundreds of women environmental defenders, community organizations, and allies across Africa and beyond will mark the inaugural African Women’s Climate Justice Day, highlighting how these actions aim to deliver tangible benefits, such as improved resilience

and support for local communities affected by climate change.

 

Under the theme “Our Lands, Our Voices: African Women United for Reparations and Climate Justice!”, the Day of Action will showcase community-led activities across West and Central Africa, fostering hope and collective resilience.

 

Unlike traditional conferences or summits, the African Women’s Climate Justice Day has no central venue or “main event.” Instead, it will be observed through coordinated local actions including marches, workshops, symbolic dress actions, poster-making, storytelling, singing, and digital campaigns. Organizers say the decentralized approach reflects the movement’s spirit.

 

“There is no main event, but rather a Call to Action for communities to unite against the increasing climate crises affecting Africa. It seeks to unite the collective struggles of African women. Several community-level activities will take place simultaneously across West and Central Africa Women’s Climate Assembly (WCA) member countries and elsewhere on the continent,” WoMin African Alliance’s Extractives, Militarisation and Violence Against Women Coordinator Winnet Shamuyarira told Witness Radio team.

 

The African Women’s Climate Justice Day is rooted in years of organizing through the Women’s Climate Assembly (WCA) and allied movements such as the African Climate Justice Collective (ACJC) and the African People’s Counter-COP across West and Central Africa since 2022.

 

These platforms have consistently criticized global climate governance spaces such as COP summits for excluding frontline communities while prioritizing the interests of donor countries and corporations.

 

“Through our march and this assembly, we have left our fingerprints, and it is clear what we want for our environment, our climate, our ecosystem, our livelihoods. During the COPs, we have seen how donor countries’ agendas dominate. You cannot come and steal African resources, and at the same time help us to get climate justice.” Reveals Khady Faye, from Senegal.

 

The initiative emerges amid worsening climate impacts across the continent, where heatwaves, droughts, floods, cyclones, and land degradation are increasingly devastating communities.

 

Africa contributes the least to global emissions but continues to experience some of the world’s most severe climate shocks. According to Winnet, the crisis is not only environmental but also deeply political and economic. “Africa is living the climate crisis now, yet more than 60% of Africans depend on agriculture, with women forming the backbone of food production and household survival systems,” she added.

 

A central demand of the movement is climate reparations, a call for financial and structural accountability from historical and industrial polluters.

 

African women activists argue that climate justice must go beyond aid or adaptation funding to include recognition of what they describe as a “climate debt” owed to Africa by industrialized nations, international financial institutions, and transnational corporations.

 

“This day is an important symbol of African women’s agency. It is more than a call to action; it is a continuum of a beautiful story of resistance, solidarity, and survival. It’s an earth-shattering roar of women’s voices and transformative actions. It’s not a day, it’s a story of survival, agency, and resistance by the women of Africa,” Winnet added.

 

Esther Finde Kande from Sierra Leone emphasized that climate justice must reframe how African women are viewed globally: “Climate justice in Africa is not a request for charity; it is a recognition of the women who feed the continent while the earth warms.”

 

At the heart of the Day of Action are structured conversations and community education processes aimed at raising awareness on climate change, climate debt, and its root causes, building community dialogue on lived experiences of climate impacts, challenging extractive economic systems driven by multinational corporations, and strengthening African women’s collective demands for climate justice.

 

Organizers say the actions are intentionally political, aimed at challenging what they describe as a global capitalist system that prioritizes profit over people and ecosystems.

 

Following the event, the movement plans to continue advocating for change by lobbying governments, building legal cases, and resisting harmful projects, encouraging ongoing hope and determination.

 

The goal, organizers say, is to ensure that African women’s voices are not symbolic but central to global climate decision-making.

 

Declared following a resolution at the WCA Steering Committee meeting in Monrovia in February 2026, the African Women’s Climate Justice Day is being described as a historic milestone in feminist climate organising on the continent as it builds on earlier calls from the 2024 WCA in Saly, Senegal, where participants first proposed a dedicated day to recognise African women’s leadership in climate justice struggles.

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