Tag: Mile 12

  • Ambode reopens Mile 12 market

    Ambode reopens Mile 12 market

    TWO weeks after its closure following a riot, Mile 12 market was reopened yesterday on the order of Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode.

    But the market is to be relocated to “another suitable place” because it can no longer contain traders, according to a statement by Information and Strategic Commissioner Steve Ayorinde.

    Ayorinde said the market was reopened following agreement reached at a meeting involving market men/women, traditional leaders in Agiliti and Maidan communities, residents and the Community Development Association (CDA).

    Under the agreement, activities at the market shall, henceforth, be confined within the market;  street trading will no longer be allowed.

    Trading will also be carried out in a clean and hygienic environment.

    Other major points of the agreement are: “relocation of the market to another suitable location as the existing market can no longer contain the traders; ban on the use of commercial motorcycles (Okada riders) in the area; peaceful co-existence amongst all ethnic groups in the market and environs; and removal of all shanties and illegal attachments/structures within the market area.”

    Ayorinde said the stakeholders agreed that trading could only thrive in a peaceful atmosphere.

    A Mile 12 market leader, Alhaji Jubril Magaji, yesterday said people in the area were determined to live together.

    Magaji, a foundation member of Sukura Yam Sellers Association of Nigeria, said: “You can see for yourself that the market is open and after sanitation, you will see traders and customers bargaining. The trucks are not here yet because closing a market for 14 days is not easy on traders. The trucks have been offloading in different areas and also Ogun State government was proactive enough to offer us a space within their jurisdiction. Soon, this place will be a beehive of activities as it used to be.”

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the market lacked the usual hustle and bustle it is noted for following its reopening.

    Traders complained of low patronage; customers lamented the high cost of goods.

  • Govt, leaders agree on relocation of Mile 12 Market

    Govt, leaders agree on relocation of Mile 12 Market

    Leaders of communities affected during the Agiliti crisis yesterday agreed with the Lagos State Government on the relocation of Mile 12 market from Kosofe local government area.

    Alhaji Shehu Usman, Financial Secretary of Mile 12 Market, made this known at a news conference by the leader of the market, Maidan and Agiliti communities at Alausa, Ikeja.

    Usman said they had resolved to work with the government on the relocation.

    He noted that the market had grown bigger than its present location and social infrastructure.

    “It has become necessary for its relocation to another suitable and more convenient location within the state, “ he said.

    According to Usman, the relocation will help increase economic growth and development, provide better infrastructure and reduce traffic congestion.

    He said stakeholders agreed with the government on the ban of motorcycles as means of transportation in the area, removal of shanties and blighted areas, among others.

    According to Usman, the motorcyclists were responsible for the breakdown of law and order that caused the crisis.

    The Secretary to the State Government, Mr Tunji Bello, said government’s decision on the relocation and other matters arising would be made known in due course.

  • ‘Mile 12 clash caused by joblessness’

    Lagos State government has been urged to create jobs to curb hooliganism among youths.

    Chairman of Okada Riders Welfare Association of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) Comrade Adeleke Adegboyega, who gave the advice in an interview with The Nation, said the clash in Agiliti near Mile 12 was caused by joblessness.

    He said people should not blame commercial motorcyclists aka Okada riders for the crisis.

    He enjoined the government to show interest in commercial motorcyclists’ welfare, because they are contributing to the state’s development.

    Adegboyega added: “We reduce pressure on the government by creating jobs and contributing to the economic development of the country through transportation.”

  • Mile 12: Stray bullet victim battles for life

    Mile 12: Stray bullet victim battles for life

    Doctors are battling to save a 16-year-old boy, Bolaji Kalejaye, who was hit by a stray bullet during last week’s violence in Agiliti, near Mile 12 on the outskirts of Lagos.

    A bullet pierced through the back of Kalejaye, who was on his way home after writing the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).

    Kalejaye’s case was miraculous. The bullet tore through his stomach, pushing out a vital organ, which he said he held in his hands. He was rushed to the nearest police station where he was allegedly sent away.

