Tag: hawker

  • OYEGUN:my years of struggle as labourer, hawker

    OYEGUN:my years of struggle as labourer, hawker

    National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, is reputed for prematurely retiring from the Federal Civil Service where he rose to the position of permanent secretary because he could not continue to tolerate the ills that were gradually creeping into public service. He went into private business and later became a politician elected as first executive governor of Edo State in the short-lived Third Republic. He later became an active member of the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), the pro-democracy group that mounted pressure on the Gen. Sani Abacha-led junta to hand over power to an elected government. With the return to democracy, Oyegun decided to pitch his tent with the All Peoples Party (APP) which later transformed into All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), one of the parties that coalesced to form the APC. He chose to remain in opposition for 16 years even though most of his friends and former political associates were in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). TONY AKOWE had an interesting encounter with the APC National Chairman, in which he told the grass-to-grace story of his life.

    Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, born to a man who was an only child, told The Nation that his father apparently wanted to compensate for being an only child, so he wanted his family name to be everywhere. Recollecting his growing up years in Benin, he said: “Growing up was lovely. It was a beautiful large family with a well educated father who worked with white judicial officers at the early stages, went on tours with magistrates at the time and all that. He was a court registrar, and whenever he was coming back, we were always happy because there would be lots of chicken and those little, little things. So it was fun because there were many children. We were 26 at the peak and that went relatively well.

    “Of course, in a situation like that, you tended to depend on your mother. They became the focus, the rallying point, and he (father) coped in spite of the large family. He was a one-child product of his family and I suppose he wanted to ensure that the family name lives forever. And I think he has succeeded because there are so many Oyeguns now all over the place.”

    Looking back into his early history, Chief Oyegun said even though his father was a well educated man who had a job, meeting all the family needs was not an easy task. So, most of the time, he had to rely on his mother for some petty needs.

    He said: “It was good even though there was not always enough to meet all our needs. He (father) paid our fees religiously and our mothers took care of the slack. You know, when you are going to school, the garri, sugar and all those things, you take along.

    “Of course, at that time, there was this tendency after secondary school to ask the female children to go into one of the professions whilst the male children struggled along. But what was good was that for many of us that went to the university then, we were basically on scholarship. So, it helped a lot.”

    At a tender age, Oyegun, who graduated from the University of Ibadan in 1963 with a degree in Economics, wanted to be a lawyer. But destiny had something else in store for him.

    He said: “I was preparing to go to the University of Hull in the United Kingdom to do a Law degree when my federal scholarship arrived and that immediately changed that possibility and my career path.

    “It was a beautiful time, and since there was not enough to meet all our needs, most of us the older ones took to supplementary occupations now and then just to earn some pocket money. Sometimes, we worked at building sites.

    “In those days, the scarcest commodity in Benin was water. With just a few taps in the city, you had to queue for a long time to get water. What we did was to work at building sites, more often than not filling drums with the water they used to mix concretes.

    “Occasionally, we hired trucks to carry things for market women. The third thing a lot of us did was selling. I sold soap. We put them in trays and went round town hawking. But it was quite a wonderful experience.”

    Oyegun had a distinguished career as a civil servant, rising to the position of Permanent Secretary at the age of 46, becoming one of the youngest Permanent Secretaries of his time. Quitting after about 22 years in service, Oyegun is not happy with the changes that have occurred in the service today.

    He summed up his civil service experience in just one wordfantastic. “Truly, there is nothing like it,” he said.

    “When you look back to those years and you look at what is happening today, you see a totally different world. At that time, you did not even dare go to your permanent secretary not to talk of discussing loot or lobbying for anything. That was an anathema.

    “I remember the very first position, I was left out. I wrote a petition in that regard and at the end of the day, I was called and told to take it easy, that I would be promoted when it was time, and that was the end of the matter.

    “During our time in service, you do not lobby for promotion. You do not lobby for posting or anything, and merit was very critical because it was highly recognised.”

    After his protest, luck smiled on him and he had the opportunity of working with some of the best leaders in the service.

