Tag: Traders

  • Benue traders protest multiple taxation

    •BIRS: don’t blame us

    Market unions and traders in Benue State have protested the “multiple taxation” imposed on them by the government.

    The protest held at the tomato markets in Tarka and Ushongo local government areas.

    Tarhembe market in Tarka council was shut as traders blocked the Makurdi-Gboko highway, causing a gridlock for about four hours.

    Traders in Lessel market in Ushongo council blocked the highway and made a bonfire.

    There was no vehicular movement for hours as stranded passengers lined up at both ends of the Ogoja, Cross River State, express road.

    Provost of the College of Education, Katsina Ala, DR. Ndyer said he was caught in the unpleasant situation for over three hours.

    Youth leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Tarka, Comrade Justine Anzembe, supported the protest. He berated the idea of asking a J5 bus loaded with tomatoes to pay N40,000, saying this would make it difficult for both the sellers and buyers to make profit.

    Comrade Anzembe warned that if the government does not check the action of the Benue State Internal Revenue Service (BIRS), voters will react negatively come 2019 general election.

    However, an official of the BIRS, who pleaded for anonymity, said the multiple taxation was caused by the traders and their associations.

    He said the federal, state and local governments collects revenue in various markets, thereafter, market unions also imposed their own tax on members.

    According to him, the BIRS operates within the tax law passed by the State House of Assembly. He, however, promised to look into the allegations.

    At press time yesterday, the road was still blocked and travelers remained stranded, even as officials of BIRS headed to the troubled areas to calm tension.

  • Traders await road rehab

    Abia State Government has concluded plans to dualise Faulks Road, a major road leading into the popular Ariaria International market, Aba Abia State.

    That has left left the traders looking forward to the take-off of the project.

    One of the renowned construction companies in Nigeria, Setraco Constructions Company,  will handle the job, it was gathered.

    Ariaria which serves as a melting pot for traders from Southeast and Southsouth, including others from nearby West African countries, suffered neglect by previous governments resulting to perennial flooding and defacing of the market which the present administration in the state on assumption of office said it was going to address it.

    Though The Nation was yet to gather when the project would take off and how much it would cost the state government to execute, government sources disclosed that the state government and the contractor had completed the signing of the MOU and other necessary documents of the road project.

    According to a source who pleaded anonymity, Governor Okezie Ikpeazu visited Ariaria on Monday with the contractor for inspection of the market and the road to be rehabilitated after which it was expected that the construction company would move in their earth moving equipment to begin the construction work.

    Speaking further, the source told our correspondent that part of the agreement reached by the Abia State government and Setraco was that they were going to dualise Faulks road to ease off gridlock usually associated with the road which serves as a major entrance and exit route for vehicles moving in and out of the market and stressed that the road when completed would have positive impact on trading activities in the market.

    However, traders at the market have expressed their happiness over the news about the state government’s intention to reconstruct the road leading to the market and awarding the contract to a “reputable” construction company.

    They however called on the state governor to set up a taskforce team that would consistently carry out on the spot assessment of the project to ensure that the contracting firm builds the road according to specifications on the contracts terms of reference.

    The traders recalling that previous administrations in the state had reconstructed the road while their administrations lasted and attributed the use of substandard materials, lack of proper supervision and monitoring amongst others as reasons why the road especially “Ukwu Mango” continues to fail a few months after it was rehabilitated.

     

  • Traders to Ikpeazu: we won’t relocate

    Traders at the Ariaria International Market, Aba, Abia State have rejected the order directing them to relocate to the Aba Mega Mall.

    They also accused the State Market Development Committee of planning to take over their shops.

    Speaking with journalists in Aba, Chairman of the National Association of Nigerian Traders, NANTS, Deacon Michael Aniorji, accused the state government of planning to sack traders from the market under the guise of rebuilding it, adding that the distortion of the original plan of the market was done by government officials and its agencies who allegedly encouraged erection of shops on drainage channels.

    The traders’ union said they support the demolition of structures built on drainages and walkways, but are against the plan to relocate them to the Aba Mega Mall which they described as a private facility.

    Aniorji said, “We are 100 per cent against the planned reconstruction and demolition of already existing structures not built on drainages. They now want us to relocate to the Aba Mega Mall; this is a ploy to rob us of our shops. No trader is relocating. Why can’t the government partner with us in the development of the market? Are not willing and able to provide the needed funds for the development of the market? Ariaria International market is enjoying international status only by the sweat of the traders who has made it what it is today. These shops are our only investments. It is from these shops that we pay our rent, train our children; it will be inhuman to take it away from us.

