LEGAL REGIME FOR COMPULSORY ACQUISITION OF LAND IN NIGERIA: RESOLVING THE CONFLICT BETWEEN THE CONSTITUTION AND THE LAND USE ACT

Chinedu A. ONAH

Abstract


Compulsory Acquisition is the process by which national or regional governments obtain properties fordevelopmental purposes when they consider this to be in the best interest of the community upon the payment ofprompt and adequate compensation to the owners of the properties. In Nigeria, there are two principal legislationsregulating compulsory acquisition. They are the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the LandUse Act. Sections 43 and 44 of the Constitution encapsulates the right of every Nigerian to acquire and ownimmovable properties in any part of the country and provides for such rights not to be compulsorily acquiredwithout the payment of prompt and adequate compensation. Section 28 of the Land Use Act, on the other hand,empowers the Governor to revoke a right of occupancy for overriding public interest and entitles any personwhose right of occupancy has been revoked to compensation for unexhausted improvement on the land which isthe subject of the right of occupancy and neither for the land itself nor for the right of occupancy. In view of theseeming conflict between the provisions of the above legislations, this work undertook a comparative and criticalexamination of the two legal frameworks for compulsory acquisition in Nigeria vis-à-vis the United Nations’guideline on compulsory acquisition of land and compensation. It was found that the legal regime for revocationunder the Land Use Act is in conflict with the legal regime for compulsory acquisition under the Constitution. Itwas also found that the legal regime for revocation of title does not meet the requirement contained UnitedNations’ guideline on compulsory acquisition of land and compensation and therefore needs to be reviewed. Inresponse, the work recommends that the legal regime for revocation of right of occupancy and compensationunder the Act should be reviewed to bring it in tandem with the current global trend on the subject as encapsulatedin the United Nations’ guideline on compulsory acquisition of land and compensation.

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