Following gradual resurgence of traffic build up on Dutse Alhaji road by the market, the FCT Administration shut down the market for clean up and renovation.
The return of traffic to the area was said to have been caused by lack of parking space inside the market which has been converted into illegally attached shops.
Part of the enforcement include clean up of the market premises, distilling of drainage systems and removal of make shift shops.
The team also cleared the market of broken wooden tables and benches used in blocking passage ways; heaps of littered polythene materials as plastics and nylon papers; as well as stones and refuse.
All makeshift shops fastened to walls of main shops and others nailed into the ground on walk and drive ways were removed, assembled and burnt to ashes.
The perimeter fencing of the market earlier built by the FCT Administration, two years ago, was also given a face-lift.
Senior Special Assistant to FCT Minister on Monitoring, Inspection and Enforcement, Comrade Ikharo Attah, told reporters that his principal, Malam Muhammad Bello, was determined to keep the market clean and ensure its operation does not impede traffic flow.
Ikharo said: “We want them to know they cannot have attachments in the markets because that makes it difficult for seamless movement and for cars to come in…
“We have been here continuously for this. The FCT Minister, Muhammad Bello, has tasked us to keep this market under check and keep the road corridor free’’.
“He (Bello) was the one who fenced this beautiful market and has done so many work here putting up the gate, which was broken and stolen.
“Today, we are restoring the gate, painting the fence and carrying out general renovation and clean up work.
“We could not have achieved this much with the market on, so we had to close it in partnership with Bwari Area Council to enable us clean it thoroughly in and out.
“All our team from the Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB), Department of Development Control and all others had free chance to work that is why you can see the market wearing a different beautiful face just as the Minister wants it to look.”
Commenting on the Olajumoke Akinjide section of the Market, which was still unkept at the time of interview, the SSA assured that his men would return on Monday for another round of cleaning, revealing that there was equally serious illegalities to be corrected at the market.
He said: “We will go back to the Olajumoke Market in Dutse. We never knew the extent of the illegality at that market. We saw it and together with the Bwari Area Council, represented by the Council Secretary, Hon. Eli, we will get back there and purge it very soon.
“Hopefully by Monday morning, because we cannot be doing clean up when they are selling since it is so crowded. We therefore asked the traders to join us on Monday morning to clean up the market.”
Advising the traders and buyers to use an alternative market, located near the Army Housing Scheme, Ikharo assured them that the alternative market was of superb quality and one of the best which was visited and endorsed by the FCT Minister.
Secretary, Bwari Area Council, Kadanya Peter Eli who spoke on behalf of the Council reiterated the readiness of his council to work in synergy with the FCTA and traders to ensure the market was cleaned in line with the directive of the Minister.
Eli pledged the commitment of Bwari Area Council to clean up exercises of other markets in the FCT, particularly those within the council.
An Assistant Director in charge of Operation with the AEPB, Kaka Bello assured that his men were on ground to ensure total clean up of not just the market but also other areas.
He recalled that the team had, two years ago, cleared the road corridor which paved way for the road expansion and fencing, which he noted, has greatly reduced the hitherto hydra headed witnessed by commuters playing that road.
Another speaker, Manager of the market, Sunday Marcus, commended the taskforce and the FCT Minister for working hard to clean up the market from time to time.
Pledging the continued collaboration of all traders of the market, Marcus urged his colleagues to always keep to the rules regulating operation in the market, even as he disclosed that they would set aside a day for general sanitation of the market weekly.
One of the affected makeshift shop owners, Linus Okoronkwo, popularly known as PRO, decried high cost of buying or renting shops in the market and appealed for a rather better arrangement of incorporating the attachments inside the market to enable the poor also have access to FCT markets to trade for survival.