    He said: “I had the singular fortune of being deployed, after my protest, to the Ministry of Economic Development where I had very enlightened leaders like Alison Ayida, I.D Ebong, one of the most forgotten now but one of the most intelligent civil servants of those days. And in many instances, I collaborated with Chief Phillip Asiodu and other very brilliant persons who were not in the ministry but collaborated a lot with us. These were people who encouraged you to reason; encouraged you to argue, encouraged you to speak your mind.

    “So, one grew up in that fearless mould but always reminded you that once a decision was taken, the issue was closed. Before the decision was taken, you could argue your point and they would listen to you, no matter how junior you were. So, it brought us up in a mould where we could speak fearlessly. There was no fear of witch hunt. In fact, it was a problem if you could not reason and you could not speak and you could not defend your point of view.

    “So, some of us, because of that kind of background, had problems much later in our career. But it was a fantastic civil service.

    “For instance, I got whispers about the possibility of me becoming a permanent secretary when I was attending a board meeting of the Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA), because you never knew things like that would happen. Somehow, somebody heard of it and called me out of the meeting to inform me. Just to give you the idea that at that time, the golden days of the civil service, merit was everything. Lobbying and corruption were absent. You dared not buy a car that was out of sync with your economic possibilities. It was not done. They would ask you.”

    Having had a flourishing career in the public service, Oyegun did not wait until he had attained the mandatory retirement age or number of years in service. He chose to disengage voluntarily.

    But why take such a decision when he had the opportunity of staying longer at the apex of his career?

    He said: “I retired voluntarily because the kind of upbringing we had in the civil service became a disadvantage when the military came in. For a long time, we had no problems, but I think there was a stress factor involved. When the Buhari administration with which I empathised a lot came in, discipline was becoming a problem. Corruption, drugs were becoming a problem. I was on all fours with that administration and when the coup happened and they were removed, I was truly upset. So in the usual forthright manner in which I grew up in the service, I said a few things and resisted a few things that created issues for me. So, I just knew it was time to go.

    When the new (Ibrahim Babangida-led) government came in, my problem started immediately, and I knew that by the time they would appoint permanent secretaries, it was almost certain I would not be on the list. So, I just said to myself, instead of facing that humiliation, I better just go whilst I was still on my feet.”

    So, while not waiting to be shown the way out, Oyegun took a decision he considered good for his future and left the service.

    After his retirement from the civil service, he was practically in the cooler for most parts of the Babangida regime until the doors of politics opened and he pitched his tent with the Social Democratic Party (SDP) on whose platform he was elected the governor of Edo State, defeating the more popular candidate of the National Republican Convention (NRC), Lucky Igbinedion, in an election that did not take money politics into consideration.

    Many who followed the election believed that if money had been allowed to play a major role, Oyegun would not have come near the Government House.

    What was the experience like for the former Edo State chief executive? He said: “It was lovely and beautiful. It taught me one thing and I think it is a universal truism, that when people trust you, when they believe you are acting in their own interest, they tend to take to you, and that was clear during most of my period in Edo State.

    “Then, almost like now, there was no money. I think we got less than N100 million most times in any month, because the last budget I presented was about N1 billion; the first time everybody was declaring billions. And that was for the entire year, and salaries almost took everything.

    “At the end of the day, you are left with almost nothing. At the best of times, I do not think we were left with more than N15 million or N20 million to manage the state in any month. But that is where resource management comes in.”

    In terms of liability, what did his government leave behind at the time they were eased out of office by the military?

    He said: “At the time I left, I owed nobody no salary. I owed nobody no pension; no lack of payment for work done. My habit from the time I became permanent secretary was that unless the money was there, I would not give out a job, because the effect is simple: people would go and borrow money to execute the job, then they come back after one, two, three months or even a year and you are unable to pay them. You have only ruined them, and for me, that was totally unacceptable.

    “So, unless the flow of resources was reasonably sure to me, I would not allow a job to be awarded. I had the challenge finally with the salary issue and I called the unions for a debate. I told them I did not want to lay off staff. They had just gotten one or two increments, that was during the Babangida regime when they would just virtually decree things. Two, three times, they reduced our percentage of the Consolidated Revenue funds while workers’ salaries went up.

