Over
a hundred tenants who were expecting to be given keys to their new
apartments on Monday stormed Ketu area of Lagos, southwest Nigeria,
after they realised they had been duped by the property’s
developer.
The
prospective tenants had paid hundreds of thousands of naira for 13
mini-apartments and were asked to come for their keys on Monday at
the newly built house located at 59, Oriola Street, Alapere-Ketu.
However,
on Sunday night, rumour began to circulate that some tenants had been
given keys and were already occupying all the apartments. Those who
arrived today had to confront those already occupying the apartments,
claiming they had also paid for the aprtments.
As
dozens of people stormed the house in protests, the developer, the
landlord and the agents had all disappeared. Their phones were all
switched off.
“I
paid N400,000 for a mini-flat and I was asked to come and get my key
today,” said 69-year old Mrs. Mariam Eboigbe. “But the landlord
is nowhere to be seen.”
The house belongs to Alhaji Ishola Salawudeen who issued some receipts to the prospective tenants and gave his address as 59, Oriola Street, Alapere-Ketu.
“I
paid to the landlord himself. I came to meet him here and I paid him
N230,000 for a room self-contained ,” said Iyamah Anthony Oshoke.
Bashorun
Ganiat who paid N475,000 for a two-bedroom flat was also stranded.
Calls to the landlord did not go through.
Folami
Emmanuel paid N380,000 as rent for 18 months, while Mutiu Ogunlana
paid N230,000.
Other
duped victims such as Ismail Olatunbosun, Stephen Okeleke and Abel
Oke paid N325,000, N550,000 and N325,000 respectively but could not
get the apartment.
“I
paid N205,000 for a year rent. I don’t know what to do now. I don’t
know where the developer or landlord lives,” said Owoyomi Aderemi.
Iyamah
Anthony who paid N230,000 and Ambrose Simeon who paid N410,000 could
not believe they had been duped.
Utulu
John Ndubusi who paid N250,000 and Ukachukwu Theresa who paid
N500,000 said they don’t have anywhere else to go as they had
borrowed the money to rent the house.
Others
such as Ebenezer Rotimu who paid N320,000, Ugochukwu who paid
N150,000 and Ofenake Benjamin who paid N250,000, looked dazed and
stared at the house helplessly.
Pastor
Yele Akin who had paid N580,000 and Omoniyi Aderemi who paid N205,000
as well as Lateef Fadipe who paid N200,000, were frantically trying
to get across to the landlord or the developer.
“People
can be heartless,” said Alli Rasak who paid N305,000.
Jessica
Onuoha who paid N410,000 and Abdulsalam Olawale who paid N210,000 as
well as Okechuwku Collins who paid N300,000 were about joining others
to go to Alausa to lodge a complaint.
Many
more tenants were showing up and displaying their receipts at the
time of going to press.
Culled
from pmnewsnigeria
I guess the news was not a rumour after all, but it actually came from the Grapevine.
No comments:
Post a Comment