    In pains, he fell on the road. Passersby ignored him as they ran for cover.

    Some neighbours later rushed Kalejaye to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) in Ikeja where doctors rallied to save his life, stitching the lower part of his stomach to the upper part of his private parts.

    No fewer than 16 persons died in the mayhem and  177 are being tried by the Lagos State Government for their roles in the violence.

  • Mile 12: Stray bullet victim battles for life

    Mile 12: Stray bullet victim battles for life

    THERE were echoes of the Mile 12 disturbance yesterday, eight days after the riot in which 16 persons died.

    A 16-year-old boy, Bolaji Kalejaye, hit by a stray bullet is battling for his life in hospital.

    A school bursar, Rasaq Olaide, who was machete on the head, has been discharged from hospital.

    A bullet pierced through the back of Kalejaye, who was on his way home after writing the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), and came out from his stomach, spilling his intestine.

    Kalejaye, it was learnt, packed his intestine and rushed to the nearest police station where he was allegedly sent away.

    He was said to have fallen on the road in pains. Passersby reportedly ignored him as they ran for cover.

    Some neighbours later rushed him to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) in Ikeja.

    Doctors rallied to save his life, stitching the lower part of his stomach to the upper part of his private parts.

    His parents are seeking assistance from government and individuals to pay his bill.

    Kalejaye said: “I left the house around 5am that day for Ikeja, where my JAMB centre was. On getting to Mile 12 on my way home after the exam, I saw people raising their hands up. I followed suit. Suddenly people started running and I joined them in running. I noticed police people were behind me as I ran. It was while I was running that I realised that I have been hit by bullet.

    “When the bullet hit me, I was bleeding, I was thirsty but I refused to drink water because we have been thought how to survive gunshot wounds.

    “I was crying for help but no one answered me. So, I removed my tee shirt and used it to pack my intestines up and pushed them inside. I managed to walk about 50 steps to the police station that is under Mile 12 bridge, where I pleaded with them to help me.

    “But the policemen chased me away. They saw that I was bleeding badly but they told me to go away that their station was not hospital. I was becoming weak. I had to beg some of the area boys hanging around to help me.

    “Fortunately, one of them knew me and they rushed me to a nearby private hospital. It was the doctor that removed the bullet which was hanging on my outer stomach.

    “I gave them my daddy’s number. So, my daddy came and they doctor now told them to transfer me to specialist hospital. That was how my parents brought me here and I was operated on.”

    The victim’s mother, Mrs Alero Kalejaye, a crayfish seller, said they have spent all their savings and even borrowed to save his life.

    She said the doctors told them Kalejaye will undergo another surgery in two weeks time.

    The mother of five said she had resorted to begging to safe her son.

    “We have spent over N500,000 since last Thursday that this incident happened. I have even called my crayfish customers and borrowed money from them. It is so bad that on Monday I went begging from General Hospital to Computer village in order to raise money to buy drugs for my boy.

    “I am begging Nigerians to help me and safe my son’s life. I am begging them because at the moment, I do not even have money to eat. It is the relatives of other patients that have been assisting me with money.

    “At the moment, a pipe (catheter) is on his body from where he passes out faeces. Some of the money we have spent here are the savings for his admission and the school fees for his older siblings. Where do I start?” she sobbed.

    Asked why she didn’t go in search of her son when the crisis started, Mrs. Kalejaye said she travelled to Ondo State two days before the violence and only returned that Thursday.

    “I was not around. I went to Ondo State on Tuesday to buy crayfish. It was on my way back, when I got to Mile 12, people were talking about a young boy that was shot from the back and his intestines came out. They were narrating how the boy packed his intestines and how police people refused to help him. I did not know it was my Bolaji.

    “Immediately I got home and saw his father’s face, I knew something was not right. I asked him and he told me that he won’t lie to me. That night alone, we spent over N250,000 in the hospital and since then, we have been doing one test or the other and also buying drugs.

