Tag: shops

  • Anambra, group sign MoU to build 20,000 shops

    The Anambra State Government and Bukham Group, a firm of real estate developers, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to develop 20,000 units of shops at the Anambra International Trade Centre, Oba, near Onitsha.

    Governor Willie Obiano and the Chairman of the group, Mr. Bukham Hassan, signed the agreement. Under the MoU, Bukham Group would build 20,000 shops, including 2, 000 warehouses and hotels. The group would also build a primary school, a cinema house, police post, health centre and a fire station in the project, which are expected to be completed in five years.

    Represented by Mr. Ifeatu Onejeme, the state Commissioner for Industry, Trade and Commerce, at the signing, Obiano said the government would build access roads to the centre from Onitsha-Owerri road and Oba. He noted that the centre would attract infrastructure, boost the economy and continue to generate employment for the community and its environs.

    “Trade and commerce development is one of the core pillars of our administration and what we have done today speaks volume of the strong desire to make the state a major commercial hub in Africa. Government has agreed to fence the market centre, connect it with electricity as well as ensure adequate security. With this agreement, the developer (Bukham Group) has assured that the market centre will be inaugurated in March with 1,700 shops placed on offer for the public,’’ Obiano said.

    The governor revealed that N3 billion had been set aside for infrastructure development at the centre.

    The chairman of the group said the phase 1 of the project was nearing completion and would be inaugurated in March this year. “The project will gulp about N100 billion and it has been bankrolled by Bukham Group and Enterprise Bank Plc. We already have up to 1,000 youths employed and working to construct the centre in order to meet deadline for the project. When the project is completed, no fewer than 100,000 people will be directly engaged and its multiplier effect will be felt by more than a million families,’’ Hassan said.

    The President-General of Amalgamated Market Traders Association of Anambra State (AMATAS), Chief Okwudili Ezenwankwo, lauded the government for attracting the investment to the state. He, however, urged it and the developer to make the shop rents affordable for traders.

  • Fire razes shops, school in Ondo

    Fire razes shops, school in Ondo

    Another fire incident occurred in Odosida area of Ondo town in the early hours of Tuesday, throwing the community into pandemonium as some shops and a private secondary school were razed down.

    The inferno which reportedly started at about 6:00am caused destroyed personal property and vital documents owned by the affected school.
    However, no life was lost in the incident.

    The cause of the inferno has not been ascertained at the time of this report, but speculations were riffed that it occurred shortly after some armed young boys driving in an unmarked Toyota Camry stormed the area at about 5: 00am with guns and other dangerous weapons before setting the place ablaze.

    The Nation gathered that the hoodlums had initially blocked the major road in the street, before shooting sporadically and set the shops ablaze.

    Eyewitnesses said the hoodlums who were reportedly led by a boy, whose identity was yet to be ascertained, had engaged in an argument with his brother whose name was given as Rotimi, over the property of their late father.

    The eyewitnesses said the hoodlums had earlier invaded a beer palour in the area and brought out drinks before setting the shops ablaze.

  • Fire razes 50 shops in Lagos

    Fire razes 50 shops in Lagos

    Fifty shops containing planks and other building materials were razed yesterday in Abule-Egba, Lagos State.

    The Director, State Fire Service, Rasaq Fadipe, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that two vehicles and cutting machines were also burnt.

    There was no casualty.

    Fadipe said the incident happened at Sawmill, U-Turn Bus Stop, Abule-Egba.

    He said firemen put out the fire after battling with it for hours.

    Fadipe told NAN that the cause of the fire was yet to be known.

     

  • Fire destroys over 100 shops in Ibadan market

    Fire destroys over 100 shops in Ibadan market

    GOODS worth over N1billion were destroyed in a fire inferno that ravaged parts of the popular Aleshinloye market in Ibadan,Oyo state capital at the weekend.

    Men of the State Fire Service yesterday successfully quenched the raging fire, which began on Friday night.

    Hundreds of affected traders were seen wailing over the huge loss, calling on well- meaning individuals and government at all levels to come and assist them.

    The leader of Igbo community in the state, Eze Ndigbo of Ibadanland,  Eze Alex Anozie, led other Igbo chiefs to the market to sympathise  with the  traders yesterday.

    Describing the loss as very devastating, Anozie made passionate appeal to the government to assist the affected traders financially and also help in reconstructing the shops.

    He also suggested that the market be ordered to close by 6pm daily, leaving only the security personnel to man the market and open for business by 7am.

    “I remember that since such was introduced at Onitsha market, frequent fire out break stopped,” Anozie added.

    The burnt items are mainly jeweleries, fabrics, shoes, handbags and travelling bags as well as wrist watches, among others.