    “So I called the workers and persuaded them to give up some of the increments they got, but repayable to them at retirement. We called it compulsory savings. I told them that would save their colleagues from being fired. The union leaders agreed.  But, of course, it turned out that they had difficulty persuading the workers. That was the issue we had. Otherwise, it was a most pleasurable experience.”

    How would he defend the argument that while in office as governor, he did not initiate new projects? He said: “When I came in, there were so many abandoned projects and I decided that instead of starting new projects, let me complete the ones that were there and bring them into use by the public because they had invested a lot of money in them and we could not just write them off.

    “The very day I was sworn in, I declared education free. So, when people today talk about free education being unaffordable, I do not understand it. I called the vice chancellor, rector, provost and heads of other tertiary institutions and asked them to tell me what each student paid into the system. They gave me the student population as well as how much they generate from them and I told them ‘fine, subject to increases everywhere, I will give you what the students are supposed to pay. So they are free to attend classes.’ And that was it. We managed that very well.

    “I introduced the public bus service and registered it as a limited liability company and we had an arrangement with those that were managing it. I would buy the buses, you would manage and maintain them properly and meet your recurrent costs, but I would always provide the capital. That worked very well.

    “When we needed to build a students’ hostel in what was then Edo State University, I called the students of Auchi Polytechnic and asked them to design it, do the architectural drawing. I called the students of the then Edo State University to supply the labour while we would supply the materials. We had to do these innovative things to succeed. It was a very lovely experience, such that till today, from the very first day I left office, I could walk the streets of Benin freely.”

    While working to put the new state on the path of development, his four-year tenure was cut short by the intervention of the Abacha junta thereby truncating the Third Republic after the annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election by the Babangida regime.

    To Oyegun, it was a very bitter experience. He told The Nation that he considered it a bitter experience not because his tenure was cut short, but “annoying as that was, it was a period of promise. You could see the future. The governors were mostly of high quality and we interacted very well and had a mission of where the country was going. Then, the military struck again and it became clear to me all of a sudden that the military was the source of the nation’s problems and that they had to be voluntarily or with a little push, be taken out of the political scene on a permanent basis. That was why NADECO came about. That was the mission of NADECO: an end to military rule.”

    But how did MKO Abiola come into the NADECO struggle?

    “June 12 was grafted when Abiola came to join us. We were meeting then somewhere in Ikeja GRA when Abiola applied to join and I remember I got up that day and said he had to accept that the core of the struggle was a permanent end to military rule; that we were ready to accommodate. Once we got the military out, we could cope with democracy with all its imperfections, but it was still a better option than military rule.

    “We fought till the end, won 50 per cent. We would have won 100 per cent but for the strange death of the dramatis personae. But we got the military out of politics with God assisting us in the process.”

    When it became clear that many of the leaders of NADECO which had become like an opposition to the military junta were either in detention or had fled the country, Oyegun knew that it was time to go into exile in order to survive to tell the story. It became worse when his name appeared among those that were wanted by the government.

    He said: “The minute I was declared wanted, the choices before me became very stark. We were bitter political enemies in Edo State. The late Aikhomu, for example, believed that I organised those who burnt his house and other attacks in Edo State, including the attacks on some leaders of the then NRC and those even within the SDP who became collaborators, not to talk of the political people that I defeated in Edo State. I was even in Lagos when all that happened.

    “So, it was clear that if I found myself in Benin Prisons, I might never come out alive. So, the choice became stark. The truth of the matter was that I went into hiding for quite a while and it became uncomfortable for those who were hosting me. Even for me, it became a bitter assault. And I contacted friends in the security services to say, ‘Look, I am tired of hiding. I’ll come out, stay in my house and I won’t say a word.’ And I was told, ‘Well, that may not be enough. You have to say you support us.’ And I told them, ‘Sorry, I will not do that. I am ready to keep quiet, but I am not ready to say I support you’.

    And it was a friend. So, he said, ‘Well, my advice is if there is any way you can get out for a while, please do so.’ That was how I went on exile.”

    Even though he has presided over a state which many believe to be stressful, Oyegun believes that the task of running a governing party is only tough, rough and stressful, but totally a rewarding experience.

