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Federal Capital Territory (Nigeria)

Federal territory of Nigeria

Federal Capital Territory (Nigeria)

Summary

Federal territory of Nigeria

FieldValue
<!-- See Template:Infobox settlement for additional fields and descriptions -->nameFederal Capital Territory
image_flagFlag of Abuja.svg
flag_altFlag of the Federal Capital Territory
image_sealEmblem of of Abuja Federal Capital Territory.png
seal_altSeal of the Federal Capital Territory
nicknameCentre of Unity
image_mapNigeria Federal Capital Territory map.png
map_captionLocation of Federal Capital Territory in Nigeria
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameNigeria
established_titleDate created
established_date3 February 1976
seat_typeCapital
seatAbuja
governing_bodyFederal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA)
leader_title1Minister
leader_name1Nyesom Ezenwo Wike
leader_title2Minister of State
leader_name2Mariya Mahmoud Bunkure
leader_title3Permanent Secretary
leader_name3Ajakaiye Babatope
leader_title4National Assembly delegation
leader_name4Senator: Ireti Kingibe (LP)
Representatives: List
unit_prefMetric
area_total_km27315
population_total1,406,239
population_as_of2006 Census
population_footnotes
population_density_km2auto
population_est3,067,500
pop_est_as_of2022 estimate
demographics_type1GDP
timezone1WAT
utc_offset1+01:00
iso_codeNG-FC
blank_name_sec1HDI (2022)
blank_info_sec10.678
· 4th of 37
websitewww.fcta.gov.ng
footnotesPreliminary results
typeFederal territory

Representatives: List · 4th of 37

The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) is a federal territory in central Nigeria. Abuja, the capital city of Nigeria, is located in this territory. The FCT was formed in 1976 from parts of the states of old Kaduna, Kwara, Niger, and Plateau states, with the bulk of land mass carved out of Niger state. The Federal Capital Territory is within the North Central region of the country. Unlike other states of Nigeria, which are headed by elected Governors, it is administered by the Federal Capital Territory Administration, headed by a minister, who is appointed by the president.

History

The Federal Capital Territory was created upon the promulgation of decree number 6 of 1976. It came into existence due to a need to find a replacement for the capital city of Lagos, which had become congested and had little space for expansion. The area chosen as the new capital was principally Gwari Land (the home of the tribes referred to as the Gbagyis, their language is referred to as Gwari) with high concentrations of Muslims and Christians and a high degree of neutrality from the dominant ethnic groups.

Decree 6 of 1976, gave the federal government rights over land within the territory. The population density prior to the takeover by the government was sparse with a population of 120,000 residents living in 840 villages and mostly of Gwari heritage. Inhabitants were relocated to nearby towns like Suleja in Niger state, and New Karshi in Nasarawa State on the outskirts of the territory.

Geography

A Farmland in Kuje, the Food Basket of the Federal Capital Territory, Nigeria

The territory is located just north of the confluence of the Niger River and Benue River. It is bordered by the states of Niger to the west and north for 179 km, Kaduna to the northeast for 45 km, Nasarawa to the east and south for 156 km, and Kogi to the southwest for 17 km.

Lying between latitudes 8.25 and 9.20 north of the equator and longitudes 6.45 and 7.39 east of Greenwich Meridian, The Federal Capital Territory is geographically located at the center of the country.

The Federal Capital Territory has a landmass of approximately 7,315 km2, and it is situated within the savannah region with moderate climatic conditions.

Natural resources

Minerals found in the FCT include marble, tin, clay, mica, and tantalite.

Wildlife

The hills of the FCT provide home to many bushbuck, forest Black duiker, bush pig, chimpanzee and red-flanked duiker. Also found in FCT woodland are leopard, buffalo, roan antelope, Western hartebeest, elephant, warthog, grey duiker, dog-faced baboon, patas monkey and green monkey.