    One of the affected traders, Mr.Adeoye Soyemi, who deals with jeweleries, told newsmen that no fewer than six hundred shops were affected in the inferno, putting his loss at close to N1 million.

    He revealed that the fire started as a result of power surge, which affected one refrigerator inside one of the affected shops.

    Further investigation revealed that when the fire initially started, five shops were affected while the private night guards on duty alerted men of Oyo State fire service.

    It was also learnt that the fire fighters could however not get enough water to contain the fire, a development which worsened the situation.

    It was a sad tale for many of the traders who got to know of the incident as late as midnight as hoodlums had already vandalised and stolen their goods before getting to the market.

    As at press time, scores of affected traders were compiling their names and items lost to the inferno with sympathisers thronging the market.

  • Ebola: Bush meat vendors close shops in Benin

    Ebola: Bush meat vendors close shops in Benin

    This is not the best of time for bush meat vendors in Benin, Edo State.

    Many of them have closed shop following reports that the virus may be contacted through wild animals.

    Consumers are also wary of buying what is considered in many homes as a delicacy.

    Vendors at Eki Osa, Uwa, new Benin and Yangan markets,  as well as those along the Benin / Auchi  Road  confirmed low patronage over the last few days.

    Low patronage is also being recorded by bush meat/palm wine joints.

    Mrs. Asosa Idemudia, a bush meat seller said: “the Ebola alert has scared people away from  consuming bush meat.”

    Another vendor, Mrs. Jane Ekinafo said: “since bush meat is believed to be a cause of the disease, I don’t want to touch it for now.

    “If you can contact it (Ebola) by eating an infected animal, it is possible that one who handles it for sale can also be infected.”

    Meanwhile, the Edo State Government said yesterday that there is no trace of the disease yet in the state, but advised residents to remain vigilant and report any suspicious case to the nearest health facility.

    Health Commissioner Aihanuwa Eregie told reporters in Benin that  the state Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization (WHO)  have mounted  a surveillance in all parts of the state to ensure early detection of any infection and  timely containment and control of same.

  • AUGUST 2014 FIFA window: NFF shops for Eagles’ friendlies

    • Technical body given one-week ultimatum
    • African opponents preferred

    The executive committee of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) rose from an emergency meeting in Abuja on Thursday, urging its technical body to immediately open discussion with agents for an international friendly scheduled for August 13.

    The NFF body challenged the technical committee to ensure that an inetrnational friendly is played by Nigeria, on August 13 2014, a day set aside by the Federation of International Football Associations (FIFA) for its 209 affiliate federations to be involved in matches without hinderance from the clubs where their players ply their trade.

    According to the communique, “The committee mandated the NFF Management to proceed with discussions with a number of African countries with a view to the Super Eagles playing a friendly match on the FIFA window of Wednesday, 13th August, 2014, as part of preparations for 2015.

    “The committee expressed satisfaction with all arrangements so far made for the different National Teams, namely Falconets, Flying Eagles and Golden Eaglets ahead of important international matches and qualifying games, and also directed the Technical Sub-Committee to meet in a few days to harmonise all arrangements in this regard.

    “The committee expressed satisfaction with all arrangements so far made for the different National Teams, namely Falconets, Flying Eagles and Golden Eaglets ahead of important international matches and qualifying games, and also directed the Technical Sub-Committee to meet in a few days to harmonise all arrangements in this regard.”

  • Fire razes 120 shops in Lagos market

    Fire razes 120 shops in Lagos market

    It was a bad Sunday for traders at the popular Daleko Market in Isolo, a Lagos surburb, yesterday. An early morning fire razed over 120 shops and destroyed goods worth millions of naira.

    Many others shops were partially torched. The inferno was said to have been sparked by an electrical surge.

    No casualty was recorded as men of the Lagos State Fire Service arrived promptly for rescue operations.

    When The Nation visited the market, fire fighters and other emergency rescue agencies had cordoned off the affected areas. Traders were seen moving the charred remains of their wares to neighbouring streets, causing gridlock on the road.

    Those who could not rescue their goods stood speechless. Many others bemoaned their losses in the midst of sympathisers.

    The market’s Assistant Leader, Alhaja Sidikatu Amori, who claimed the fire was caused by high electrical voltage, said goods worth over N100 million were destroyed.

    “Just last week, two truck-loads of rice were brought in here. We sell yam, palm-oil, rice and vegetable oil, among others in large quantities. Most of these items were gone in the fire. We lost over N100 million goods to the fire. But we must thank men of the state fire service for responding to our distress call in good time. But for them, we wouldn’t have salvaged anything.”

    The Director, Fire Service, Rasaq Fadipe, who said his men were not overwhelmed, confirmed that about 120 shops were destroyed.

