Tag: markets

  • ‘Access to financial support by rural women ’ll help local markets’

    ‘Access to financial support by rural women ’ll help local markets’

    It all started like play on a WhatsApp platform. But today, Mayowa Akinpetoye has transformed it into a big venture. In this interview with Bukola Aroloye, she recalls how she came about Chronicles Empowerment Foundation.

    ow do you empower women entrepreneurs and what inspired this?

    Our focus is to empower women to fund their business with 5000 per head to start a business for rural woman. How to save and give them financial tips while chipping in things on violence. Rural women die in domestic violence. Empowering them will save them from domestic violence.

    Tell us about your life and the lessons you have learnt over the years

    Life to me is designed to be fully enjoyed, while fulfilling God’s ordained plans. We are all here to fulfil purpose. This purpose might be to generate new ideas or improve on existing ideas, either way problems are solved. The onus lies on us to identify where we are needed and fix problems.

    What are some of the things that make what you do different?

    Precisely last year April, I registered an NGO under the name Kronikles Empowerment Foundation. It first started as a dream but with the help of God and committed friends, the NGO has since kicked off. To be honest, we have more than enough NGOs doing similar thing with ours, especially in the area of women empowerment.

    However, the difference with what we do in our organisation is that we make use of real life stories and experiences to connect and empathise with women.  Women connect better with empathy than expectations. As a matter of fact, the word “Kronikles” was gotten under the inspiration of God, not mere fantasy. That is why “Experience is the best teacher” is our watchword.

    Why did you decide to go into this area?

    My decision to pursue this line of service is due to my personal experience in life. Growing up as a teenager, my mum was a strict woman who believed that being strict with female girls was the best way to guarantee that they are not led astray. Somehow, I didn’t get a clear understanding of why she was being strict in her gestures to me especially. But sooner I learnt why.

    I got involved in few relationships while growing up, but one got really messy and bad. This relationship moved from good to worse to sour, because at some point trust and every form of respect was lost.

    After this ordeal, I summoned all of my experiences up. I knew my experience was to help other people facing similar challenges. It was only structured to help us connect better.

    How did the interest develop?

    I have had this passion for a long time, but somehow the interest developed after walking out of the messy relationship I found myself. On leaving the abusive relationship to restart my life, I was financially grounded. I received the grace to pick up again and face the new life I found myself. With the support of friends and family members, I started to sell vintage baby wears, while I continued looking for jobs. After few months of doing this, I got a job.

    The thought of vulnerable girls and women in rural settlements who are in abusive homes and relationships have since not left my mind.  How do these women get back their lives after exiting abusive marriages or relationships? How do pregnant teenagers get back their lives? How can we reduce the number of girls exchanging their bodies for tokens in the slums just to feed and clothes? These were the problems I was interested in solving.

    I remember my mother worked as a Centre Supervisor for Maryam Babangida’s “Better Life for Rural Women” project, in connection with UNICEF in the old Ondo State back in the days. I was always with her at the centre waiting for her to close from work.

    At the centre, women were taught life and vocational skills, which produced many viable businesses owned by Nigerian women. All these contributed to the developed passion.

    What were you doing before this?

    I have always been in full time employment. Presently I work with one of the foremost Share Registration Companies in West Africa as Customer Relationship personnel.

    What do you consider as some of your achievements over the years?

    There are quite a number of achievements but I can only share but few of them. A lady contacted me on one of my social platforms of what she was going through at that moment. She had no source of income and was abandoned by the husband. She was left with her kids. The NGO was able to empower her with funds for her to start a business and in the space of five working days. She has since sealed a catering job deal with a private school in her state.

    Another lady from the northern part of the country also supported us. Members of the group were able to rally round her until she got back on her feet. She is a teacher and baker today. She is one of our strong and committed members impacting lives in the north as I speak.

    I also remember a young lady I mentored, while staying in Ogba area of Lagos. I met her on the street and we became friends. I saw a beautiful woman in her and I asked if she could please allow me mentor her. I became her friend, got to know her parents and helped in grooming and influenced some of the choices she made. Today, she is married with kids, and runs an event outfit.

    When I look back and see the women whose lives have been impacted by programmes and activities of our foundation, I cannot but thank God for the opportunity. I sincerely owe my achievements to God almighty who turned my mess into an inspiring message, all members of Kronikles Empowerment Foundation home and abroad. I want to say l am nowhere close to where I am destined for, but certainly not where I used to be!

    What are some of the challenges you encountered?

    One of the major challenges I encounter is low educational levels of women. Most of the women we deal with lack education, hence communicating vital points to them is a bit difficult.

    Also the population of women who live below average in Nigeria is alarming. Women make the majority of the poor population in Africa. They are directly and indirectly affected by the financial and economic crisis.

    Some women are still keeping mute about their situations. They are scared of being stigmatised in the society. They therefore prefer to die in their pains rather than speak out for what they believe. They stylishly allow various forms of abuse without knowing they have rights to say NO.

    If you have to compare what you do with your counterparts in other parts of the world, what would you say?

    I want to say with the support of friends and family, I am making progress but I can do much more.

    The role of education cannot be over emphasised in empowering women.  The education level of majority of rural women is very poor. Hence, I would like to partner more with volunteers who are willing to teach rural women how to read, write and speak basic English. This will help to spread literacy in more rural settlements.

    Nigeria is blessed with mineral resources and our women are making good use of these resources as means to generate income for themselves. However, despite the ideas these women have, they lack equipment to maximise their outputs. Helping rural women to access financial support from rural development agencies, micro finance banks would help to utilise local resources and local market.

    I would encourage more women to come out to support women who are already involved in social engagements with rural women. This is because we would achieve more together. I need women in technology to come up with social apps that will help us connect better with rural women. Apps that would enable rural woman get quick response to domestic violence cases even in remote villages across Nigeria, Africa and all over. We need more donors to prioritise funding women’s empowerment at this critical time.

