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‘₦900,000 For A Single Room, We Work All Year To Pay Rent’ – Residents Lament Lagos Housing Costs

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Residents of Lagos State are grappling with what many describe as an unprecedented surge in house rents, as accommodation costs across the metropolis continue to skyrocket amid worsening living conditions.

Findings across several neighbourhoods revealed that tenants now pay between ₦1.5 million and ₦2.5 million annually for single rooms and self-contained apartments, many of which lack potable water, proper sanitation, stable electricity and effective waste disposal systems.

The rising cost of housing has compounded hardship for low and middle-income earners already burdened by inflation, high transport fares and stagnant wages.

For many residents, shelter, once considered a basic necessity, has become a daily struggle defined by uncertainty, displacement and financial strain.

High Cost, Poor Quality

From mainland communities to emerging suburbs, complaints of arbitrary rent increases and deteriorating housing standards have become widespread.

In expanding residential corridors such as Ikorodu, Ajah and parts of the mainland, accommodation prices have surged far beyond the reach of the average worker. Single rooms in crowded compounds now command prices previously reserved for full apartments.

Many tenants rely on water vendors, share toilets with multiple households and endure erratic electricity supply. In some cases, residents walk long distances to access water, while drainage failures leave compounds flooded during the rainy season.

Despite these realities, landlords continue to impose rent reviews without consultation or visible improvements.

Housing analysts say the imbalance has worsened as demand continues to outstrip supply, particularly in areas where affordable housing development remains slow.

I Pay ₦900,000 Every Year

Funke Olamide, a trader residing in Ikorodu, told Daily Post that her annual rent no longer reflects basic human dignity.

“I pay ₦900,000 every year for just one room, not even a self-contained apartment, and there is absolutely nothing to justify that amount,” she said.

“There is no running water in this compound, so every morning, before I even think of going to my shop, I must buy water. During the rainy season, the place floods, mosquitoes are everywhere, and nobody cares.

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“If you complain, they will tell you to pack out. At times, I ask myself whether we are paying rent for a house or just paying because we have no other option,” she lamented.

Another resident, Adeyemi, a commercial driver, described the situation as degrading.

“The painful part is not even the money alone; it is what you are forced to endure after paying. We share one toilet among many tenants, and most times it is broken.

“The roof leaks when it rains, and when we complain, the landlord says repairs are expensive. Yet, every year, they add more money to the rent. It feels like tenants are suffering in silence because Lagos does not give you alternatives,” he said.

80% Rent Hikes, No Renovation

Tenants also decried the frequency and scale of rent increases, alleging hikes of between 60 and 80 per cent within a single year.

According to residents, these increments are often announced abruptly as tenancy agreements expire, with no corresponding repairs or upgrades.

A 51-year-old private school teacher, Tunde Babalola, said rent has become a lifelong burden.

“I earn ₦120,000 monthly, but my annual rent is ₦750,000. If you calculate it properly, you will see that I work almost the whole year just to pay rent.

“After transport, feeding, and helping my family, there is nothing left. Sometimes, I delay hospital visits because I cannot afford it. This is not how life should be,” he told journalists.

A single mother, Funmilayo Bidemi, said the pressure of rent renewal takes a toll on her mental health.

“Each time my rent is about to expire, I lose sleep. I start calculating how to borrow, who to beg, and what to sell. The landlord does not care whether your salary has increased or not.

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“They will just inform you of the new amount. Even my children feel the pressure because sometimes we have to reduce food or school expenses just to meet rent demands,” she said.

Traders, Shop Owners Also Hit

The crisis extends beyond residential tenants. Shop owners and small-scale business operators across Lagos say spiralling rent costs are squeezing their livelihoods.

In commercial hubs such as Yaba and densely populated areas like Mushin, traders report sudden increases without prior notice or improvement to business premises.

A tailor in Yaba, Sola Ibrahim, recounted his experience. He said, “My rent was ₦200,000 but suddenly, they increased it to ₦550,000 without any explanation. Nothing changed in the shop. When we asked why, the answer was that ‘things are expensive.’

“But tenants are also affected by the same economy. It feels like landlords are passing all the hardship to us.”