    He said: “We are battling with the outbreak and 120 open shops, selling palm oil and vegetable oil, were consumed by the fire. Fire fighting operation is still on, but we are fully in control. We responded with three fire trucks of 1000 litres of water each from Isolo, Ilupeju and Ikeja. The incident was caused by power surge. There is need for total overhauling of electrical wiring system in Lagos markets.”

  • South Africa’s spaza shops suffer as big retail rolls in

    In this corner of South Africa’s black township of Soweto, the biggest building used to be the Catholic church. Now it’s been overshadowed by a shopping center and business has only gotten worse for Grace, a 68-year-old shop owner.

    Like many proprietors of spaza shops – the informal stores that dot township corners – Grace barely manages to keep afloat as more of her neighbors head to the mall.

    “Once people get paid, they buy their groceries at the malls,” she said, sitting among dusty shelves of tea-bags, small packets of biscuits, loose cigarettes and butter.

    “They used to buy their groceries from us. Now they only come for daily items,” she said, declining to give her last name.

    Grace has been running the shop with her husband since 1993, the year before South Africa’s first all-race elections. They used to earn around 1,500 rand ($140) a day, but are down to a third of that now.

    During apartheid, blacks were crammed together in squalid townships miles away from cities. Some residents began to sell staples such as maize meal and cooking oil out of their own homes. The informal stores became known as tuck shops or “spazas,” a slang word that connotes “just getting by”.

    Along with shebeens, or corner taverns, spazas are one of the most visible parts of township life, and a major component of South Africa’s vast informal economy.

    While recent data on the informal economy is hard to come by, a 2002 study by the University of South Africa’s Bureau of Market Research (BMR) estimated that spaza shops brought in around $705 million a year, employing up to 290,000 people.

    Those numbers will have come under pressure over the last decade as real estate developers and big grocers such as Shoprite and Pick N Pay push into black areas, targeting rising consumer spending.

    Getting the cake

    South Africa’s emerging black middle class grew at annual 6.5 per cent between 2001 and 2007, according to the BMR, which estimated the growing socio-economic group at 9.3 million in 2007, out of a total population of around 50 million.

    “The emerging consumer market has been very, very good for construction of retail outlets in non-traditional locations,” said Mike Upton, chief executive of South African building company Group Five.

    “It’s kind of like first mover gets the cake.”

    Grocers have been big beneficiaries of this broadening wealth.

    Shares of Shoprite, Africa’s top retailer, have more than trebled over the last five years, lifted by a push into sub-Saharan Africa and previously underserved South African markets. The Cape Town-based company’s no-frills Usave discount outlets pose a major threat to spaza shops.

    The warehouse-like stores appear tailor-made for low-income customers: most of the laundry soap is for hand washing, not machines. Some dispense with large parking areas as customers come on foot.

    The only milk available is full cream – no skim, organic or soy – while bags of frozen “walkie talkies” – chicken heads and feet – are plentiful and cost just 10 rand.

    In Soweto, a flashpoint of the anti-apartheid struggle, where stone-throwing black youths battled heavily armed soldiers and police with their snarling dogs, the 65,000-sq-meter Maponya Mall is one of several shopping centres that have sprung up in recent years.

    Just down the road from Regina Mundi church where former President Nelson Mandela is depicted in stained glass, the mall boasts a Pick N Pay hyper-market, more than a dozen restaurants and a Virgin Active gym.

    Although still poor, Soweto is unmistakably on the rise, evidenced by the growing number of tidy brick bungalows and shiny Toyotas, and even the odd BMW.

    While recent data is not available, Rose Nkosi, the head of the South African Spaza and Tuckshop Association, reckons that the sprawling black township alone may have lost around 30 percent of its spaza shops since 2005.

    That’s bad news for the elderly or those who live far from a shopping center, Nkosi said.

    “Spazas are community shops,” she said, pointing out they sell in small amounts, such as half loaves of bread, to meet the needs of the poorest customers.

    Economies of scale

    The big retailers are able to use economies of scale to undercut spazas, which usually buy in small volumes and from wholesalers, driving up costs.

    Nkosi has teamed up Songi Pama, an entrepreneur and consultant, to bring spaza shop owners together to buy direct from suppliers such as South Africa’s Tiger Brands and the local units of Unilever and Nestle.

    The survival of spazas is critical to the fabric of the townships because so many of the owners are women, Pama said.

    “The little that they get out of these outlets they use to feed their children and take their children to school.”

    Too few owners are real businesspeople, said Noel Ndhlovu, who publishes industry newsletter Spaza News. Most are just looking to make enough get by, he said.

    “Unfortunately, the bulk of spaza shops, about 60 or 70 percent, are survivalists. And because they are survivalists, they don’t have skills – no business skills, no financial literacy, nothing.”

    In one workshop he ran, Ndhlovu said it took him several sessions to get some of the owners to understand how to work out their gross and net profit.

