BENIN CITY, Nigeria — The Edo State Government has started issuing allocation letters to verified owners in Oke-Oroma, beginning the return of 2,950 plots to about 1,550 beneficiaries and signaling a formal end to one of the state’s most contentious land disputes in recent years.
The move addresses fallout from the September 21, 2022 demolition exercise, when structures in Oke-Oroma and surrounding axes were pulled down during the previous administration’s reclamation drive for a planned new-town project. At the time, officials said the land had been acquired and gazetted in 2017 and described affected developments as encroachments.
For many affected residents—some of whom had reached advanced construction stages—the demolitions triggered years of protests, legal uncertainty, and heavy financial loss. Reporting from multiple outlets says the new administration’s restitution process follows a campaign commitment by Governor Monday Okpebholo to revisit the case and restore land to verified owners.
State Lands and Housing officials said the current phase is documentation-driven: a one-week verification exercise was conducted before allocation letters were issued, while survey teams have started plot demarcation and site-clearing to support handover logistics.
Government-aligned statements frame the exercise as both restitution and governance reset—an effort to restore trust in public land administration after years of conflict between authorities and property holders. Beneficiaries quoted in local reports have described the process as long-awaited relief after fearing they had permanently lost investments.
Still, the hard part starts now: execution. The credibility of the initiative will depend on how transparently disputed claims are resolved, how quickly physical handover matches paper allocation, and whether unresolved grievances (including arrest and detention allegations raised by some residents) receive due legal attention.
For Edo, Oke-Oroma is more than a local land file—it is a test case for whether politically sensitive restitution can be handled through verifiable records, timely delivery, and durable conflict resolution. If the current process holds, it may offer a template for settling similar land disputes in other rapidly urbanizing corridors around Benin City


