    “Why would the police chase a child like that away? Are they not supposed to rescue an innocent child that was hit by stray bullet?” she queried.

    Mrs Kalejaye has appealed to Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and Nigerians to assist the family, through her first bank account – 3026288658, Alero Kalejaye. She can be reached on 08052535277 and 08075621272.

    The Nation learnt that Kalejaye, who applied for Medicine, scored 250 in the UTME.

    Olaide, the Bursar of As-Siddiq Schools in Ikosi, Ketu, told The Nation that he was moving from the primary to the secondary section when he was attacked.

    Olaide said: “I was coming from our Primary school in Iyase and branched at First Bank to make a transaction for the school. When I left the bank, I headed towards the college. The only information I heard was that the bikes were not working. When I got to Aina road, I found out that everywhere was quiet and that there was no bike but people were buying and selling. I decided to walk down the street to get Keke Napep. On getting to the bridge, I saw police vehicles there trying to control those fighting.

    “In less than a minute, I heard gunfire from the other side. I saw people running and I also started running in order to dodge stray bullets. I saw a house close to the bridge and decided to hide there not knowing who the house belonged to. Somebody opened the door and told his friend to enter. I wanted to enter too but he refused and pushed me out. The next thing I saw was five men coming towards the house with cutlasses and clubs and they descended on me. I kept shouting Lailahaillallahu.

    “They struck me with their cutlass at the back of my head and I saw blood all over my body and all the school documents I had on me were scattered in different directions. I managed to escape from there. Everyone was running from me. All the chemist shops were locked. So, nobody could attend to me. I managed to walk back to under the bridge and got a bike that took me back to the primary school. I was then taken to the hospital from the school.”

    Olaide said he sustained a deep cut at the back of his head which was stitched at the hospital. He added that he was also given an injection and some pain relievers.

    The Proprietress of As-Siddiq Schools, Hajia Sherifah Yusuf-Ajibade told The Nation that the pupils closed early that day to ensure their safety.

    She said: “We had to invite the security personnel who brought armoured tank to escort our pupils out of the school. They were released by 2pm instead of the usual 3:30pm. We had heard of the clash since morning but we could not release them until we were able to get the military personnel to assist us. The crisis did not get to our area but we could not retain the children in the school because we were not sure they would not get there.”

  • 177 to face trial for Mile 12 riots

    177 to face trial for Mile 12 riots

    Twenty-Eight more persons were yesterday arraigned before a magistrates’ court in Lagos, bringing to 177 the number of those now being tried over last Thursday’s Mile 12 violence.

    Lagos State Government has taken over the trial from the police.

    Assistant Director of Public Prosecution (ADPP) Jide Martins told Magistrate Y.O. Aje-Afunwa sitting in Ikeja, Lagos that he has the instruction of the Commissioner for Justice and Attorney-General to take over the case.

    Martins spoke after Prosecuting Chief, Etim Eno-Edobor, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) arraigned the 28 suspects, who pleaded not guilty to the charge which was read to them through an interpreter.

    Eno-Edobor did not object to the request.

    Counsel to the first, 12th and 15th defendants Michael Oni urged the court to grant his clients bail on liberal terms.

    Counsel to the third, seventh and 28th defendants Chief S.A. Bello aligned with Oni, promising that their clients would not jump bail.

    Martins opposed the bail request because the defendants have no connection with the state.

    “My Lord, going through their statements we found out that they don’t have places of abode while most of them are from Niger Republic and Republic of Chad.

    In his ruling, Magistrate Aje-Afunwa said since the offence is bailable, the defendants are entitled to bail.

    She granted each of them N200,000 bail two sureties in the like sum.

    She ordered the sureties to present evidence of tax payment which must be verified by the state Inland Revenue office. Their addresses are also to be verified.

    Mrs Aje-Afunwa adjourned the matter to May 27.

