By Bernard Lugongo,The Citizen Reporter, Tanzania.
Posted Monday, March 30 2015 at 12:10
Posted Monday, March 30 2015 at 12:10
IN SUMMARY
· Newly
appointed minister for Lands, Housing and Human Settlements
Development, Mr William Lukuvi, yesterday announced the residents would
not be forced out of their land.
Dar es Salaam.
Residents
of six wards in Kigamboni area who have been in a dispute with the
government over a plan to repossess their land to pave the way for a
modern city were relieved after they were told that the plan has been
shelved.
Newly
appointed minister for Lands, Housing and Human Settlements
Development, Mr William Lukuvi, yesterday announced the residents would
not be forced out of their land.
The
residents of Kigamboni, Tungi. Mji-Mwema, Vijibweni, Kibada and part of
Somangila were sitting on borrowed time as the government wanted them
out to construct Kigamboni New City Project under an arm called
Kigamboni Development Agency.
They
had fallen out with Mr Lukuvi’s sacked predecessor Prof Anna Tibaijuka
whose several efforts to solve the dispute failed to yield any fruits
and delayed any plans for investment in the area by reported
multinational companies and institutions. The people had also spanned
attempts to buy shares in the agency.
Yesterday,
however, there was a sigh of relief when Mr Lukuvi said the government
had no intention of evicting them and announced that a special desk will
be set there to issue them with title deeds for their pieces of land.
He
boldly vowed to change a circular by his predecessor Prof Tibaijuka
prohibiting the residents from building permanent structures on their
respective pieces of land.
The
circular had led to the stoppage of the issuance of title deeds,
pending disputed compensation. The residents feared the agency would
acquire their land cheaply and sell it exorbitantly to the would be
investors.
But
now, Mr Lukuvi says the people themselves will decide in a free
buyer-seller arrangement if they wished to sell their land or not or
enter another agreement with the interested investors.
The
minister, who was meeting the complainants as part of his
familiarisation of land disputes, said the government would only provide
market prices for land.
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