 In a dramatic turn of events, Governor Umaru Finteri finds himself entangled in a legal showdown with Abubaka Babazango, aka Abaza, a prominent member of the Adamawa All Progressives Congress, the dispute centers around the revocation of a two-hectare plot of land in Yola, initially designated for a model school in the name of public interest. Finteri's lawyer, Barista Desmon Adewale, countered the official narrative, a setting that a revocation was driven by political motives rather than a genuine commitment to public welfare. Adewale argued in court that the Governor's decision had no intention of building a model school and was in fact an illegal and politically motivated act. Speaking to the media after the court session, Adewale revealed that the fear of losing ownership prompted Babazango to seek legal intervention. And the plaintiffs have come to court to challenge the reactionary government. The law says that before you file any suit against the state government or any of its agents, you must give reactionaries of 30 days. So you cannot come to court. That's how we demand reactionary actions. That must be for 30 days before you file any suit against Babazango. The council for Babazango contended that the government's reliance on the Adamawa Limitations of Law was misplaced as imminent threats and human rights violations warranted immediate legal action, circumventing the need for a pre-action notice. In response, the government's council Barista Bayumi, a comedy, defended Finteri's right to revoke the land for overriding public interest, citing section 28 of the Land Use Act. The 2020 general election was especially presidential. The APC has a party sought to use the battle square as a campaign center. The government confuses them. And my point being a stakeholder of the government, the APC decided to allow them to use the battle square as a campaign center.