  • Mixed reactions trail Mile 12 traders relocation

    Mixed reactions trail Mile 12 traders relocation

    Displaced traders, mainly tomato and pepper sellers at the popular Mile 12 market, have relocated to Kara Market, Ibafo. However, the relocation has been greeted with mixed reactions. While the traders count their blessings because of expected boom in sales, the far location of the market, high cost of items, and unfriendly environment are areas of concern to customers. TONIA DIYAN reports.

    For displaced traders at the popular Mile 12 Food Stuff Market in Lagos, especially tomato and pepper sellers, boom time is here again. The traders, who were displaced from the market in the aftermath of a dispute within the communities in Ketu-Mile 12 area of Lagos, have relocated to Oluwanisola Kara Market, Ibafo.

    However, the relocation to the market situated at Berger and Ibafo along Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, The Nation Shopping learnt, has been greeted with mixed feelings. While the exercise has raised the traders’ hopes of brisk sales, while also reuniting them with their kinsmen from the northern part of the country, some of their customers and buyers have expressed concerns over the new location, which they consider far, with prices of items also high.

    Usman Aruna, one of the tomato sellers and a native of Sokoto, is one of those who see the relocation as an opportunity to reunite with his kinsmen from the north. He told The Nation Shopping that he is pleased with his new place of business. He said he now has peace of mind as the fear of death no longer exists.

    His words: “We see this place as a refuge from the war zone called Mile 12. Our brothers reside and sell here; therefore, we have decided to take refuge here since we are no longer safe with the Yorubas who dominate Mile 12 Market where we used to be.”

    Abdulai Sheu, another trader, expressed similar sentiment. He said: “In the north where we come from, we are mainly farmers and cattle rearers. We go home, farm and harvest our crop which we transport to Lagos and other parts of the country for consumption. Yet, we are killed and our properties destroyed in Lagos. We have decided to stay here for now.”

    Sheu said it is easier for him and his trader colleagues to offload at the new market and sell produce to customers mostly market women. “This place is closer to the high way that takes us to our home town faster than Mile 12,” he noted, adding that alhough, some people say the government might not allow traders stay there because of traffic obstruction on the road, he does not know why that should be since it is a private market.

    From a commercial point of view, Mallam Audu, a cattle rearer, expressed hope that the relocation would translate to increased patronage. He said his kinsmen from Mile 12 Market would make business thrive for them at Kara Market.

    “I am happy that my bothers are here to trade and help our business thrive. Our market is now like a one-stop-shop where you can buy meat, tomato, pepper, bell pepper (Tatashe) and onions rather than moving from one market to another to buy these things. Their presence here will make our market more significant and known,” he told The Nation Shopping.

    It is also boom time for owners and drivers of buses conveying produce from the market to different areas. Some of them, who spoke with The Nation Shopping, confessed that they now have more jobs to do. And with it comes more money.

    “Conveying pepper and tomato is now added to my daily work. People go as far as FESTAC, Amukoko and other far places from here. So, we charge them according to distance and quantity they want to convey per trip,” says Afikayo, one of the bus drivers.

    Indeed, following the relocation, the Kara Cattle Market has become busier than before. The market is gradually becoming a centre of attraction for buyers and sellers, particularly market women who buy in bulk from trucks offloading and resell in bits. For now, there is no other place in and around the area that is enjoying such increased tempo of business/commercial activities.

    The food contractor and head of catering, Eko Hotel and Suites, also testified to the convenience and increased tempo of activities at the market. When the The Nation Shopping met her at the market shopping for tomato and pepper in bulk, the woman, who pleaded not to be mentioned, said her visit to the market has become an everyday thing since the traders relocated.

    Hear her: “I now patronize this market, but before now, I visit this place mainly for meat. But now that the pepper sellers have been relocated here, it is easy for me to do my daily shopping in a particular place, unlike before when I and my team had to come here for meat and then go back to Mile 12 for pepper and tomato.”

    Indeed, the hustling and bustling in the market can hardly go unnoticed. The loud voices of mallams selling tomato and pepper could be heard even from a distance as they try to attract buyers for their goods. Although, they face hard competition because they all sell the same wares in a small space they now manage, some of them even bring out the tomato to meet the buyers who are not able to enter the flooded market..