    Asked to speak on his experience running the APC as its National Chairman, he said: “I did not know I still had so much to learn and I am still learning everyday. We were dealing with groups that had never held power at the centre. So, there was a little bit of inexperience.  Before we got into government, the vision was a lot clearer. The mission was definitepush out these people who are running the country. So, we all rallied around that single bannerget rid of the destroyers of our nationand we succeeded.

    “But once we succeeded, the issue of putting everyone in positions became problem number two. How do we fill the positions? Who is more important than who? Who occupies what position? Who are the most important groups in the party? What level of hold would they have on the structures? All those became divisive issues which, to be honest, we have not totally resolved up to this point in time, and which also gave rise to some of the problems that exhibited themselves in the National Assembly and places like that. But we are working on it. Distresses have come, but in the long run, people would start accepting the relative positions within the party, settling for what they have or what they can get, and the party would get into a more even state. But until people start accepting the realities that we need everybody on board, that influences within the party are to be shared relatively equitably, that all those who contributed majorly to the victory must feel an equal sense of belonging, an equal sense of ownership; once the individuals start accepting that it is not an all-or-nothing situation, this unfortunate problem that we have would recede to the background.”

    Retiring from service at an early age, having his tenure as governor cut short, being in the opposition for 16 years and watching the country drifting and now becoming the National Chairman of the ruling party, is he a fulfilled man?  He said: “As a human being, God has been generous to me. So, I am totally fulfilled. Many years ago, I looked at the lives of Awolowo, Zik, Papa Ajasin, Ahmadu Bello, Tafawa Balewa and the rest of them who contributed to the development of this country, but who on their death-beds felt a lot of frustration that the vision they had for the nation, we were not even yet on the road to realising them, and I said to myself, ‘God, I want to be on my death-bed knowing not that all the problems of this nation have been solved, but knowing that we are finally on the right path to greatness.

  • Mayhem in Lagos as truck kills hawker

    Mayhem in Lagos as truck kills hawker

    ALL hell was let loose in Maryland, Lagos, yesterday when a hawker was crushed by a truck.

    His colleagues went wild, destroying about 47 Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) buses belonging to Primero Transport Service Ltd and several others owned by LAGBUS Asset Management.

    The debris of the buses filled the road from Maryland to Obanikoro.

    Eyewitnesses said the eyeglasses hawker was trying to evade arrest by Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI) officials when he ran into the truck’s path.

    The accident, which happened around 1.15pm, caused a traffic gridlock, which stretched from the Maryland Independence Tunnel to Fadeyi.

    An eyewitness said: “KAI officials pursued the guy who tried to run away with his wares, but he was hit by a truck which was on high speed.

    But another witness said the hawker ran into a Honda vehicle and was crushed.

    He said: “What I saw was a Honda vehicle which was on high speed. It hit the guy when he was running towards the other side of the road and he died immediately while his intestine came out. Immediately the vehicle owner realised he had killed someone, he parked and stepped out to  sympathise with the guy’s fellow hawkers but he was later asked to leave as many people reasoned it was not his fault but KAI’s who pursued him to death.”

    A mob barricaded both sides of the road, hindering motorists’ movement.

    The mob, The Nation learnt, chased away the first and second batches of policemen that arrived on the scene.

    To escape from the mob, some drivers were said to have abandoned their buses and fled. Others manoeuvred their way out of the mayhem.

    Some hawkers told The Nation: “Those KAI officials are wicked people. Can you imagine how cruel they are? The innocent man had already obeyed them by running away to avoid being punished but they kept chasing him till he was killed by a car. Immediately they saw that the car had knocked him down, they drove off speedily. We are all human beings and we are not happy with the situation. We need to let the government know that we can’t take the injustice. Therefore, venting our anger on the buses is the best way to let them know what they have done is bad. The poor man is gone but we will make sure all the buses that would ply this road today must pay for his death.”

    A driver with Primero Transport Service Ltd, Mr Adedeji Adeosun, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN): “I was in traffic for about 20 minutes at Maryland. Then I saw some people running from Maryland and I opened the door to see what was happening. I heard shouts from people that we should come down, so, I immediately removed my uniform. I saw about 100 of the hoodlums otherwise called ‘area boys’ coming with stones and so I ran away.

    “All the passengers on board my bus also came down and ran for dear life. I was hit by a big stone”.