    Let’s talk about some of the memorable moments in your life and on the job

    I would say the most memorable was the day I met my man. He’s been such a wonderful husband, and my number one complement.

    I run an event outfit named SimpliiAriya. I am also a Certified Traditional Engager (Alaga Iduro and Ijoko). I do this mostly on weekends. In my spare time, I enjoy brushing up on my skills and learning about any developments in the social enterprise world. I attend local seminars, go on shopping and spend quality time with my lovely family.

    What changes would you like to see in the sector? 

    I desire to see more women leading in all sectors of the economy. An empowered woman will make an empowered society.

    What is your assessment of the impact of the sector on the economy?

    Empowering women benefits all. This is important for any economy. Most countries that have invested in empowering women in financial and basic life development programmes are doing much better than countries where women are suppressed and caged. Hence for any home, community or society at large to economically progress, women empowerment must be a topmost agenda.

    What is your advice for women? 

    I have so much to tell women, but these few would do for now. I would like to encourage every woman, especially those experiencing difficult times in their lives. Stumbling only makes us stronger, and when you do, never remain on the floor.

    What you pick after any fall matters. Some pick rubbles, others pick rubies. Only you can choose what you make out of every situation. Take responsibility for your life, don’t run your life based on people’s opinion about you.  Don’t compare yourself with others, it only promotes envy. Accept criticism as compliments, in this manner you would only become better. Trying to please people will only frustrate you. Get a mentor and improve on your skills, volunteer when less busy. Be good to yourself.

    Who or what do you consider as the greatest inspiration in life?

    One great inspiring woman in my life is my maternal grandmother, Chief Mrs. Matilda Agunbiade. She is ninety-seven years old but she looks younger than her age. My grandmother is a courageous woman who hardly has negative feelings about life no matter what challenge she’s faced with.

  • Lagos takes free legal services in markets

    The Lagos State government yesterday began free legal services at Agege market.

    The Director of Public Affairs Centre (PAC) in the Ministry of Justice, Mrs Omotola Akinsanya said over 750 persons were attended to by the eight agencies in the ministry during the awareness and sensitisation, tagged: Legal Clinic.

    The gesture, she said, was to assist the public in resolving conflicts at no cost and enlighten them on their legal rights.

    According to her, the intention of the government is to use the agencies as mechanisms for amicable conflict resolutions and a strategy to decongest the various prisons in the state.

    She noted that it was expedient for every resident to be aware of their fundamental rights such that they would know whenever their rights were trampled upon.

    The Director of Citizens’ Mediation Centre (CMC), Mrs. Oluwatoyin Odusanya, urged the public to visit any of the centres for their complaints.

    She added that issues that could not be resolved immediately would be referred to appropriate offices for adequate attention.

    The director urged those who are yet to benefit from the services provided by the ministry to take advantage of the opportunity to resolve issues on landlord/tenants feud, debt reclaim, land issues, matrimonial cases among others.

  • Using markets for immunization awareness

    I was deeply heartbroken when I visited a fellow market woman to console her after she lost her child to pneumonia early this year. The atmosphere was charged with so much grief and sorrow. I remember the pain that cut her so deeply, her cries and tears which never seemed to stop. She really loved her daughter, and now she was gone. It was truly an unbearable experience. My pain comes from the fact that it is a disease that could have been prevented through immunization. I am also shocked by the knowledge that every year in Nigeria, many thousands of children die from pneumonia, meningitis, diarrhoea and other diseases that can be prevented through immunization.

    Markets are places where a lot of our Nigerian women ply their trade. In addition, women carry the bulk of responsibility in caring for our children. The woman who lost her child is one of the many thousands of women in this situation. Imagine a scenario where as a market seller, she has to suspend her commercial activities in order to tend a sick child. She may make little to nothing on the days she has to visit a clinic. Having no money to cater for her family also brings additional problems. And after all the effort, you lose your child to a disease that can be prevented by immunization?

    No, it is very painful indeed.

    Nigerians, especially our children, need not die from these diseases because the vaccines to prevent them are available. What we must do is ensure that the government takes this case seriously to purchase and provide these vaccines for every primary healthcare centre in the country. I commend the Federal Ministry of Health for the leadership they demonstrated to quickly provide Meningitis C vaccines during the meningitis outbreak. This should also extend to all vaccines covered within the routine immunization programme. The vaccines under the government’s routine immunization programme takes care of diseases that can kill or maim children early in their life: diseases such as pneumonia, tuberculosis, hepatitis B, diphtheria, polio, tetanus, meningitis, whooping cough, measles and yellow fever. It is commendable that the government wants to expand the programme by introducing two new vaccines within the next three years. These new vaccines will protect children against diarrhoea, and young girls and women against cervical cancer.

    Considering the population of this country, this shows the enormous responsibility that this part of the health sector carries in ensuring the safety of many Nigerian children. There are more than seven million children born every year in Nigeria. This also shows how wide the routine immunization programme in the country functions in reaching many poor and remote areas to keep our children healthy and productive. However, with the impending addition of new vaccines to the traditional ones in the routine immunization programme, the overall cost for funding them has increased. These new vaccines are also relatively more expensive than all the traditional ones combined.

    Currently, the government pays for all traditional vaccines. For the new vaccines, government co-pays with international donors such as Gavi. However, government disburses only about 20% of the total cost for these vaccines. The rest are paid by donors. We must ensure that government increases funding for the routine immunization programme because we have to take initiative in saving the lives of our children. We are not talking about American or British children, we are talking about Nigerian children. Why must we rely on foreign money to keep our own children healthy? We need to start taking real ownership of our problems and begin to take steps to plan ahead for the health needs of our country.

    Ensuring that there is enough funding for the routine immunization programme puts us on the right track on the road to preventing diseases or outbreaks if they arise. The funds should also be released on time to buy these vaccines and ensure that they are distributed safely to avoid stock outs. They must be distributed from the central storehouse down to the local primary healthcare centre, especially those in rural communities, where they are utilized.

