While government and
traders engaged in talks on how to find the lasting solutions to the frequent
tribe clashes in the mile 12 market, the neigbouring Ogun State government
quickly, offered the displaced marketers a portion of land at Ogere area, a
Lagos/Ogun border, which is currently being upgraded for their use.
The Mile 12 Market is
located in Ikosi-Isheri Local Council Development Area, along Lagos –Ikorodu
Road. It is noted for perishable food items such as: pepper, onions, yams,
fruits, tomatoes, yam flour, vegetable and palm oils, cash crops and other
numerous edible food items. The market is about 30 years old.
The market consists of
traders from different ethnic groups in Nigeria. These include: Yoruba, Hausa,
Igbo, Kanuri, Ibibio, Fulani, Efik, Edo, Igala, Idoma, and Ebira just to
mention a few. All these traders warmly interact with themselves. On a daily basis,
millions of naira is generated there.
This is so because items
from the market are sold to myriads of local buyers as well as some exported
beyond the shores of the country at considerable prices too. Ogun State govt,
traders move consequently, the traders since the closure of the market had
lamented over the attendant economic hardship it has brought upon them and the
customers at large. In the wake of the crisis, Ambode announced plans to
relocate the market permanently to a site yet to be determined.
The announcement shocked
the leadership of the market which made them to embark on serious lobbying on
the need for the governor to have a rethink. They assured that such incident
will not re-occur.
Though, moves were on by
some traders to relocate, majority opposed to the idea due to the long distance
and probable loss of advantage of proximity to customers. Alhaja Iyabo Ahmed,
the Iyaloja (women market leader) of Mile 12 Market, while speaking with
newsmen on the development, expressed reservation about the idea of being
relocated from Mile 12 to neighbouring states. According to her, “We regret the
unfortunate incident that culminated into this situation and we are promising
our amiable governor to pardon us. It will not happen again.
“We don’t want to relocate
from Lagos it’s our main market for years past. Lagos is where the consumers
are located so any relocation from Lagos will really not measure up to what we
are getting in Lagos. “While, we are ready to comply with the relocation plan
of the state government, we are pleading that the new site should not be too
remote for us in order to have easy access to our customers we are pleading
with Governor Ambode.”
The Iyaloja, who also backed plans by state government
to ban okoda operation in the area, urged the government to give adequate time
and period for traders to plan relocation movement, “because any hasty movement
will negatively affect us the traders and especially, customers.”

ambode must listen dis pple ve been deir for long, moving dem away won't stop the hausa yoruba clash
ReplyDeleteif the hausa cannot get along with the yorubas they should go back to the North
ReplyDelete