    “We therefore call on the Abia State government to resist the temptation from selfish politicians and gold-digging businessmen to lure it into demolition and reconstruction of shops in Ariaria market.”

    He called on the government to rather focus its attention in reconstruct roads in the market such as Ukwu Mango and Faulks Road, to check flooding.

     

  • Traders to Ikpeazu: get rid of extortioners, stop relocation plan

    The leadership of National Association of Nigeria Traders (NANTS) at Ariaria International Market, Aba, Abia State has cried out over what they called harassments and threats of their members by persons posing as agents of the state government.

    The traders urged Governor Okezie Ikpeazu to get rid of the people who repeatedly extort them.

    NANTS officers also urged the governor to shelve the government’s plan to relocate traders to a new site.

    In a two-page letter addressed to Ikpeazu captioned “Plea for your urgent intervention in respect of indiscriminate harassment of traders and threat to demolish shops at Ariaria International Market, Aba” the traders alleged that some people who pose as agents of government under various names have been coming to the market to extort money, sometimes claiming they were sent by the governor.

    A part of the letter signed by Chairman Michael Aniorji and Secretary Ben Amaechi, read in part, “We write to bring to the attention of Your Excellency the atrocities going on at Ariaria International Market, Aba with particular reference to the daily indiscriminate harassment of traders at the market by touts and other people posing as agents of government. Some of them claim to come from office of the Governor, while others claim to come from office of the Deputy Governor. They go by different names such as Abia State Market Development Committee, Abia Urban Renewal, Task Force or simply People from Governor’s Office. These people extort money from the traders and threaten to demolish shops if they are not ‘settled’. Right now, many shops in Ariaria International Market have been marked for demolition even when these shops are clearly located within the approved areas.

    “Traders in Ariaria International Market are now confused and do not know who to listen to or who to obey as these people with conflicting demands are claiming to be working for the Abia State Government. As a result of the activities of these enemies of the state coupled with the continued flooding of the market, most traders no longer pay their rents and storage fees.”

    “Many are now relocating to Akwa Ibom and other neighbouring states in groups. If this development is not checked now, Ariaria International Market, Aba will soon become a place for few traders… these facts can be verified so that if Your Excellency so desires, he can set up an Independent Investigation Panel to determine the truth or otherwise of our allegations.”

    The market union reiterated its support for the state government.

    They also commended the ongoing reconstruction and rehabilitation of roads in Aba by the state government even as they pleaded that such government gestures should be extended to roads leading traders and investors to the Ariaria International Market which are in deplorable state especially, Ukwu Mango, Umule, Faulks road amongst others.

    In a related development, shop owners at Park I, II, A-line Zone, C-line lockup zone, respectively in Ariaria International Market has urged the state governor, Dr. Okezie Victor Ikpeazu to consider rescinding its action of relocating them from their present location.

    The state government through a radio announcement had directed dealers on Mobile Phone and its accessories, Electronic dealers at Pound road, Hospital road and amongst to relocate to the Aba Mega Mall, Osisioma.

    But the traders said they feared that the decision of the state to relocate them to the Aba Mega Mall would displace over 2000 traders from their legal means of livelihood.

    According to one of the traders who simply gave his name as Goodluck, majority of the traders were allocated their shops by the past government when the place was still a shanty which they used their money raise them to block shops.

    “Should we at this time be uprooted from our investments and livelihood and thrown unto untold hardship of relocating to a private landlord’s property where we are not even sure of our future, it is not going to be in the interest of the traders. We are not civil servants that depend on their pension to survive. This is our pension. Most of us have spent over 40 years here and government should see reasons why it should rescind its decision because of the negative effect it will have on our businesses.”

  • Mile 12 traders reject relocation plan

    Mile 12 traders reject relocation plan

    The Mile 12 Traders Association, Lagos, has urged the Lagos State Government to upgrade the market instead of relocating to Imota area of the state.

    The traders made the plea at a news conference on Thursday in Lagos.

    The Secretary, Shukurah Yam Market, Mr Collins Obichukwu and the Chairman, Provision and Electronics Section, Chief Sunday Ossai, who spoke for the traders, said the traders were not consulted before making the decision to relocate.

    Obichukwu suggested aid that the government should develop the market into a modern one with functional facilities like it did at Sura, Apongbon and Tejuosho markets with minimum hardship to the traders.

    The trader said that the proposed relocation of the market would be at variance with their position during the meeting held with the government when the market was shut.

