 Now, over 100 persons have been displaced from the Paramount Twin Towers or near-access Victoria Allen Lagos. Men of the police force alongside the legacy task force set ablaze over 40 shanties in the community. Our correspondent Paul George was there. Sadness, all written on the faces of affected persons as onlookers and passersby watch the shanties go up in flames. Nigerians from different parts of the country have been residing here over the years, but the government says their stay here is illegal. I don't know what this is of, what the comfort she was for these kids. Nothing, what we feel survive to chop. One of the shanty residents claims a man known as Seriki has been collecting money from them as a fee for their stay. He speaks alongside another. The task force arrived at about 2.30am and started the demolition. Some persons had just paid their rent. They also came last year and demolished all our shelters. I am fully redecorated and I am running right now. What have we done to force spend a lot of money, about $70,000 investment to get the snuff out of them. You have it in your spare time. You have it in your world. If you come and say, okay, I have some money, can you come and gather about $1,000? Where will they say? Where will you never collect? Where will you ever say? Say what they say. You gather about $1,000. And then they give us information to come back. Say, and Seriki, and King, can you be forgetful here? Anybody, people like you, two of them, whatever. The police representative at the scene refuses to speak on camera, but he says the shanties have become the den of criminals and have become a threat to the community. For many here, it is indeed a bad feat on them at this time. Poor George for Plus TV Africa.