Michael Abiodun, a phone accessories dealer, criticised the short notice often given to tenants.

“They gave us barely two weeks’ notice. How do you raise such money in two weeks? When we begged for time, they said if we can’t pay, we should leave.

“I have lived here for years, but sometimes you are treated as if you don’t matter. There is no protection for tenants,” he added.

The rent surge has been attributed to multiple factors, including rising construction costs, population growth and inadequate housing supply.

The removal of fuel subsidy has pushed up transportation and logistics expenses, impacting building materials and maintenance costs. Prices of cement, iron rods, roofing sheets, sand and land have also increased sharply in recent years.

Urban planners note that Lagos’ rapidly expanding population, coupled with slow delivery of affordable housing projects, has created a market where landlords wield significant power.

The continued practice of demanding one or two years’ rent upfront, despite previous opposition by the Lagos State Government, remains widespread, deepening tenants’ financial vulnerability.

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Residents Eye Ogun Relocation

It was reports that as pressure mounts, many residents are considering relocation to neighbouring states such as Ogun State, where rents are comparatively lower.

A 25-year-old hairstylist, Blessing Nwankwo, said Lagos is gradually becoming hostile to low-income earners.

“What I pay for a single room in Lagos can get me a two-bedroom flat in Ogun State. I love Lagos because it is where my customers are, but the cost of living is choking.

“I’m now planning to leave, not because I want to, but because I am being forced out. Lagos is becoming a city only for the rich,” she said.

A technician, Agada Peter, who recently relocated his family outside Lagos, said daily commuting has become his survival strategy.

“I work in Lagos, but I can no longer afford to live here with my family. So I moved them out and now travel long distances every day.

“It is stressful, but at least my rent is affordable. Lagos has turned housing into a luxury instead of a basic need,” he said.

Naija News reports that the Lagos State Government has repeatedly warned against exploitative rent practices and illegal demands, including compulsory two-year advance payments.

However, tenants argue that enforcement remains weak, allowing landlords and agents to operate with little restraint.

Efforts to obtain an updated response from state officials on rent control measures were unsuccessful as of the time of filing this report.

As the crisis deepens, residents say urgent intervention is required to prevent further displacement and restore housing to its rightful place as a fundamental human need rather than a privilege reserved for the wealthy.

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Court adjourns Emefiele’s case till May 4 following heated legal arguments

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Justice Rahman Oshodi of an Ikeja Special Offences Court on Friday adjourned till May 4, 2026, to deliver a ruling on the admissibility of an extra-judicial statement made by Henry Omoile, a co-defendant in the trial of former Central Bank of Nigeria Governor, Godwin Emefiele.

The judge fixed the date for the ruling after counsel for both the prosecution and defence adopted their final written addresses in a trial-within-trial focused on whether the statement was voluntarily made.

Emefiele is facing a 19-count charge bordering on alleged gratification, corrupt demands, and abuse of office tied to financial transactions, while Omoile is standing trial on a three-count charge over the alleged unlawful acceptance of gifts in connection with CBN-related dealings.

The prosecution alleged that the transactions involved about $4.5bn and N2.8bn.

While arguing on behalf of the second defendant, Adeyinka Kotoye, (SAN), told the court that the crux of the matter is the voluntariness of the statement.

“The issue before this court is whether the statement credited to the second defendant was made voluntarily,” he said.

Kotoye argued that the process of obtaining the statement breached Sections 9(3) and (4) of the Administration of Criminal Justice Law (ACJL) and Sections 17(1) and (2) of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA).

“In situations where voluntariness is contested, video recording of the interrogation is essential. It is the most reliable way to establish compliance with due process,” he submitted.

He further faulted the prosecution for failing to provide independent evidence to support the alleged confessional statement and questioned the role of the lawyer said to have been present.

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“The mere presence of a legal practitioner is not enough where that counsel was unable to effectively discharge his duty,” Kotoye argued, adding that the statement may have been influenced by coercion or inducement.

Counsel to the first defendant, Olalekan Ojo, (SAN), also urged the court to discountenance the statement.