Climate

Like some northern states in Nigeria, the Federal Capital Territory is relatively mild. The Federal Capital Territory is usually very hot between the months of January and April. The average daily maximum temperature of the city is above 30 C, with the month of March being the hottest month. The rainy season in the territory lasts between July and October of every year but the coolest month is December, during the harmattan season. During the harmattan, there is high relative humidity, coupled with windy and foggy atmosphere.

Administration

Federal Capital Territory Ministers

Main article: List of ministers of the Federal Capital Territory (Nigeria)

The Federal Capital Territory is headed by the Federal Capital Territory Minister, Barr. Nyesom Wike, who is appointed by the Federal government. The Federal Capital Territory Minister appoints members to the Abuja Metropolitan Management Council.

Subdivisions

While the Federal Capital Territory minister administers the whole of the Federal Capital Territory, the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) specifically manages the construction and infrastructure development of the region.

The territory is currently made up of six local government areas, namely:

  • Abaji
  • Abuja Municipal
  • Bwari
  • Gwagwalada
  • Kuje
  • Kwali

Languages

Languages of the Federal Capital Territory listed by local government area (LGA) are presented in tabular format as follows:

LGALanguages
AbajiBassa; Dibo, Gupa-Abawa, Ebira, Ganagana
MunicipalBassa; Gade; Gbagyi, Gwandara, Nupe, Hausa
BwariGwandara; Bassa; Ashe; Gbagyi
GwagwaladaBassa; Gbari, Egbira, Hausa
KujeGade; Gbagyi, Bassa
KwaliBassa, Gwandara; Gbagyi; Ebira, Kami, Abawa, Ganagana, Nupe, Hausa

Hausa language is widely spoken at the Federal Capital Territory.

Religion

Sheikh Ibrahim Ahmad Maqari is the Chief Imam of the Abuja National Mosque (2017).

21% Roman Catholic with 908,744 followers in the Archdiocese of Abuja (1981) with 137 parishes under Archbishop Ignatius Ayau Kaigama (2019).

The Anglican Province of Abuja, led by Archbishop Henry Ndukuba, Primate of Nigeria (2020), also Bishop of the Diocese of Abuja (1989), also includes the Diocese of Gwagwalada led by Bishop Moses Bukpe Tabwaye (2015).

Politics

The council was elected in the 2022 Federal Capital Territory local elections.

Ireti Kingibe is the current representative of FCT senatorial district.

References

References

  1. See [[List of ministers of the Federal Capital Territory (Nigeria)]] for a list of prior ministers
  2. "Federal Capital Territory (Nigeria)". City Population.
  3. "Sub-national HDI - Area Database - Global Data Lab".
  4. (2022-02-03). "Abuja at 46: The Dreams, Strides, Challenges {{!}} Premium Times Nigeria".
  5. Nigeria Education. [http://nigeria-education.org/states/federal-capital-territory Federal Capital Territory]. Retrieved 28 December 2021.
  6. Elleh, Nnamdi. (August 2015). "Architecture and politics in Nigeria : the study of a late twentieth-century enlightenment-inspired modernism at Abuja, 1900-2016".
  7. "FCT State". Raw Materials Research and Development Council.
  8. "Federal Capital Territory Administration - Facts". Federal Capital Territory Administration.
  9. "Weather sparks".
  10. "Trip report".
  11. Daily Post Staff. (2015-11-16). "Natives tasks new FCT Minister on development of Abuja satellite towns, rural areas".
  12. Wande, S.-Davies. (2017-09-19). "FCT minister appoints mandates secretariats, political appointees".
  13. Abuchi, Joe. (2022-09-08). "FCT Minister makes six new appointments".
  14. "Abuja {{!}} City Profile, Culture, History & Districts – Villa Afrika".
  15. (13 January 2018). "Gwagwalada re-run poll: APC beats APGA, PDP in narrow victory". Daily Post Nigeria.
  16. "Nigeria". Ethnologue.
  17. (2021-03-31). "FCT Area Councils election to hold February 2022 - INEC".
  18. (2023). "Ireti Kingibe wins FCT Senate seat".
Wikipedia Source

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