    Another driver, Mr Michael Onabolu, said: “I saw people running and shouting that I should come down from the bus. And all of a sudden, I saw some guys surrounding the buses and asking my passengers and I to come down. Before I knew it, one of them hit the bus with a big stone and I could not move because of the traffic. I was wounded on my hands and my thighs with stones’’.

    He said the passenger beside him was also hit by a stone, adding that all the passengers were moved to other buses to continue their journey.

    A commuter, Mr Elijah Omotayo, said the mob attacked their driver for not opening the doors.

    Omotayo, a student, told NAN: “They started throwing stones and one of the stones hit my head”.

    Primero Ltd Managing Director Mr Fola Tinubu, expressed displeasure over the incident, saying: “We don’t know what happened, whatever it is; it is something that has to do with the government or the police. But does that give aggrieved people the right to destroy private property”.

    He added: “People are saying that there are no jobs in Nigeria; we have created over 2,000 jobs in the last six months. Is this the reward we will get for it? We need to start asking ourselves serious questions in this country. They have destroyed over 14 of our buses now. I don’t even know how many they have destroyed now. For what, what did we do? I am angry. I don’t even know where to begin because there is no justification for destroying private property; our service is for the masses. Do you know how many people will be stranded today if we don’t go out to pick them up? How are they going to get home? We do this for the masses. Is this the reward that we will get? This is madness.”

    Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (LAMATA) Communications Director Mr Kola Ojelabi told The Nation last night that about 47 BRT buses were destroyed.

    This, he said, was more than 10 per cent of the numbers of buses on that route.

    A combined team of soldiers and policemen restored law and order before traffic started moving again.

    They used tyres and big stones to shield the body to ensure free flow of traffic.

  • Dilemma of the hawker

    Dilemma of the hawker

    To stay home leaves the unemployed at the mercy of hunger and other dangers but to hawk exposes them to even more risks, including robbery and death. GRACE OBIKE reports

    They may have mastered how to run after vehicles and sell their articles to commuters, but hawkers in the nation’s capital have not devised any effective strategies to keep members of the Abuja Environment Protection Board (AEPB) at bay.

    The hawkers say they are often chased, caught, beaten up and allegedly robbed of their articles by AEPB officials. Sometimes, the chase turns really ugly, resulting in the death of the itinerant petty traders, it was alleged.

    Nineteen-year-old Sani Shehu who hawked energy drinks at Bolingo Junction was allegedly killed by officers of the AEPB, leaving his aged father, a roadside orange seller at Area1, in grief, Abuja Review was told.

    The Abuja Environment Protection Board (AEPB) Act of 1997 prohibits street hawking among other things. To ensure compliance, the agency sends out its dreaded agents with a task force team which comprises security operatives. The hawkers are often harassed and arrested, their wares seized.

    When the hawkers are arrested, they are required to be tried at a mobile court and if found guilty, fined, while those who cannot pay the fine are detained. A lot of them have different negative stories to tell about this task force team. Some hawkers accuse them of collecting bribes, allowing some hawkers who can afford to bribe them each day go ahead with their trade without any fear of intimidation.

    Others accuse them of going about in plainclothes so they can catch unsuspecting hawkers.

    Elkana Habilla said, “Most of us hawking are people trying to make ends meet instead of always begging from people or relatives or getting involved in criminal activities; it is not everyone that has the means of renting shops, some people start small and probably save enough to become big.”

    A few weeks ago, a groundnut seller beside the NNPC Mega Station in Wuse was killed by an oncoming vehicle because she was being chased by the task force and she tried to cross the road too suddenly. A boy who roasted maize by the roadside around Central Area was also knocked down and killed by a lorry as he tried to escape from the AEPB.

    Sani Shehu did not notice the AEPB officials on time, his co-hawkers said. So the team caught up with him and his friends at Bolingo Junction. The officials reportedly bundled some into their vehicle but could not take Shehu in because he held onto the bridge railing. In the scuffle, the hawkers said, Shehu was pushed over and died.

    Umar Farouk, 20, who sells sachet water, said to be a close friend of Shehu, said he was one of those dragged into the AEPB vehicle.