“Any doubt regarding the voluntariness of a statement must be resolved in favour of the accused,” Ojo said.

Citing Section 29(2) of the Evidence Act, he added, “A statement obtained through oppression, inducement, or improper means is inadmissible, and the prosecution has failed to prove otherwise.”

He maintained that the burden rests on the prosecution once voluntariness is challenged.

“The prosecution has not discharged this burden, particularly in light of the circumstances surrounding the making of the statement,” he said, noting that key aspects of the defendant’s testimony were not challenged.

But the Director of Public Prosecutions of the Federation, Rotimi Oyedepo (SAN), urged the court to admit the statement in evidence.

“The first defendant’s counsel cannot challenge the admissibility of a statement he did not object to when it was tendered. That amounts to an abuse of court process,” Oyedepo argued.

He insisted that the statement was obtained in line with the law.

“Though the statement was not video-recorded, it was made in the presence of the second defendant’s counsel,” he said.

Oyedepo also pointed to the contents of the statement as evidence of its voluntariness.

“The second defendant refused to implicate the first defendant and denied committing the alleged offences. That clearly shows he was not under any form of duress,” he submitted.

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He dismissed claims of intimidation, stressing that the process was transparent.

“The statement was taken in the presence of several individuals, and the defendant was duly cautioned and voluntarily signed the cautionary form,” he added.

Following the submissions, Justice Oshodi adjourned the matter for ruling on May 4, 2026, and fixed June 26 and June 30, 2026, for the continuation of the substantive trial.

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IPCR boss seeks adoption of national peace policy

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The Director-General of the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR), Dr Joseph Ochogwu, has called for the urgent adoption and implementation of Nigeria’s National Peace Policy, warning that the country’s worsening security challenges require a coordinated and institutionalised response.

Speaking at the Second High-Level Expert Dialogue on the draft National Peace Policy on Friday in Abuja, Ochogwu said peace in Nigeria is “not a luxury but a foundational imperative,” stressing that the time had come to move beyond rhetoric to concrete action.

He emphasised that words must yield to architecture, noting that good intentions must be backed by robust systems, institutionalised coordination, and a clearly defined roadmap for implementation.

Ochogwu described Nigeria as being at a “defining crossroads,” citing persistent insecurity across regions, including insurgency in the North-East, farmer-herder clashes in the North-Central, separatist tensions in the South-East, and widespread banditry and kidnapping in the North-West.

According to him, the situation demands more than isolated interventions.

“What is urgently needed is an overarching framework that coordinates efforts across all tiers of government and ensures measurable, people-centred outcomes,” he stated.

He explained that the proposed National Peace Policy was designed to address gaps in Nigeria’s peacebuilding efforts, lamenting the absence of a unified framework to harmonise interventions by government agencies, civil society organisations, and development partners.

“Nigeria currently lacks a coherent, nationally owned policy that harmonises the multiplicity of conflict prevention, management, and peacebuilding interventions.

“The result has been duplication, resource wastage, institutional rivalry, and communities that fall through the gaps,” he said.

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Ochogwu added that the policy would provide legitimacy for an integrated peacebuilding system, making interventions less “ad hoc” and more accountable within Nigeria’s governance structure.

He further noted that the framework would enable evidence-based decision-making and shift the country’s approach from reactive crisis management to preventive and strategic peacebuilding.

“It transforms peacebuilding from a reactive, crisis-driven enterprise into a strategic, preventive, and developmental pursuit,” he stated.

Highlighting the importance of coordination, he said peacebuilding must be mainstreamed across key sectors such as security, justice, education, and economic planning, rather than treated as a standalone initiative.

“Integration means ensuring that peacebuilding is mainstreamed across all sectors. Coordination requires a central architecture that maps who is doing what, where, and with what resources,” he explained.

He also underscored Nigeria’s alignment with global and regional peace frameworks, noting that the policy reflects commitments under the United Nations, African Union, and ECOWAS systems.

On implementation, Ochogwu warned that dialogue alone would not suffice, urging stakeholders to take ownership of the process.

“Dialogue without implementation is mere eloquence. We are here to generate the political will and inter-institutional consensus that will carry this policy from formulation to implementation,” he said.