    As we make efforts to get vaccines to where they are needed, we must also focus on getting more Nigerians to use our immunization services. Many people need to be aware about the importance of getting their children immunized.

    This is why I want our market places, where all manner of people visit for their daily activities, to be an avenue for immunization awareness and service. Whether you are in Balogun Market in Lagos, or Old Market in Sokoto or Ariaria in Aba, you should be able to see messages on the importance and benefits of immunization and realize how important it is to save lives. People should understand why government needs to spend more money to maintain the immunization programme. Visiting the market should also give you the opportunity to see and hear messages calling you to immunize your children.

    When this is done, over time, more children will receive their immunization because more people are better informed about the benefits and know where to access them. I am a vaccine champion under the Women Advocates for Vaccine Access (WAVA). So I stand for the right for all Nigerians to be fully immunized and lead a healthy life. If government working with traditional rulers in northern Nigeria can bring about a better control of polio, then it is possible that working with market women and men in all states in Nigeria can bring about a better control for every vaccine-preventable disease.

    Let me remind us that those who have died during the meningitis outbreak that claimed many lives could have been anyone of us. When the majority of children in Nigeria are immunized, this will prevent outbreaks from these diseases. Nigerians need to understand that as government is making efforts to provide these vaccines, we as citizens must use these immunization services. Immunization is free at all public hospitals, so no child should be deprived of this essential service.

     

    • Chief (Mrs.) Tinubu-Ojo is Iyaloja-General of Nigeria; President-General, Market Women and Men Association of Nigeria.

     

  • Lagos asks markets to establish task force on sanitation

    Lagos State Government has mandated all the 93 markets within Lagos Island Central Business Districts (CBD) to set up a task force on sanitation, warning that any market that fails to comply with the directive will be shut down indefinitely.

    Special Adviser to the Governor on Central Business Districts, Mr. Agboola Dabiri who disclosed this at a sanitation and awareness creation meeting with market leaders inside the Youth Centre, Onikan, Lagos Island, said the extent of waste generation in markets on the Island has become worrisome and the State Government was taking drastic measures to tackle the situation once and for all.

    He said: ‘’any market that fails to set up the task force on clearance and effective disposal of waste and refuse will definitely be shut down’’

    Lagos, he said, has been in the fore front of cleanliness and hygienic market situation towards forestalling outbreak of epidemic disease, adding that no stone will be left unturned at ensuring that the huge refuse that are in several places on Lagos Island CBD is cleared up, as the CBD has put series of plans in motion to ensure the clearance.

    “Traders themselves have a lot to gain from clean and serene environment as it is a sure panacea to a disease-free society”, Dabiri said.

  • Ramadan: Scanty markets, low patronage

    Ramadan: Scanty markets, low patronage

    The yearly Ramadan fasting for the Muslim faithful begins tomorrow, but the usual high tempo of shopping at major foodstuff and fruits markets within the Lagos metropolis has given way to slow buying and selling, reports TONIA ‘DIYAN, who visited some of the markets.

    Ramadan begins tomorrow. It is a period when Muslim faithful across the world  observe fasting.

    As usual, they are expected to stock their homes with staple foods and other things they will need during the period.

    But, many of them are constrained to do this, no thanks to the prevailing  recession, that have driven prices to the roof tops.

    In the past, when it is two weeks to Ramadan, markets get busier with patronage increasing by daily.  Shoppers, mostly Muslims, troop in and out of markets to buy goods, mainly foodstuffs and fruits. Visits to Idumota, Mile12, Oyingbo, Daleko and other foodstuff markets in Lagos revealed that sales were low with few customers buying up some of the items on display. This time, the markets have refused to ride on the crest of the spirit of the season.

    For instance, at Idumota Market in Lagos Island, traders were lamenting that they were not making  sales because Muslims were not buying their goods. A trader who sells food seasoning, Mrs Bimbo Akinyemi, said: “We always look forward to seasons like this to make money but customers are not coming; the few ones that come around only inquire prices and leave complaining that food items are extremely expensive and there is no money to buy.  We are not pleased with slow sales and low patronage we are getting from customers,” she said.

    A garri trader at Balogun market also in Lagos Island Local Government Area, Mrs Fatimat Awosanya, said at the weekend that her customers had not being patronising her in the last three months. She lamented that sales had been very discouraging.

    “Before now, we used to anticipate Ramadan rush, which comes once in a year but the story has changed,” she said.

    The price of a bag of garri, a common staple among low income earners, has increased. From N11,000 a bag,  it sells for N14,500, depending on the brand.

    Another trader, Shade Ifedapo, a pepper and tomato seller at Sabo Market in Ikorodu, said sales had been very poor in the past few weeks. “My Muslim customers are not coming to buy pepper, tomato and other items in large quantities the way they used to when they were preparing for their fast. Last year, regardless of the hike in the price of these items, particularly at times like this, they still patronised me. I haven’t seen them, some of them complain of lack of money,” she lamented.

    She said a basket of pepper, which used to sell for N16, 000 sells for N17, 000. A basket of tomatoes was N7, 000, now it’s between N28, 000 and N30, 000, depending on its freshness.

    Also, a bag of Tatase and Shombo: (pepper varieties), which gets expensive during raining season rose from N4000 to between N6,500 and N7000. A bag of onions, which hitherto sold for N15,000 has moved to N20,000.

    Shade explained that when these items were sold at exorbitant rates to wholesalers, it was also sold at exorbitant rates to the retailers. “Yes, we sell to make profit. But we cannot afford to lose after spending so much money to buy to resell. That is why we sell according to what we buy,” she said.

    She noted that in the past, Muslims would buy in bulk before the fast and when they are fasting, adding that is the only time traders experience low patronage is when the fasting proper begins.