    The market is at its peak in the mornings. There is not a single corner where a big crowd is not seen, as sellers and buyers engage in hard bargain for a very long time. Everyone seems to be in hurry. While some buyers feel satisfied after purchasing at a spot for convenience, others feel dissatisfied because of the hike in prices of the items.

    For instance, a woman, Stella Maris, who bought tomato and pepper in bulk, said she bought from traders when they were offloading. She said she was fortunate to arrive the market as early as 6am and got cheap bargain than those who came late. “I bought directly from the trucks as they arrived in turns and was fortunate to get baskets of tomato for between N1, 800 and N2, 000 instead of between N3, 500 and N4, 000 per basket,” she said.

    Maris also said she bought pepper for N8, 000 per bag as against N9, 000 they are selling, while a bell of pepper (Tatashe) cost N3, 200 instead of N4, 500. She was also lucky to buy onions for N5, 000 instead of N6, 500 per bag. She, however, regretted that “Prices of the items are not friendly at all. They used to be cheaper at Mile 12 market.”

    Maris noted that prices of items at the new market are rather expensive. “This is why you can see market women, I mean those who would buy to resell in bits share bags and baskets amongst themselves. They move around the market asking people who want to buy if they are interested in sharing as they couldn’t afford to buy bags and baskets,” she said.

    However, despite traders and buyers’ excitement over convenience and patronage, there are issues around the new location. For instance, the head of catering for Eko Hotel and Suites complained that the place is water logged, calling on government to help develop it.

    She also noted that such a market is not suitable for the highway, as offloading food items is sure to pose a major traffic challenge. “I notice some vehicles loading and offloading on the highway and it can be very risky,” she said.

    The Nation shopping learnt that the Lagos State Government had always wanted to shut the Mile 12 Market because it obstructs the free flow of traffic on Ikorodu Road. Motorists who help buyers and market women convey their produce were a menace, as they consistently load and offload while parked on the high way.

    Officials of Lagos State Transport Management Agency (LASMA) are said to have been hectic time controlling traffic in that axis. Therefore, the thinking was that the only way traffic can be decongested there was to shut the market.

    This was why when the shutdown was announced it came as a relief to not a few traders and road users. Kara market, which is a privately owned market named after its owner, Oluwanisola, is a relatively peaceful places.  It has 31 heads and an overall chairman.

    For orderliness, a fine of N5, 000 is imposed on anyone who fights. In other words, people can only shout at themselves when they argue, but are not allowed to raise their hands against each other. “You cannot fight here, people are very careful. The market is peaceful and doesn’t encourage violence,” says Mallam Audu, a cattle rearer.

  • Mile 12: Police arraign 32 for public disturbance

    Mile 12: Police arraign 32 for public disturbance

    Thirty-two persons were yesterday arraigned before an Ikeja Magistrates’ Court in Lagos for last Thursday’s Mile 12 disturbance.

    They are among the 105 persons arrested by the police during the riot, which claimed 16 lives.

    The defendants are Sanusi Mohammed, 17, Haruna Abdulahi, 30, Umaru Bala, 18, Saheed Tahir Abdulahi, 20, Musa Isa, 22, Biliaminu Dauda, 15, Abeeb Ibrahim, 16, Farouq Adamu, 22, Aminu Abubakar, 22, Sanni Amadu, 24, Amoo Mustapha, 42, Danjuma Adamson, 30, America Umaru Saidu, 21, Awolu Alli, 30, Rufai Ibrahim, 15, Monday Obasi, 37, Aminu Abubakar, 19, Abdulquddus Olalekan Ajuwon, 19, Tunde Nureni, 24, Abdulahi Umoru, 20, Musa Usman, 35 and Abdulahi Aliyu, 35.

    Others are Aminu Saidi Ibrahim, 19, Sunday Idoko, 48, Hassan Adam, 39, Yahaya Sheu Malami, 23, Rabiu Hamza, 19, Nura Yahu, 19, Rayyanu Lawal, 34, Abdurahman Mohammed, 40, Abubakar Tasu, 28, Sunday Lawal, 15 and Sani Ahasy 15.