He called on participants to act as “co-architects of Nigeria’s peace,” warning against bureaucratic delays and institutional rivalry.

“The time for a unified, integrated, and credible National Peace Policy is not tomorrow. The time is now,” he added.

Ochogwu further noted that the administration of President Bola Tinubu had created a fresh opportunity to actualise the long-delayed policy, stressing the need to avoid past setbacks.

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Describing the current peacebuilding landscape as fragmented, he warned that uncoordinated efforts had weakened impact.

“As we speak today, it’s a bit chaotic in terms of the approach. People are working in silos. The National Peace Policy provides an opportunity to harmonise all these efforts,” he added.

He also explained that the policy was being updated to reflect emerging threats such as banditry and climate change, noting that earlier frameworks no longer captured current realities.

“Society is dynamic; a lot of the things that were captured in 2012 have gone. Now we’re talking about issues around banditry, climate change, and several other new dynamics,” he said.

He disclosed that stakeholders were co-developing an implementation framework to be presented to the Federal Executive Council for approval.

Beyond policy, the IPCR boss urged the political class to embrace issue-based politics ahead of future elections, warning against divisive rhetoric.

“We must stop divisive politics. Democracy is to serve the people and to promote peace, not to create division and, at the end of the day, promote violence,” he stated.

The draft National Peace Policy traces its origins to a 2012 initiative aimed at establishing a comprehensive framework for conflict prevention, management and peacebuilding in Nigeria.

However, the policy was not approved at the time, despite its broad objectives to address recurring inter-group conflicts, establish a National Peace Commission, and create sustainable “infrastructure for peace” involving both government institutions and civil society actors.

The renewed push for the policy comes amid growing security challenges and evolving conflict dynamics, which stakeholders say have outpaced the provisions of the original draft.

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While the 2012 framework laid important groundwork, current realities have necessitated a review and update of the policy, which seeks not only to revive the stalled initiative but also to strengthen it into a more responsive and implementable national framework capable of addressing Nigeria’s complex, changing peace and security landscape.

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US ambassador posts vacant in Nigeria, 116 countries – Report

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The United States ambassadorial positions in Nigeria and 116 other countries are currently vacant, reflecting a broader diplomatic gap affecting countries across different regions of the world, according to official records released by the US Department of State.

The document, published on April 8, 2026, via the US Department of State’s website and titled “Ambassadorial Assignments Overseas” by the Office of Presidential Appointments, showed that Nigeria is among 117 countries yet to have a Senate-confirmed US ambassador.

The document was obtained by our correspondent on Thursday.

The affected countries spread across Africa, Europe, Asia, the Americas and Oceania.

In Africa, the vacancies exist in countries including Algeria, Angola, Benin, Burundi, Cabo Verde, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, Eritrea, Eswatini, Gabon, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania, and Togo.

Across Europe, the list includes countries such as Albania, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Germany, Hungary, Iceland, Kosovo, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Norway, Russia, Serbia, the Slovak Republic, Slovenia and Ukraine.

In Asia and the Middle East, those affected include Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Burma, Cambodia, Indonesia, Iraq, the Republic of Korea, Kuwait, Laos, Malaysia, Maldives, Nepal,  Pakistan, Philippines, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka, Syria, Tajikistan, Timor-Leste, United Arab Emirates and Vietnam.

In the Americas, the vacancies extend to countries such as Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Cuba, Commonwealth of Dominica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Grenada, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela.

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Meanwhile, in Oceania, several island nations are also without confirmed US ambassadors, including Australia, the Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, Nauru, New Zealand, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, the Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu.

This development followed earlier diplomatic changes reported in December 2025, when the administration of President Donald Trump recalled nearly 30 career diplomats from ambassadorial and senior embassy positions worldwide.

According to a report published in The Guardian, attributing it to AP, the move affected mission chiefs in at least 29 countries, including 15 in Africa.

The recalls were part of efforts to reshape US diplomatic representation in line with the administration’s foreign policy priorities.

Although such envoys typically serve at the pleasure of the president, the large-scale withdrawals raised concerns about gaps in the US diplomatic presence globally.

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