    The story is the same at Oshodi Market. One of the traders in the market, who spoke to The Nation, Belinda Ngu said: “Usually when Muslims are preparing for their fast, they don’t want to be caught unawares as they stock their homes with staple food items to prepare them. This time around, the case is different, we only come here to sit with our wares and return home unaccomplished. Last year Ramadan sale was better. Yes, foodstuffs and other items were expensive but affordable by many.”

    At the fruit market at Ketu, the story is the same, people are not buying. Hameed Abu, a middle-aged stall owner, has been selling seasonal fruits for 20 years. According to him, business has not been this bad. “Before now, when people are preparing for Ramadan, I deal with about 300 customers daily. I sell fruits worth more than N30, 000 daily; watermelon used to be the most patronised. Now, I hardly take home N5,000. My customers walk past my shop asking me if fruit will fill their stomach. They would rather use the money to purchase foodstuffs,” Abu lamented.

    Traders at the popular Agege Market also lamented the low patronage. Haji Abdullah, a tomato seller, said this year’s Ramadan business is the worst she had experienced since she started selling at the market. According to her, “despite an increase in the price of almost all food items last year, my sales did not go down.

  • Killer palm oil floods markets

    Killer palm oil floods markets

    Gboyega Alaka chronicles the growing presence of adulterated palm oil in the Nigerian market and the dangers they portend for unsuspecting consumers

    You must have seen them. Or perhaps tasted of them, albeit unwittingly. Adulterated palm oil or killer palm oil as some people have come to term them. They are everywhere in the Nigerian market. For the not-too discerning buyer, these set of oils even get the nod ahead of the pure unadulterated palm oil on the shelves because they come across as more alluring. What are the tell-tales? Redness; they are unusually red and attractive, while some are almost impossible to differentiate.

    From Ikotun market in Lagos to Jankara, to Mushin, Ajegunle, in Lagos, Ibadan and as far as Potiskum in Jos, the story is the same. Nigerians go to the market with the intention of buying palm oil to cook their meals but end up with poison. Yes, consumers do not die immediately, but that does not make it less poisonous; or how does one describe inedible substances and chemicals deliberatly mixed with food ingredients and sold to innocent people?

    Palm oil ordinarily enjoys a universal acceptance amongst all Nigerian tribes, to the extent that no home-made meal is complete without it (or vegetable oil).

    Palm oil in Nigeria is derived mainly from African oil palm (Elaeis guineensis), popularly referred to as Palm Tree.  It is naturally a reddish-orange colour because it has very high beta-carotene content. It is richly endowed with so many health and nutritional benefits. According to Organicfacts.com, an online health journal, the health benefits of palm oil include improving energy levels, preventing cancer, boosting the immune system, helping to prevent aging, protecting against heart diseases and also beneficial to pregnant women. More recently, it has become more popular because of the risk of bad cholesterol associated with other cooking oil. Aside energy, its beta-carotene content also boosts hormonal balance in the body, and enhances vision. The source also states that it prevents macular degeneration and cataracts, thereby enhancing sight.

    This is why this habit of adulterating the oil is attracting so much attention. “What else do we turn to?” Morayo, a housewife around Mushin area of Lagos, asked this reporter almost rhetorically, during one of his fact-finding mission. Palm oil also has high level of HDL, good cholesterol, which helps to maintain a good balance of cholesterol in the body and by implication, ensure a healthier cardiovascular system. It’s rich in Tocopherols , a type of vitamin A antioxidants, that also help to prevent cancer by neutralising free radicals, which experts say cause healthy cells to mutate into cancerous cells.

    It is therefore unfortunate that this rather healthy gift of nature is gradually being bastardised to the extent that man now needs to be more alert when buying and consuming it or products for which it serves as a component.

    Adulterated palm oil everwhere

    At Ikotun Market, arguably one of the biggest markets in Lagos, an elderly woman, Mrs Saratu (not real name), who deals in yam and other farm stuff in the market, spoke of how adulterated palm oil has taken over the market. “Adulterated palm oil is what we have in the market right now. I mistakenly bought it sometime ago and regretted it. It is adulterated with chemicals and colouring. I got to know the secret when one of the sellers operated close to me, before she closed down due to debt incurred from a microfinance bank.”

    Asked if there is a marked difference between the pure oil and the adulterated one, Mrs Saratu said, “It is attractive when you behold it in a bottle, but when you cook with it, the chemical with which it had been mixed will not allow you to enjoy the soup. Apart from showing in the colour, which makes the soup as red as blood, the chemical does not allow you to enjoy the soup, as it mars the taste and makes it nauseating. And that is aside whatever health danger the chemical may carry. And as for me, anything that will harm my body, I have sworn not to take, except if I don’t know.”

    Continuing, she said: “I wonder why they are not just selling the oil pure, even if it is more expensive, at least, people will eat and remain healthy. And it is not as if the mixed one is cheaper. I think it is mainly because the chemical and colouring make the oil red and more attractive. Please, help us tell the government to look into it before these greedy traders kill us all. They don’t seem to care about the risk they are putting the people through. All they are interested in is the money they are making.”

    Asked how she gets her supply now, or if she now has a way of detecting the adulterated type, Mrs. Saratu said she now buys from source in Edo State, since it is not so easy to determine which has been mixed. “I give money to my contacts who supply me yam in Edo and other states to help me buy pure unadulterated palm oil from source, and this is what I take with my family and sales people who live with me. I buy in gallons, but how many people can do that?”

    Another woman, Lara, a journalist in Lagos, said the situation is horrible and dangerous to healthy living. Her experience: “I bought it once and it was really appalling. The odour that greeted me the moment I got home was really offensive. Aside that, there were so many dirt and particles; most of them blackish. It was so bad that I just closed the lid and went out to buy another oil. I couldn’t cook with it. I think one of the reasons I fell for it was because I did not taste it. Usually, I taste my oil before buying. “

    Since then, Lara said she has been more careful, taking time to always taste the oil and stick to one customer, whom she can trust and who has so far never failed her.