    “They threw him over and he died and the painful thing is that, maybe, it is because we are poor or seen as unimportant but we see his killers everyday and they act normal as if nothing happened, they have returned on several occasions to chase us after killing Sani and no one seems to care about the case,” Farouk alleged.

    Other witnesses said they could identify Shehu’s killer any day.

    “We all know him, every hawker in Abuja knows him. I know him very well just like I know the hunger in my stomach. He is the most heartless among all the members of the task force. We were all here and saw him kill our friend.”

    Shehu’s 65-year-old father, Mallam Shehu Umar looked devastated, saying that the AEPB has taken his only hope and reason to live.

    “Sani was my only hope after God; he was the only son that I had in this life, he was so hard-working, was always ready to help me out and I was grateful to God for giving me such a responsible child. All my hope was that now that I have grown old, he will take care of me but now they have killed him.

    “No one has bothered to come and talk to me since the incident; his killers all ran away and now I’m only living like a shell, I feel like I have nothing else to live for.”

    Mallam Umar says that since the burial of his son, the police force who acted like they will take up the case have forgotten about it.

    “I am crying to Baba [President Muhammadu] Buhari for justice, for him to wipe away my tears. During the election, Sani was one of those that fought hard to ensure victory for this government but now see what was done to him; they killed my only eye because he decided to be responsible, to work hard and support his family. To be honest if I could have my way then I will ask for AEPB to be scrapped completely, since they took my son away from me without remorse then I can never feel sorry for them.”

    When Abuja Review contacted the Public Relations Officer (PRO) of AEPB Joe Ukairo, he said that the case was still being investigated.

    “The case is a criminal case that is presently being investigated, the case is with the Inspector General of police and I cannot comment of it.”

    Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Anjuguri Manzah informed Abuja Review that the Inspector General of Police, Solomon Arase has ordered investigation into the matter.

  • Police investigate hawker’s death in FCT

    Police investigate hawker’s death in FCT

    The FCT Police Command said it had commenced investigation into the death of a teenage hawker in the territory.

    The FCT Police Commissioner, Mr Wilson Inalegwu, disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Sunday in Abuja.

    It would be recalled that a teenage hawker lost his life on Nov. 13 after scaling a bridge around Bolingo Hotel, Abuja, while allegedly evading arrest by officials of the Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB).

    Inalegwu said that some arrests had been made and investigation was ongoing.

    “We are investigating that case, we have made arrest and we are trying to narrow it down to whoever is responsible for that.

    “We are investigating, that is all that I can say. We are very much aware of that case,” he said.

    Inalegwu said that officials of the board had been advised to be evenhanded while carrying out their duties.

    “We have told them to be evenhanded and told the management to deal with any staff that is overexcited,” he said.

    He also appealed to FCT residents to show understanding by obeying the law against hawking in the territory.

    “But we also appeal to FCT residents to show understanding by not engaging in street hawking.

    “If everybody is allowed to hawk on the street the traffic will not flow and we will begin to have traffic robbers.

    “Experience has shown that this hawkers metamorphosis at night to use same locations when you stop at traffic to rob you at night.

    The commissioner said that Abuja is a cosmopolitan city and the standard should not be so lowered as to encourage criminality.

    The management of the board had denied being responsible for the death of the hawker.

     

  • Beware! That hawker may be robber, terrorist

    Beware! That hawker may be robber, terrorist

    Almost everyday, traffic robbers who masquerade as hawkers are nabbed by the police in Lagos. These “Ember” months, it is feared that they will become more daring. OLUKOREDE YISHAU writes that residents are advised to be extra-vigilant as the next traffic hawker could be a robber or a terrorist. 

    The Italian Ambassador to Nigeria, Fulvio Rustico sees Lagos as the most challenging and most fascinating state any public office holder in the world can lead. The Italian envoy spoke at the Lagos House, Alausa, Ikeja when he visited Governor Akinwunmi Ambode.

    He added that the enormous challenges of governing the state, which is not only the power house of Nigeria and the fourth economy in Africa, would continue to mount with the projection that it would be the second or third largest city in the world by 2050; with 450 million inhabitants. It has over 21 million people at present.