    He said that the traders had earlier agreed with the government that issues bordering on relocation would be subjected to extensive consultation with the stakeholders of the market.

    “The government did not dialogue with us before making declaration of relocating the market within six months.

    “How will a government make unilateral declaration on a matter that affects our livelihood and the masses without due consultation with the people that will be directly affected particularly in a democratic dispensation.

    “Instead of relocating us, government should modernise our market; after all we also pay tax,’’ he said.

    Ossai said that the report, which claimed that the traders had agreed to the relocation was false.

    He alleged that the traders were coerced by the state government to agree to relocation as a condition before the market could be reopened after the bloody clash in the area.

    “We agreed under duress because the market had been closed for two weeks.

    “We were hungry, our goods were rotting away and we were recording financial losses.

    “If the government does not have ulterior motive of converting the market into an estate as it is being speculated, they should develop the market with the necessary infrastructure,’’ Ossai said.

    The Iyaloja of Orisumbare Market, Mrs Dupe Ojo, said the traders had invested billions of naira in the market, adding that relocating within six months would be difficult.

    “Mile 12 market is an international market that provides employment to over 250, 000 people.

    “We appeal to the government to develop the market just like they did to Tejuosho and Oyingbo markets for economic growth in the state,’’ Ojo said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Mile 12 Market had been in existence for over 40 years and it occupies over 20 hectares of land.

  • Traders counts losses after shops’ demolition

    Traders counts losses after shops’ demolition

    •‘They got quit notice’

    Traders near Daleko Market on Apapa-Oshodi Expressway have accused construction giant, PW, of demolishing their kiosks.

    The traders claimed that the firm told them to pack their wares on Tuesday and came to demolish their shops on Wednesday morning.

    A trader, who gave her name as Precious Chukwu, said the firm claimed that it wanted to expand the road.

    “They told us that they want to construct the road. The demolition of our shops is not a serious issue; we would seek other means of survival. After the construction of the road we may still return and everywhere would look better by then”, she said.

    Other traders said they had no other place to go, adding that they have resorted to selling under Iyana-Isolo bridge.

    Mrs Adebari Azeez, who sells men’s underwears, said she used her business to support her husband, who is the family breadwinner.

    Mrs Azeez said: “They came to meet us on Tuesday and told us to pack our wares that they wanted to demolish it. They came on Wednesday and tore our canopies and cleared the place. It is not our wish to sell on the road but we had to do it since we had no other choice. We are using this business to support our husbands. They are the ones paying the house rents, school fees and all other bills. This is just a means of supporting them. The government should please have mercy on us and come to our aid.”

    Mrs Sherifat Mudashiru said she used proceeds from her moin-moin (bean pudding) business to educate her children.

    “This business is where I make ends meet and support my family. I also use the profit to pay my children’s school fees. We don’t pray for our children to end up like us so we are doing all we can to make sure they are educated. This place we are now is not convenient for us. They (construction workers) said they want to use the place as a motor park. We don’t know if the government sent them to do it,” she said.

    Oluwafunmilayo Abiodun, a graduate of Public Relations from Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Ojere in Ogun State, said she resorted to selling baked goods when she could not get a job.

    “I went to learn catering and started selling here when I could not get a job because I did not want to sit at home doing nothing. We want the government to be thinking of our plight when they are thinking of developing anywhere. We are just too many under the bridge and it is not supposed to be like that. My house has been sold now and the shop I use to support myself is now gone. If government can build shops that we can afford like shops of N2,500 or N3,000; we would rent them. We know times are hard but we are all the ones saying Eko o ni baje (Lagos would not get bad) and we also want Lagos to grow”, she said.

    Another trader, who did not give her name, said she was not aware of the demolition notice.

    She said: “I was not around when they came on Tuesday. I just came on Wednesday to find my shop demolished. We don’t have any other place to fend for ourselves. Some of my goods were spoiled after they demolished the shops. They should have at least given us a week notice.”

    But, a construction worker, who did not want to be named, claimed that the traders were given notice last year, adding: “The demolition of the kiosks did not come as a surprise to the owners, as they had been notified since last year. The day before demolition, majority had packed their belongings and salvaged whatever they could, so none of them lost anything. And the day we were to demolish the kiosks we only met things that could not be put to use anymore,” he said.

  • Lawmaker gives N5m to 250 traders

    The lawmaker representing Ibadan North East/South East in the House of Representatives, Adedapo Lam-Adesina, has given N5 million to 250 women, traders and artisans.

    The event took place at the ancient Mapo Hall, Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.

    The beneficiaries who collected N20,000 each, were drawn from markets, associations and religious bodies within the wards in the constituency.