    Unlike Mrs. Saratu, Lara said the one she bought was not attractive. “It had the same reddish-orange colour but was clearly adulterated. And it was not as if it was cheaper. As a matter of fact, they even make it look more expensive by giving it a higher price tag. That was last December, but after that, I have been extremely careful, making sure I only buy from one customer, whom I trust.,” she said.

    Yetunde, another journalist, also recounted how her experience made her stop buying palm oil in Lagos. Last year, she said her sister bought a 250 litre palm oil, which they both shared. “Initially,” she said, “the content looked really good. Even when we started using it, it tasted really nice. However, by the time we used it halfway, we discovered that the colour and taste were changing. The content in the gallon had become thick and black. It was then that it dawned on me that the palm oil was adulterated. We stopped using it immediately.”

    So now, she buys her palm oil only outside Lagos. “Each time my sister or anyone is travelling out of Lagos, I ask them to help me buy from source, to avoid making the same mistake.” She would not allow some bad people to poison her and her family in their greed.

    Barakat, a housewife and businesswoman, also condemned the adulterated palm oil, which she said may be the cause of the numerous cases of cancer now afflicting the country. A 41-year-old woman, she said in her younger days, cancer was virtually unheard of and wondered why some people, would, for the sake of making money, be poisoning their countrymen and women. To underline her angst over the adulterated oil, Barakat told this reporter of how she has taken it upon herself to enlighten as many people as she knows and come across, never to buy the palm oil. She does not know exactly what chemicals it is adulterated with, but vows that they cannot be edible stuffs. She also wonders what NAFDAC is doing about it.

    It is from Cotonou – Head, Ikotun palm oil sellers

    One of the wholesale dealers in Ikotun Market, who gave his name as John, would not divulge any information. He denied knowing about adulterated palm oil and would not tell where he sources his supply from, save an umbrella statement that: “My oga buys it from the East.”

    Attempts at getting information from the retailers also met with denials and rebuffs.

    Ifeanyi, a bulky elderly man, is the head of palm oil retailers in Ikotun Market, Lagos. In an attempt to unravel the riddle behind the unwholesome practice and ask if anything is being done to stem the situation, this reporter sought  his opinion.

    He admitted that he is aware of the adulterated palm oil, but said it is the ones brought to Nigeria from Cotonou via Idiroko border that are adulterated. On his own, he said he does not mix his oil and that he sells it as it is delivered from the producers.

    When asked what the perpetrators use to mix the oil, he said he did not know. When this reporter told him about his finding that the dealers mix the oil with bad cholesterol vegetable oil, colouring and other chemicals, he said he was not aware.

    And on the effort his association is making to stem the practice, Ifeanyi said the association tries its best, but insisted that it is a difficult situation, as it is hard to catch the perpetrators in the act. On some occasions, he confessed that they have had to fight some of those involved in the practice and admitted almost helplessly that “they just seem unwilling to desist.”

    As for him, Ifeanyi said he sells original, unadulterated palm oil, but disclosed that even the consumers/buyers make things difficult, as they always ask for the adulterated ones, albeit unknowingly, because of its ‘rich’ colour and attractiveness. “And you know that in business, demand drives supply. So the sellers try to meet up with demand.,” He said.

    ‘They’re all culpable’

    Mrs Saratu on sighting this reporter with the head of the palm oil sellers association, however, vowed that even he is into the unwholesome practice. She expressed surprise that even Ifeanyi was the head of the oil; sellers and said that is a sign that ‘we’re all in trouble.’

    When asked if she ever sighted NAFDAC officials cracking down on the adulterated oil sellers, Mrs. Saratu said she had no idea.

    Nowhere is safe

    For those taking solace in buying the products from outside Lagos, it might not yet be uhuru, as some unscrupulous elements are even said to be engaged in the dangerous habit. Sometime last year, the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NCDSC) arrested some suppliers in Potiskum, Jos, for allegedly adulterating the product with dye. Their arrests at the time led to the confiscation of several other samples, which after lab tests by NAFDAC, showed traces of high acid, high saponification and high relative density.

    Lawal Musa Dadingelma, the state’s coordinator of NAFDAC, confirmed that the adulterated palm oil samples tested contained dye which is capable of causing cancer when deposited in human body. And these were just a tip of the iceberg of people who might be engaged in the nefarious activity. The Medical Director of Sani Abacha Specialist Hospital, Damaturu, Dr. Garba Fika, was also quoted by a national daily to have confirmed an increase in the number of cancer cases. Ditto, several other hospitals in the country. Even the ministry of health has confirmed this.

    Last year, Francis Durosinmi-Etti, a professor of Oncology and Radiotherapy at the College of Medicine, University of Lagos, disclosed that 500,000 new cases are diagnosed yearly in the country. Speaking at his inaugural lecture, titled, “That We May Overcome Cancer: The Odyssey of a Radiation Oncologist” in Lagos, cited lack of basic infrastructure and late report by patients, as reasons. But with the spread in these ‘evil’ palm oil, the professor might have overlooked one major factor, albeit unwittingly.

    Dr Abubakar Jimoh, Director, Special Duties at  NAFDAC, confirmed that the trend is not new and that the agency is aware of the dangerous practice. Even as far back as ten years ago, when it first got wind of the trend, he said the agency, under the late Prof Dora Akunyili, waged a ceaseless battle against the perpetrators in the markets. “We also made it a point to educate the public about the presence of the product and sensitise them. We discovered a particular colourant, with which they mixed the oil to make it more attractive and get people to buy.”

    During a lab test, Jimoh said they discovered that the palm oil is mixed with of Azo dye. “Azo dye is a dye used in dying clothes and is not to be consumed because it is highly carcinogenic, which means it can cause cancer. It is the major colourant used but it is dangerous enough.”

    He said the first challenge the agency faced back then was whether to dabble into it or not, since it especially didn’t fall into its purview. “We were torn between cracking down on it and being passive, because it does not really fall under the purview of NAFDAC. NAFDAC, based on law, is concerned with processed food. But it got to a point, where we decided that we had to think outside the box. For the sake of the people, we had to redefine our role and commenced a public enlightenment process to get people aware. Market women particularly.”