    “I envy you Mr Governor because you have one of the most challenging and most fascinating tasks anywhere in the world. You have a fantastic city,” Rustico said.

    The envoy’s observations are not easily lost on keen observers of the cosmopolitan state.

    Of the challenges, one that is of concern to all inhabitants of the state is security. Because of its cosmopolitan nature, the state houses people from all over the world. A large chunk of the inhabitants mean well for it. But there are a few bad eggs that make it look bad. They are traffic robbers who, most times, pose as street or traffic traders to wreak havoc.

    These robbers, under the guise of hawking gala, plantain chips, plastic table water, soft drinks and other edibles during traffic jams, unleash terrors on their victims. From Ojota to the Third Mainland Bridge to Ijora Bridge and several parts of Lagos, these robbers who pretend, most of the times, to be hawkers, rob people of their valuables.

    Addressing Government House Correspondents shortly after an emergency Security Council Meeting which he chaired, Ambode said it had become evident that traffic crimes and robbery are mostly as a result of the menace of motorcycle operators popularly known as okada riders and street hawkers.

    •Ambode
    •Ambode

    The governor said the government would not allow a few notorious elements to cause a breakdown in law and order and upset the peace that the state has enjoyed over the years.

    Ambode also admonished residents of the state to see the last two months of the year as a period that calls for vigilance and a changed attitude towards issues relating to crime and terrorism.

    He urged residents to co-operate with the government at all times, just as he warned them against the dangers of patronising street and in-traffic hawkers.

    “The next hawker could be a robber or terrorist. You are now well-advised. If we all co-operate and decide not to buy, gradually and collectively, the hawkers will not come to the highways and streets anymore. Our roads will definitely become safer.”

    Ambode, who said the government is also working hard to restrict street hawking, urged the people to stop patronising them, so as to discourage street traders from the highways.

    “We have already hit the ground running. I’m deeply concerned about the issues that Lagosians are sending back to me and the issues range from security, traffic gridlock and the environment itself. But again, just as we are looking at the immediate solutions to them, there are medium-term solutions that Lagosians will see in the next few weeks that we will roll out.

    “As we are now in the ‘Ember’ months, I just want to appeal to Lagosians to be more vigilant, and cooperate with us in all the measures we will be carrying out,” Ambode said.

    The governor’s concern will make sense when considered side by side traffic robbers who are in the police net. Some days back, operatives of the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) of Lagos Police Command arrested three ex–convicts for traffic robbery in Oshodi.

    The robbery suspects, Adekunle Mustapha, 21, Popoola Olumide, 20 and Femi Amusa, 20, were arrested following a tip-off from their victim, Olasunkanmi Oyelakin, who alerted the police that his blackberry phone was stolen by the suspects during early morning traffic around Bolade, Oshodi.

    Oyelakin was quoted by the police as saying: “I was on my way to Ajah at 6:30 a.m. I saw Adekunle Mustapha passed by the bus I boarded. Unknown to me, he was monitoring me. A few minutes later, I noticed a missed call on my phone, and as I brought out the phone, Mustapha took the phone from me through the bus window and ran away. Because there was traffic, I made no attempt to struggle with him, but got down from the nearest bus-stop and I began to monitor him. I noticed that he had regrouped with his friends and one of them was telling him to hand over the phone he stole from me.

    “I knew I couldn’t handle the three of them all alone. So, I informed the RRS operatives who followed me down to the place where he was arrested.”

    Mustapha said he was driven by frustration to steal the handset from him.

    “I am a bus conductor in Oshodi. I am from Ibadan and a secondary school dropout. I sleep in Ojuwoye. I am an ex-convict. I don’t want to go to prison again. Government should please have mercy on me. I was frustrated into traffic robbery. I won’t do it again,” he said.

    Also, early this month, the RRS apprehended suspects alleged to be members of traffic robbery syndicate terrorising commuters and motorists around Bourdillon Road in Ikoyi.

    The suspects are Joseph Edem, 24, Jamilu Musa, 29 and Gambo Yunusa, 30. They were arrested on November 7.

    The RRS Commander, Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP), Olatunji Disu, said: “Following the complaints from members of the public of incessant in-traffic robbery attacks around the axis; our men laid an ambush on them which led to the arrest of the suspects, while others managed to escape the dragnet of the police. When the policemen combed the area, different kinds of weapon were recovered from their hideouts.”

