Documents show Nigerian High Commission paid for land 20-years ago to lands commission

Documents show Nigerian High Commission paid for land 20-years ago to lands commission

Nigeria’s Foreign Affairs Minister breaks silence on demolishing of High Commission building in Ghana

Intercepted documents suggest that a piece of land housing the Nigerian High Commissioner and purported to belong to the Osu Stool had been fully paid for by the High Commission in December 2000.

On Friday, June 19, 2020, armed men stormed the residence of the Nigerian High Commissioner at West Ridge in Accra with bulldozers and destroyed some structures on the property.

Though the Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned the act and opened investigations into it, the Osu Traditional Council insisted that the land on which the said building stood belonged to the Osu stool, accusing the Nigerian High Commission of trespassing.

The statement signed by the head of the Osu Traditional Area, Nii Okwei Kinka Dowuona VI, further alleged that the High Commission “to date does not hold in its possession any documentation on the parcel of land.”

But documents in our possession proves otherwise.

Receipts and letters available to us reveal that the high commission paid a sum of Fifty Million Cedis (GHC 50,000,000) in settlement of development charges, Eight Million Cedis (GHC 8,000,000) for ground rent settlement and Three Hundred and Thirty Million Cedis (GHC 330,000,000) for the replacement of 2 bungalows demolished on the site.

The receipts signed by the Lands Commission also shows that payments of the above-mentioned amounts were made to the Standard Chartered bank.

Below are the documents:

Exit mobile version