    He confessed though that the agency has not sustained the battle, especially because it has had to do battle on so many fronts. “There are so many issues, including fake/counterfeit drugs that is still daunting, not to talk of other processed foods. There is also the issue of bringing the quality of export agricultural products to par with standards. “

    He concluded that what the agency needs still is “a lot of public enlightenment. If people are aware, then they will not fall prey. Another thing we’re planning is to begin to make people scapegoats. So far we have been restraining ourselves from literally taking over the role of the police, so to speak.”

    He admits that the agency would eventually resort to cracking down, but said for now, it aiming to get Nigerians to take their destinies in their hands and try to be vigilant and careful. I can tell you that the local market women have very discernible eyes to detect such adulterated product. “By just looking and tasting, they are able to decipher and differentiate. It is called organoleptic test. Even scientists do organoleptic tests to eliminate products before embarking on tests. That is the first natural test, before any lab tests.”

    Jimoh, however, said the agency’s Food Nutrition and Applied Nutrition Department recently disclosed to him that it is part of their plan to carry out a nationwide survey. “That survey will help us take samples from markets and suppliers across the country to see what new tricks or addition they’ve brought on aside azo dye. The survey would also aim to gauge how impactful our enlightenment campaigns have been on the market habits of the consumers. It is after that we will take more actions, such as raids. The only raids we have done in the past were on vegetable oil.”

    Adulterated palm oil can cause cancer – Chemist

    Life MarchDr Abayomi Akeem of Environmental and Analytical Chemistry Research Group,  University of Lagos, expresses his dismay on adulterated palm oil in the market and warns that it can cause cancer and other health complications.

    What are the dangers in consuming such palm oil?

    As in all adulterated foods, impacts on health could range from a mild discomfort to serious long term effects such as cancer and organ impairment, depending on the chemical composition of the additive used in the food. There have been reports of gastrointestinal issues from people who allegedly consumed foods prepared with adulterated palm oil.

    Have you seen these adulterated palm oils or done any analysis?

    I have not seen adulterated palm oil or perhaps I have had no intuitive need to look out for such. That is not say I might not have seen one unknowingly on the supermarket shelves. I always try to avoid smartly packaged palm oil, since it is one item that is still amply produced locally. I believe the rural dwellers are likely no to have access to these chemicals, which in all likelihood do not come cheaply. Thus, when buying palm oil for use, I buy from source. I have not carried out any analysis on palm oil especially with respect to this emerging concern but it will be interesting to quickly do so in order to have a scientifically provable fact to the insinuation.

    There have been fears about the chemicals being carcinogenic, what is your opinion on this?

    As to the chemicals being used, unconfirmed reports indicates they are dyes, presumably to enhance the red hue of the oil. If this is true, consuming artificially formulated dyes or pigments could be poisonous, depending on the composition of the dye. Some dye are formulated using colourful and often toxic metals, which could bioaccumulate in the body and damage its physiology, while other dyes are azo dyes which have allergenic, carcinogenic, mutagenic, and teratogenic effects on humans. If the presence of any of these dyes is confirmed to be present in the oil, then this must be taken as an emergency by the regulatory bodies.

    There have been fears that these adulterated palm oils may be responsible for the rise in cancer cases; what do you think?

    This may not be a definitive statement, as there is presently no peer reviewed publication to this effect to my knowledge. However, the newly acquired knack of Nigerians to go for processed, packaged and often colourful foods is obviously doing more damage to our health, thus the increasing incidences of these terrible ailments. So, it is not only in palm oil that one may be exposed to cancer, other foods and condiments, in addition to our rapidly deteriorating urban environment, may also serve as exposure route for these ailments. The concern is that most of these foods find their ways onto our supermarket shelves without the necessary certification by NAFDAC.

    A particular consumer said the one she bought had repulsive odour and filled with blackish particles.

    If this is proven to be true, then samples must be obtained and adequately tested to determine the constituent. The repulsive odour may be due to the presence of the dye. Dyes, especially the azo types, smell awfully. The presence of particles as an indication of artificial additives may not be conclusive, as wholly natural palm oil may still contain particles if not refined properly.

    The adulterated oil seems to be everywhere; this probably casts a question mark on the efficiency of NAFDAC, what do you think? What do you think can be done to exterminate these dangerous products in the market?

    The problem is that products get into the market faster than NAFDAC could effectively monitor. Nigerians can also assist by reporting suspicions of such food items to the regulatory bodies for prompt action. I will encourage consumers to move as close as possible to the base of the production chain when buying food items, especially those that are still produced locally. In other words, patronise the traders who bring in fresh produce from the hinterland rather than looking for attractively packaged food items on the shelves. In so doing, the probability of buying adulterated items might be reduced. Also, as there is virtually no household in Nigeria which does not consume palm oil, the item must be listed as a priority food which requires regular sampling, by NAFDAC, from the local markets and departmental stores to determine their constituents.

  • Citi presents markets outlook to Fed Govt

    Citi presents markets outlook to Fed Govt

    Citi International Bank has presented energy markets outlook to Federal Government’s Economic Management Team (EMT) led by the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo.

    The presentation focused on the outlook for Energy markets including oil, gas, power and renewables, in the short, medium and long-term. The Citi delegation was led by Citi Nigeria CEO, Akin Dawodu. Other members of the delegation included Citi’s Global Head of Energy Strategy, Seth Kleinman, who was the lead presenter, Citi’s Chief Economist for Africa, David Cowan and Citi’s Regional Public Sector Head, Mrs. Funmi Ogunlesi.

    The presentation was designed to provide the government top economic managers with the forecast international market prices for oil and other energy sources such as gas.