    The defendants were arraigned before Magistrate B.O. Osunsanmi.

    They are facing a two-count charge of conspiracy to wit felony, unlawful assembly,   acting in a disorderly manner and also disturbing public peace.

    According to the prosecutors, Osuyi Goddy, a lawyer and Inspector Simon Imhonwa, the accused committed the offence on March 3, at Agiliti, Mile 12, Ikorodu Road, Lagos.

    Goddy said the offence is punishable under Sections 409 and 45 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State 2011.

    The accused pleaded not guilty.

    Goddy, from the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID), Panti, objected to bail for the defendants.

    He said he was opposed to their bail because most of them do not have a fixed address and may jump bail.

    Magistrate Osunsanmi dismissed his submission, saying the offence is bailable.

    She granted them N200,000 bail with two sureties each in the like sum.

    The sureties, she said, must be blood related and must have verifiable addresses.

    She adjourned the matter till April 7.

  • Return of ethnic tensions in Mile 12 Market

    SIR: I celebrated the 16th anniversary of the peace enjoyed in Mile 12 market after the last ethnic attacks in November, 1999 with a research titled ‘Hausa/Yoruba Conflicts and Peacebuilding Initiatives in Mile 12 Market, 1999-2014’. The research was carried out to assess the causes of conflicts between Hausa and Yoruba, the peacebuilding initiatives implemented and the challenges to peace-building in Mile 12 market.

    The rebirth of ethnic tensions in the market and its environs is not something that is shocking but rather evidence of governments failure to adequately cater for its citizenry and this new wave of conflicts should serve as a wake-up call on local, state and national governments to live up to their social responsibilities.

    Since the end of the violent attacks in the market in 1999, government has done practically nothing in building peace within the market. Apart from forcing an agreement on market leaders and setting up of an Inter Ethnic Forum which was short lived, most of the peace-building initiatives were put in place by the stakeholders (market and religious leaders) in the market.

    In the wake of call by some members of the Lagos State House of Assembly to relocate the market, it is important to point out that it is not the market that is responsible for the ethnic conflicts in the area. Relocation of the market to any part of Lagos State is not a guarantee for peace in the area. Though it may ease the traffic problem experienced along Ketu-Ikorodu axis, it will not ensure peaceful coexistence between the ethnic groups. It is important to note that contact between Hausa and Yoruba or any other ethnic group by itself cannot generate ethnic tension but rather it is the socio-economic context of their contact that generate ethnic conflicts.

    A major trigger of the ethnic tensions in the area is lack of social amenities. As at today, the market lacks good road network, public toilets, health facilities and so forth. As if that is not enough, conflict and dispute resolution mechanism in the market has been commercialized. Instead of resolving conflicts, restoring and building relationships, the focus is on generating revenues for market leaders and government. Traders are charged before issues of conflicts and disputes are entertained and resolved. This has been largely responsible for traders’ unwillingness to report disagreements and conflicts to appropriate authorities.

    The recent clash is not because Hausas are blood-thirsty; it is also not because Yorubas are not accommodating. Nigerians should not be deceived to agitate along illusionary ethnic lines. Reducing explanations of conflicts to primordial causes implies sheer ignorance. Truly ethnic diversities are natural. Local, state and national institutions must play roles in regulating the level of the conflict potentials of ethnicity. Government must provide adequate social amenities to the people, set up permanent inter ethnic forum charged with orientating Nigerians on the need for oneness and peaceful coexistence and establish an early warning mechanism to spotlight conflict flashpoints.

     

    • Lawal Rafiu Adeniran,

    lawalrafiu88@gmail.com

  • Calm returns to Mile 12

    Calm returns to Mile 12

    •Ambode, security chiefs visit scene of violence

    Calm has returned to Agiliti near Mile 12 in Lagos after last Thursday’s bloody clash which claimed 14 lives.