    According to Lam-Adesina, the gesture was not based on party affiliation but for every indigene of his constituency, adding that it was meant to also celebrate the 2016 International Women’s Day.

    He said the gesture was aimed at reducing youth restiveness and poverty in the society, noting that it is not a loan and does not attract collateral or interest rate.

    According to him, “This is meant to thank the people for the show of love and support during elections. It is also meant to empower our people economically and make their lives meaningful.

    “It will be a thing of joy to see all the beneficiaries doing well with these donations. We would continue to sustain this initiative that is why we urge the beneficiaries to make judicious use of this opportunity to better their lives.”

  • Traders urge govt not to relocate market

    Traders urge govt not to relocate market

    Traders at Owode Onirin Market in Kosofe Local Government Area of Lagos State have appealed to the Lagos State House of Assembly to ignore a call by a lawmaker that the market should be relocated with the Mile 12 Market.

    The market leader, Alhaji Wahab Adeoti, in an interview with The Nation, said since the market was established 30 years ago, it had not recorded any ethnic clash.

    He said the three major ethnic groups in the market, the Yoruba, the Hausa and the Igbo, interacted cordially, adding that there was no justification to relocate the market.

    Adeoti noted that they abided by traffic and environmental laws.

    The Secretary of Igbo traders in the market, Mr. Eke Kelechi, said he had been selling in the market for 21 years and there was no time they experienced crisis.

    He enjoined the government to ignore the call for relocation.

    The leader of Hausa traders, Mallam Yakubu Salimon Lawal, condemned the call and assured Lagosians that Arewa traders would conduct their business in a peaceful manner.

  • 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.

  • Traders moan as Daleko market is demolished

    Traders moan as Daleko market is demolished

    Daleko Market, the popular rice trading post in Lagos, was demolished on Saturday, 48-hours before today’s expiration of the quit notice served the traders.

    Yesterday, the traders bemoaned the action, claiming that it breached their agreement with the market’s executive.

    The traders and the market were said to have agreed to develop the market. But the traders reportedly kicked when the executives said they would pay for the shops after the reconstruction of the market

    A trader, Musa Yahaya, said  many of them are not happy with the market head’s decision, adding: ”I sell rice and I have been in this market since 1983. It wasn’t the government’s decision. The came around 8am Yesterday asking us to vacate the place. It took them about 6hours to remove the roofs of the shops. It is the iyaloja general. We are not saying she shouldn’t develop the market but why should we pay for our shops. We were told that If we have documents or not, we would buy the shops. Is the notice fair enough? Where should I start from? I learnt some people have gone to the government but I am yet to get a response.”

    Mrs Tope Alimi, who also sells rice, said the quit notice was dated February 29, adding that she was shocked when some people came on Saturday with a truck of sand and gravel.

    “They are the government whatever they like, they should do. But they should remember we made them achieve where they are. We don’t have anywhere to go and I can’t go into prostitution. We don’t know their next step. We are not happy about it because I have been here for over 10 years,” she said.

    Another trader, Mrs. Idayat Badru, said she was inside her shop when the roof was removed.

    “We are not happy about it. They didnt tell us anything. The notice is not up to a month. We agreed with them on developing the market but not buying it after. As they removed the roofs, people where on standby to buy it. the iron rods, everything was soldI have been here for more than 30 years. It is really bad. We are not happy. They asked us to pay for the shops we bought. We have been selling at give away price because we don’t know where to store my goods. It is really a loss,” she said.

    When the Iyaloja-General of Lagos State, Mrs Folashade Tinubu-Ojo, was contacted on phone, she urged the reporter to book an interview appointment.

    Last Friday, the traders stormed the House of Assembly to protest.

    They carried placards with inscriptions, urging the Speaker Mudashiru Obasa come to their rescue.

    They accused the Mushin Local Government Council of conniving with a developer to demolish the market and re-allocate the shops to the rich.

    A trader, Mr Segun Okunola, said the protest was to get the Assembly to stop the demolition.

    Okunola said the two weeks given them to vacate the market was unfair, adding that the traders have been in the market in the past 30 years.

    Okunola said they got information that the market would be demolished yesterday, urging the speaker to use his office to stop the exercise.

    Okunola said the assembly was the traders’ last hope.

    Responding, Olayiwola Olawale, representing Mushin 11 Constituency, accompanied by three other members of the assembly, assured the traders that their grievances would be looked into.

    Olawale hailed them for their peaceful protest, promising that they would meet with the executive secretary of the council to get details of the matter.