    Following the presentation, Dawodu said: “It has been a great privilege to provide this key data and information to the top-tiers of government through the EMT as Chaired by His Excellency, the Vice President. We were honoured to have the opportunity and greatly impressed by the levels of engagement and focus of the members of the EMT.

    Kleinman also expressed the bank’s appreciation for the opportunity and stated that it represented a great honour for Citi, to have been have been invited to give this presentation.

    Nigeria remains a key focus country for Citi within Africa and the emerging markets. Osinbajo expressed his appreciation to Citi for the very timely presentation, which he said, would assist in future planning for the economy.

  • Ramadan: Big boost for fruit markets

    The annual Islamic fasting period, otherwise known as ‘Ramadan’, presents  an opportunity for increased fruit sales. This is why in spite of an appreciable increase in the prices of fruits,retailers are experiencing increased sales, TONIA ‘DIYAN reports.

    Fruits are said to be of high nutritional value because they contain several minerals and vitamins needed for man’s healthy growth. This is why there has been an intense campaign to ensure that Nigerians include fruits in their daily diet.

    This campaign may not have recorded the best of results, especially when the cost of fruits is high compared to buying a regular meal. The biting economic reality has also not helped matters in this regard.

    However, one season Nigerians have found fruits a necessity is during holy months of Lent and Ramadan. These months are set aside for fasting by Christians and Muslims.

    For instance, Arafat Ibrahim and her family had joined their muslim counterparts across the world to observe this year’s Ramadan. For them, when it is not Ramadan, they do not see the nutritional benefit of adding fruits to their daily meals, they rather see it as a waste of money. Ibrahim, like many muslims, patronise fruit sellers only during Ramadan because she would need to break her fast first with fruits and then, her meals.

    Aware that the last six months have seen price-sensitive, markets across Lagos suffer from higher food costs. She, like many fruits merchants, agreed that this higher prices have not affected the demand for fruits this Ramadan period.

    As she visited some fruit markets in Lagos, she discovered that yearly , the holy month keeps turning into boom time for fruit sellers who are enjoying high demand presently.

    Hear her: “Every year, there is a surge in spending before, during and after Ramadan, with increase in prices of food items and fruits in the traditional markets across the country. But market survey has showed that demand for fruits tend to increase by around 50-60 per cent during Ramadan compared to other months,” she said.

    However, fruit traders have revealed that demand for fruit is up this Ramadan despite significantly higher prices compared to last year’s regardless of price hikes.Market sources say the supply of fruits to the metropolis has risen by between 50 and 55 per cent in wholesale fruit markets particularly in Ketu fruit market. However, they have said it usually goes up further in the course of the 30-day fasting period.

    It was also discovered that demand for fruits such as apple, citrus fruits such as oranges and tangerine, water melon, pineapple and banana  considerably increases during fasting periods but sellers say patronage remains high notwithstanding.

    Speaking on the development, the market leader of Ketu fruit market, Chief MrsAmopeAdesanya said, fruit markets record brisk sales whenever  Ramadan period was in the air and that her market has experienced very high sale in the last two weeks following the commencement of the holy month. According to her, at this time, it is not new to the trade. Traders of the commodity are always expectant that the season would cause a boom for them once again. “The fact that some prices of fruits have gone up and the quantity of some reduced doesn’t make patronage low for us. There are few people however  who have reduced the amount and quantity of fruits. At weekends, the Christians who buy to eat and traders who buy to resell in bits, also buy in smaller quantities. But our Muslim customer’s, particularly the traders, buy more than they did at this time last year.

    Amope added: ”There is increase in the supply of fruits in this market because we are aware that this is a major market for all kinds of fruit in mainland apart from Idi Oro market at Mushin. We have stock up varieties of fruits and we are seeing huge patronage from customers. We are selling more oranges, water melon, pineapple and apple now. We get apple from Cotonou and other fruits from the north.”

    At the market, baskets of orange ranged from N900, N1000, N1, 100, 1, 200, N1, 300 respectively depending on the size. A dozen of Pineapple ranges from N1, 600, N2, 000, N2, 500 and above also depending on size.

    The Watermelon section of the market was the busiest with more customers buying when The Nation Shopping visited.  Mr Isiaka Olarenwaju sells the item in large quantity, he testified that sale is on the high side, stating that Muslims prefers to break their fast with watermelon more compare to other fruits. According to him, the size of the fruit is an advantage. It is big and can go round many people at once. A Dozen cost 1, 500, N2, 000, N2, 500 and more. He said the price is determined by the size.

    Also, a bag of raw groundnut cost N2, 500, N3, 000 and a paint container measurement cost N350. A trader who sells it at the same market, Mr. Shola Kolawole, said the price of groundnut is not too expensive compared to other fruit because it is in its season now

    Mrs. AbeniGbadamosi, a pear seller, said 50pieces of it cost N700. It is one of the most expensive  now compare to other fruits but it is in high demand.

    For KemisolaIshola, a fruit seller at Mile 12 market, not too far from the fruit market at Ketu, she has reached her best sales this week. “I am busier than I used to be since Ramadan  began. Most times now,  it is hard to find a good time to eat lunch. I think people are more enlightened about the importance of fruits to the body and they have decided to take advantage of the season.”

  • Ife markets to be shut for two days

    The Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, Ojaja II, has ordered markets in the town to be shut for two days.

    The monarch sent a message round the town yesterday through a town crier that the market should be locked between 7am and 9am each day.

    According to the message, the closure of the markets would be observed today and tomorrow.

    In the two days, prayers would be offered to address issues of battered national economy, spate of kidnapping and some other social vices that “have retarded the progress of the country”.

    However, the message did not mention if the prayers would be offered by traditionalists, Christians or Moslems.

