For decades, land ownership in Enugu State has been shadowed by fear of land grabbers, fraudulent documents, overlapping surveys, and deals that could vanish overnight.
But at a Surveyors’ recent gathering in Enugu, that era was declared over. Stakeholders gathered for a one-day workshop expecting another policy announcement.
What they witnessed instead felt like the beginning of a revolution. The Enugu State Government unveiled its new Digital Survey Management System, a technology-driven platform designed to bring clarity, trust, and permanence to land transactions across the state.
Surv. Chime Justus, the State surveyor general, stood before a hall filled with public and private surveyors, landowners, and developers and made a bold declaration: “Land does not vanish, and now survey records will not either.”
He described the platform as a historic reform, one that moves Enugu away from vulnerable analogue processes into a future where survey coordinates, signatures, and records live in a tamper-proof digital database. No more duplication. No more conflicting surveys. No more silent alterations.
“Once a survey is captured in the system, it cannot be manipulated without full accountability,” he assured. “This protects landowners, protects surveyors, and restores trust in our work.”
The Nigerian Institution of Surveyors (NIS) agreed. Its Enugu Chairman, Surv. Emmanuel Nnamani, called the innovation a game changer, a move that finally sanitizes a land administration system long burdened by overlapping claims and documentation errors.
“Every plot will now point to one legitimate owner,” he said. “Technology is not replacing surveyors—it is elevating our relevance.”
He further praised the state’s investment in drones, dual-frequency GPS tools, CORS stations, and other modern survey equipment that guarantee accuracy down to the smallest coordinate.
Representing the Ministry of Lands and Urban Development, Commissioner Mr. Chimaobi Okorie explained the reform’s deeper purpose: restoring investor confidence. Investors, he said, need certainty, and the ability to verify land coordinates from their devices meets that need.
“This is more than a digital tool,” he noted. “It is a partnership between government and professionals to ensure that every allocation in Enugu is transparent and verifiable.”
He credited Governor Peter Mbah for insisting that the state’s land sector must reflect his broader vision: a modern, investor-ready Enugu.
Across the room, participants described the initiative as a turning point, an end to the chaos of the past and the beginning of a system where data, not influence, determines land rights.
With this digital shift, Enugu State has signaled that the days of land fraud, undocumented boundaries, and guesswork are gone. In their place stands a new promise: clarity, accountability, and a future where property ownership is secure for all.

