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The Addis Abeba Lease Board last week made a
decision to resume distributing of land for
investment three months after the Caretaker
Administration stopped transfers during the
transition of power to the new administration led by
Mayor Kuma Demeksa.
Signed by Abdulaziz Mohammed, head of the Mayor’s
office, the letter was distributed to the office of
the city’s general manager, and other bureaus.
The Caretaker stopped transferring land for
investment and other purposes in April this year
following an instruction from the Office of the
Prime Minister. The instruction was intended to curb
the possible illegal transfer of plots that was
often witnessed during transition periods.
The new City Lease Board, which held its first
assembly early this month, would therefore start
discussing which plots to give out first.
“The City Land Development and Administration
Authority has been ordered to study which land
requests to prioritize,” a source disclosed.
Close to 200 companies are expecting to be granted
plots, after putting their money into a blocked
account. The Office of the Prime Minister had also
ordered the Caretaker Administration to undertake
the construction of hotels with 10,000 beds in a bid
to alleviate the hotel shortages in Addis.
The previous administration subsequently auctioned
nine plots. but could not grab the attention of an
adequate number of participants. Although the
administration re-tendered the plots, the Lease
Board immediately passed a decision banning any
transfers of land until the new administration
assumes office.
The city administration expects sizeable proceeds
from the sale of land in the next budget year. It
expects to earn 2.4 billion Br only from transfers,
pending the leasing of 2,400hct of land in 2008/2009
by the central Lease Board.
According to an official in the city administration,
this is an ambitious target.
“The largest amount of land transfer so far is
500hct per year,” he told Fortune. “The plan
is close to five-fold of this figure.”
One of the challenges this administration would face
is the lack of adequate manpower as some bureau
officials were put under custody for alleged
corruption. The Federal Ethics and Anti Corruption
Commission during the Caretaker Administration
apprehended over 60 city officials. Some have since
resigned, anticipating drastic measures being taken
against them.
The new city administration plans to start the
implementation of Business Process Re-engineering (BPR)
in order to tackle the challenges experienced with
the existing staff. The new system aims at giving
additional responsibilities to city officials,
sources disclosed.
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