    Not far from Grace, middle-aged Vincent Jonyane leans out the window of his tin-roof shop and laughs. Business is good, he says. While elderly rivals are stuck in the past, he is thinking of expanding his wooden shack.

    “I’m still young, I know where to buy things cheap,” Jonyane said, pointing to stacks of eggs in cardboard cartons on a shelf.

     

    •Source: Reuters

     

  • POWA donates shops to widows

    POWA donates shops to widows

    The Chairperson of Police Officers Wives Association (POWA), River State Command, Mrs. Chinyere Ogunsakin, has donated 36 shops to widows of policemen who died in active service.

    Mrs Ogunsakin, who inspected markets belonging to POWA after the election of new executives, said the essence of POWA is to give succour to members and to encourage the less privileged.

    Mrs. Ogunsakin, during a visit to the POWA Market at Mini Okoro, said the association is committed to give assistance to widows who are into petty trading, adding that the amount charged widows for spaces in the market should be moderate.

    She said the idea to allocate shops to widows is in consonance with her husband’s policy.

    The POWA chairperson said the new executives would collate list of genuine beneficiaries.

    Mrs ogunsakin, who encouraged the women to keep the barracks clean, said: “The market is for you not the executives.”

    She stated that during the 50th anniversary of POWA, she would encourage schools and children to participate in various talent shows which would prepare them for a better future.

    She also urged the POWA Secretariat to ensure they keep their records up to date to guide against corruption as the Commissioner of Police, Tunde Ogunsakin would not accept any excuse from anybody found wanting.

    The POWA election was attended by over 150 members . The affairs of POWA are to be directed by the new executives, which has Ngozi Anaogu as Secretary.

  • Excess crude oil funds: Oluyole council boss to build schools, shops, others

    Excess crude oil funds: Oluyole council boss to build schools, shops, others

    Worried about infrastructure development particularly at the grass roots, Oyo State government has channelled the chunk of the excess crude money which the Federal G overnment shared amongst the states in December last year, into provision of basic infrastructure facilities and amenities within the 33 local government councils.

    Specifically, each local government council was given N100 million from the oil windfall with the mandate to provide basic infrastructure and amenities at the local level according to the needs of the local residents.

    Yielding to this directive, the chairman, Transition Committee of Oluyole Local Government, Prince Ayodeji Abass-Aleshinloye recently inaugurated a N60 million capital projects within the council areas, which is aimed at proving succour to various communities.

    The projects include construction of Ifelojulo Community School, Ololade Layout, Mosfala, construction of 12 lock-up bungalow stalls at Toll-Gate Market, construction of 24 open market stalls at Toll-Gate, construction of 24 lock-up market stalls at New Garage.

    Others include construction of a block of three classrooms with headmaster’s office and toilet at Ansar-Ud-Deen Primary School, Onigambari and construction of a block of three classrooms with headmaster’s office and toilet at OLBC Primary School, Lamolo.

    Flagging-off the project at Ifelojulo community, Abass-Aleshinloye explained that the objectives of the state government is to bring succour to its people through construction of new modern markets, employment generation, promotion of basic education and economic empowerment of all and sundry, to enhanced living condition of the people through equitable distribution and access to the dividends of democracy.

    According to him, the inaugurated projects will be completed within two to four months to further re-emphasise that the government will not relent in its determination to improve the quality of lives of the people.

    “I want to express my pleasure with a sense of accomplishment that the state government, under the qualitative leadership of Governor Abiola Ajimobi, who has been wonderful with the aggressive manner with which he has been implementing capital projects across the nook and crannies of the state.

    “I should therefore use this medium to enjoin all and sundry to continue to join hands with the local and state government in our bid to turn this state around and refuse to be manipulated or cajoled by some deceitful politicians that are going around just to take this state backward again by decades,” he stated.

    The Oluyole council boss also charged the citizens of the state to continue to give their unalloyed support to the present administration at all levels.

    Commending the council boss, leader of Ifelojulo community, Mosfala, Chief Sola Ayoola thanked the council for simultaneously embarking upon the construction of the block of classrooms in the community.

    “Our children have been suffering for long when going to school because the closest school to our community is one kilometre away, but when this project is completed, our children will be comfortable and have a conducive atmosphere for learning,” he said.

    According to him, the presence of the government is being felt here for the first time in the area.

    Also, the Babaloja of Toll-Gate Market, Chief Samuel Odedina stated that the construction of the shops shows that the present government in the state is a listening one and has passion for the welfare of its citizens.

    “When we were chased off from the road side, we thought that this government was a wicked one, and when they promised to build modern lock-up shops for us we didn’t believe until now. We are grateful to Mr Abass-Aleshinloye and Governor Ajimobi,” the Babaloja said.