    Another traffic robber in police net is Timothy Ojomandu, 22. He is alleged to be a member of a three-man syndicate who hide under gridlock to attack and rob law-abiding motorists around Mile 2 area in the state.

    The suspect was caught early this month by a team of policemen from RRS, who responded to distress call made by the driver of Mitsubishi Canter with registration number FKJ 676 XF, after the suspect and his gang members had successfully stolen one carton of cell battery from the truck.

    The lorry driver, Mr. Ajiboye Mogaji, told the police that he sighted the suspect from the side mirror of his vehicle when he sneaked in through the back of the truck.

    He said: “When I saw him sneaking in to my truck, I pretended as if I didn’t see him. While inside the truck, he passed one carton to his partner who was moving beside the vehicle. As soon as I saw him passing one carton to his partner on the ground, I rushed down on motion.

    “However, when his partner saw me alighting from the vehicle suddenly, he absconded with that one carton, and I held the suspect by his trousers when he wanted to jump down from the truck. Then, I shouted for help and the policemen from RRS who were patrolling the area responded swiftly to the distress call.”

    The suspect, who confessed to the crime, said that he was recruited into the group about two months ago.

    “Our robbery syndicate was in the habit of stealing handsets and other valuables from pedestrians and motorists during the peak period of traffic congestion along the area.

    The RRS on Tuesday, August 25, apprehended Tijani Taofeek, 26, suspected to be a member of gridlock robbery syndicate in Ojota.

    The suspect, who hails from Ogbomosho in Oyo State, said he was a bus conductor, and that the income from bus conducting business was no longer enough for him.

    For the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of the Environment, Oluwatoyin Onisarotu, traders who fail to abide by State Environmental Sanitation Law would henceforth be seriously dealt with.

    He said: “It is disheartening to see how our major roads and highways such as Apapa-Oshodi Expressway, Ikorodu Road, Agege Motor Road, Victoria Island, Ikoyi-Obalende, Ojuelegba–Stadium, Surulere, Oyingbo, Carter Bridge, Idumota, Oshodi, Ketu, Mile 12, Third Mainland Bridge, Cele, Iyana-Ipaja, Agbado Oke-Odo, Airport Road and Ikeja, among others have been converted to illegal markets.”

    Onisarotu warned traders engaging in this illegal act to desist from it as the government would not compromise any act that may derail the effort of the government in achieving a cleaner environment.

    The Permanent Secretary further said the State Environmental Sanitation Law forbade anybody from converting the road median, setbacks and walkways to any trading activities.

    According to Onisarotu, Ambode has mandated law enforcement officers and regulatory agencies to ensure compliance with the provision of the state sanitation laws forthwith.

    The Chairman of the State Task Force on Environmental and other Special Offences (Enforcement Unit), Mr. Olubukola Abe, said the government would reduce traffic congestion on the highways, often caused by the activities of hawkers.

    Abe told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that Section 1 of the Street Trading and Illegal Market Prohibition Law, 2003, restricted street trading and hawking in the metropolis.

    “Sections 7 and 8 of the same law give jurisdiction and power to the special court to order the seizure and public auction of items impounded during street trading.

    “Section 10 of the law prescribes the sum of N5, 000 as fine or three months’ imprisonment upon conviction.

    Aside the criminal aspect of street trading, Lagos State Commissioner of Police Fatai Owoseni warned of the health hazards of patronising such hawkers. He cited the recent arrest of five men who were caught selling adulterated plastic table water and coca-cola.

    Owoseni said operatives of the RRS, acting on a tip-off, arrested five persons, including three accomplices, who specialised in adulteration of dispensable jar water and sachet water at No. 3, Adesola Street, Ago Palace Way, Okota, Isolo, Lagos. They were arrested on Thursday, October 22. The two prime suspects were identified as Chukwuma Uzor, 48 and Ofonime Ikpe 44.

    “The law on street trading also affects its patrons. People should stop patronising street hawkers. The products are adulterated and in order to prevent robberies in traffic jams and also to protect people from being poisoned, they should stop patronising them,” the CP said.