    Most of the residents, who fled in the wake of the riot, have also started returning home.

    They were seen moving their things back into their homes.

    Men, women and children clutched bags containing their personal effects.

    There was also buying and selling on the streets.

    Alhaji Aminu Dogara, Chairman of the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) in Lagos, which led his members to visit Agiliti, Maidan, Adebimpe and Mile 12 market yesterday sued for peace.

    The group described the clash as most unfortunate, stressing the strategic nature of Mile 12.

    “The purpose of our visit is to commiserate with all affected in the clash. We have visited the Baale of Mile 12, who represents the Yoruba people, unfortunately, we met his absence.

    “We have also visited the Seriki of Hausa people here. We appeal to all to allow peace to reign. What happened here is a big shame to us all.

    “Nigeria is predominately Christians and Muslims. None of these religions preaches violence. It pains me to hear people play the ethnic card. We are all one. We came to put heads together on how to forge ahead. We must learn from what happened in Libya, Sudan and other countries in conflicts.

    “If we don’t learn from what happened in those countries, we are going to be in trouble,” he said.

    Also yesterday, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode visited the area, with Commander, 9 Brigade, Nigeria Army, Major General Bulama Biu; Commanding Officer, Nigerian Navy Ship Beecroft, Captain Abraham Adaji; Commissioner of Police Fatai Owoseni and Director, Department of State Security Services (DSS), Kunle Ajanaku.

    Lagos State Commissioner for Home Affairs Dr AbdulHakeem AbdulLateef has urged Nigerians not to give the skirmish ethnic coloration.

    He described the clash as “man injustice to man”.

    The Commissioner said: “People should remember that we are from the same father – Adam. We must not hate anybody on the account of religion, race or ethnic differences.

    “A criminal is a criminal; we should stop attaching criminality performed by an individual to his or her religion or tribe.”

    AbdulLateef, who noted that difference in language, tribe and tradition, should not be allowed to disunite Nigerians explained that the most pious individual is the one that fears God.

    “It is possible for the Creator who created our forefather Prophet Adam without father or mother, created Prophet Isa (Jesus) without father to make Nigerians one tribe, being an Hausa, Igbo or Yoruba is nothing but for identification.

    “An Hausa man is a human being like a Yoruba man and both of them are not in any way be different from an Igbo man.”

    Mile-12 Market Chairman Alhaji Haruna Muhammed has said the market’s partial closure has added to the traders’ woes following the clash.

    Muhammed said over N500 million was lost in unsold food items, urging the government to reopen the market.

    According to him, the market’s partial closure affected mostly those selling perishable foodstuffs and fruits like tomatoes, pepper and all kinds of fruits.

    “As I speak with you, we have 25 trucks with perishable foodstuffs in them yet to be offloaded due to the partial closure of the market.

    “The traders are only waiting for government’s directive. But for those that brought in tomatoes, they are at loss because the tomatoes had spent some days in the truck before getting to Lagos.

    “There are many more trucks that would have been here now, but we asked them to wait in Ibafo in Ogun State, until this issue is resolved,” he said.

    The chairman dissociated the traders from the clash, stressing that the market was closed because of its nearness to the riot scene.

    He said: “The clash that led to the death of people and destroyed properties was most unfortunate. Hausa and Yoruba in Mile 12 have no problem living or trading together.

    “It is true majority of the commercial motorcyclists in Mile 12 area are Hausa people; it is the same with the market traders.

    “We in the market are selling foodstuffs; we have no connection with commercial motorcycle riders.

    “We have advised the government to ban their operation in Agiliti and allow only tricycles to operate.

    “There is need for the people of different ethnic groups to work out how to co-exist in peace.”

    Some of the residents of Agiliti are calling on the government to investigate security agencies’ role in the clash.

    According to them, some security agents supported one party in the clash.

    “Most of the destruction in Agiliti would have been prevented if the security agents had acted neutrally.

    “They used tear gas on one party against the other,” Mrs Funke Lamidi said.