  • Government must let the markets work

    If there is any lesson the federal government must learn from the lingering petrol crises, in the unabated long queues at our petrol stations, it is that that a government cannot substitute itself for the market no matter the depth of its patriotic intentions.  From the management of the foreign exchange to petrol markets, we see an economic management paradigm that markets do not matter, that a government can take over the fundamental functions of markets from the supply of goods, to the determination of demand and the ultimate fixing of prices. Nothing illustrates the fallacy of this economic paradigm more than the current petrol crisis. When economic goods are mechanically and artificially priced below their true economic value, the effective and efficient functioning of markets are distorted, supply dries up and demand becomes over-bloated. This leads to secondary and parallel markets where economic goods will ultimately find prices closer to its true value. The few privileged elites who control supply benefit from unjustifiable rent, the market becomes inefficient and productivity and economic output ultimately decline. It will be useful to estimate the productivity loss and output decline occasioned by the current petrol crisis in all sectors of the economy including small business and the impact on the quality of life of Nigerian households.

    If the economic and output implications issues of a fixed pricing of foreign exchange are not as clear, it should be clearer with the petrol product crisis.  Essentially, the fixed price of petrol below its economic value created little incentive for the private sector to participate in the petrol market leaving virtually the NNPC as the sole supplier. Despite all patriotic intentions and the best of logistic management, the NNPC alone has been unable to cope and meet national demand. If any government must be open to market logic, it should be the one operating in a time of heavy fiscal constrains like the current administration. In the period of fiscal abundance, a government might have the resources to call the bluff of markets, even controversially so, but certainly not in the period of fiscal constraints where private sector resources need to be deliberately courted and mobilized to complement constrained fiscal supplies. From Venezuela to Nigeria, we see the same challenge of the anti-market economic policy and its negative effect on output and employment. A genuinely patriotic Hugo Chavez could call the bluff of markets when oil prices were high in his days in Venezuela but not the current Maduro government operating in period of low oil prices and heavily constrained fiscal state resources. Outputs have shrunk; inflation and unemployment have skyrocketed in Maduro’s Venezuela.  Shops are empty and there are typical long queues for basic essential groceries. Like Zimbabwe with the same unorthodox economic policies, we in Nigeria are now beginning to queue perpetually for fuel, queue for forex and queue for electricity.

    As it affects petrol and forex markets, the same issues affect the infrastructure and power markets. The Works and Power Minister has lamented  that while his ministry needs N2 trillion to complete just the road projects inherited from the previous administration, his ministry will at best have just about N400billion from the budget, which is expected to finance road construction, including investments required to radically upgrade our power infrastructure. It should be obvious that if we do not get our power markets to work with the right pricing of economic goods that provide sufficient incentives for private investments from home and abroad, we should say good-bye to serious improvement in our electricity situation. Babatunde Fashola despite his good track record may be potentially demystified by the current government economic policy.

    It is not that markets are always perfect and cannot fail. There are in fact critical instances where markets fail and their dysfunction necessitates the intervention of the state to protect the poor and the socially vulnerable. In the case of public goods like education and health, where the social benefits of investments are far bigger than private returns to capital, when private capital will not sufficiently invest in public goods, the state must intervene to correct market failure to ensure the protection of the socially vulnerable, the poor and the larger society.  The state will achieve this by driving public investments in social services including the provision of subsidies targeting the socially vulnerable.  Such public investments and social subsidies especially in a fiscally constrained state must be appropriately targeted to ensure that they are going to only those who deserve such subsidies, those who cannot afford to pay commercial prices.  Designing such social subsidy programme can be very challenging as we see in the petrol subsidy programme as well as in the current forex allocation programme, which is effectively a social subsidy programme to buy the dollar at prices below its true economic value. The true economic value or price of the dollar is the equilibrium price that balances demand and supply in the forex market. This price given parallel market rate today is clearly above the official fixed exchange rate.

    The distortion in the current forex subsidy programme is obvious. The subsidy programme is benefiting the rich and narrow elites more than the poor. The poor do not buy dollars. They do not process letter of credit nor buy dollars for capital investments in their companies and their subsidiaries abroad. They do not pay overseas school fees neither do they pay mortgages abroad using our dollar commonwealth. They do not travel overseas and certainly do not buy Personal Travel Allowances at official rates. And, there is certainly very little trickle-down effect of this heavy subsidizing of the dollar consumption of narrow elites as production inputs are priced at near parallel market rates, in the determination of market prices, even among businesses that are privileged to get the dollar at official rate.  The evidence of rising inflation confirms that the current non- market, fixed forex pricing policy, despite its good intentions has not delivered low prices of goods for the poor.

    The same distortion also happens in the petrol subsidy programme. The wealthy consumes more petrol with several fuel guzzling cars per household compared to the low income that uses mass-shared public transportation. The wealthy benefit from petroleum product subsidy more than the poor. The petrol product market will be more efficient if prices reflect their true economic value at equilibrium prices that balance demand and supply. At true economic prices, demand will reduce to match available supply. This will solve the lamentation of the petroleum minister that 30 percent of our fuel imports are ferried across the border to Cameroun and Chad where petroleum product prices are closer to their economic value.  In a market-driven pricing regime, the arbitrage margin between local price and cross-border price of petroleum product shrinks eliminating incentives to smuggle petrol across the border. Fuel imports and demand for dollar for fuel import will crash; the naira will appreciate with positive spiral effect on social welfare. Private sector supply of petroleum products will also increase at market prices, reducing the pressure on NNPC to supply and fulfil virtually most of national demand. We can then save resources from NNPC and plough them to fund social investments in infrastructure, public transportation, health and education.

    Our argument in essence is that a fiscally constrained government such as we have, cannot afford to distort markets in area where they are potentially efficient and create inefficiencies by its commission or omission. The social cost of such market distortions is high on society, the economy and general public welfare. While the anti-corruption stance of the Buhari government is commendable, it must embrace real economic pragmatism and allow markets to function if it will make a difference in reversing the economic downturn. There is very little evidence, even if nascent, that the anti-market economic policy orientation of the government is working. Growth rate is at its lowest in decades, unemployment and inflation are rising. It is now time for change. It is time for the government to let the markets work.

     

    • Akanmu writes on Strategy and Public Policy.