On Monday, however, officials from the Central Housing and Planning Authority (CH&PA) intervened to determine amicable solutions for all parties.
“Those persons who were removed, they will be allocated house lots in other locations so that they won’t be out of residence,” Sherwyn Greaves, the CH&PA Chief Executive Officer (CEO) said on Monday afternoon.
Greaves, after meeting with the squatters on Monday, noted that in December 2020, housing officials visited the area to plan for the forthcoming housing development. Then, 152 structures – ranging from houses to only fences – were used by squatters.
Though a number of squatters reside in the area, 16 of them impeded the construction of the access road. Of those 16, Greaves related that only two had completed houses.
As such, the two squatters with completed houses will be allocated housing units while the remaining 14 squatters will receive house lots.
Minister of Housing and Water Collin Croal told the News Room that the ministry has been exploring whether the squatting area could be regularised. In doing so, squatters would no longer have to illegally occupy lands.
“It is not desirable as a government or as a ministry, knocking down people’s houses.
“This must be done in a systematic way,” Croal told the News Room on Monday.
The 16 residents who were removed, however, would still impede the construction of the access road.
Meanwhile, Croal said that the government is focusing on a region-wide housing plan that will allow residents, including other squatters in the area, to get their own places to live.
The Housing Ministry plans to develop Amelia’s Ward, for hundreds of residents. Three contracts totalling some $364 million have been signed for works here, and some 400 lots have been allocated.