LAGOS, Nigeria — Victor Ahansu was barely awake with his wife and baby twins before the grinding sound of bulldozers woke them. It was all the warning the family had, he said, before fleeing mass evictions in their historic community of Makoko in Lagos. Their house was demolished on Jan. 11, one of thousands taken down by the ongoing operation.
Now the 5-month-old twins and their parents live in a wooden canoe, with a woven plastic sack for shelter from the rain. The thump of hammers fills the air as other residents of Nigeria 's largest city break down homes and salvage what they can.
''I have not even been able to go to work to make money, because I don't want to leave my wife and children, and the government comes again,'' Ahansu, a fisherman, told The Associated Press.
For decades, tens of thousands of people have lived in homes on stilts above the lagoon in Makoko, one of Africa's oldest and largest waterfront communities.
To many Nigerians, Makoko has long been distinctive. To nonprofit organizations, it has been a testing ground for ideas like floating schools. But to some developers and authorities, it's valuable waterfront property in the hands of some of the megacity's poorest people.
More than 3,000 homes have been torn down and 10,000 people displaced in this latest wave of demolitions that began in late December, according to a coalition of local advocacy groups. Makoko's residents have lived here legally, but Nigeria's Land Law allows the government to take any land it deems fit for public purpose.
There is a long history of such mass evictions in the rapidly developing city of an estimated 20 million people on the Gulf of Guinea. Advocacy groups estimate that hundreds of thousands of people have lost their homes since 2023, when the current state government took office.
On Wednesday, hundreds of people protested the mass evictions across Lagos. Police dispersed them with tear gas.