Lagos State House of Assembly in session |
•Police deny
being partisan in clash
The Lagos State House of
Assembly yesterday called for the relocation of Mile 12 Market on Ikorodu Road
to a more conducive place.
The
Nation report continues:
The
call came just as the police denied being partisan in the violence which rocked
the market last Thursday.
Reacting
to the incident, the Assembly described it as unfortunate, adding that it could
have been avoided.
The
issue was brought under matter of urgent public importance by Jude Idimogu.
The
lawmakers implored Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to relocate Mile 12 and
Owode-Onirin Markets elsewhere after feasibility studies and accompanying
infrastructure must have been provided.
While
commiserating with the bereaved families, the Assembly condemned the killings
and the attitude of soldiers deployed in the market, who could not prevent the
crisis.
It
urged Ambode to constitute a high-powered enquiry into the skirmish.
Earlier,
Speaker Mudashiru Obasa said the incident followed disagreement among brothers,
adding that government should act decisively on the issue.
He
said: “Soldiers have been stationed at the market since 1999, yet they have not
been able to solve the problem. There is a police station there, what did the
Divisional Police Officer (DPO) do, when the incident occurred?
“It
is a market without structure; we can move the market to another place if we
can provide an alternative. We should look at a new planning; we cannot have
such a market at the centre of a megacity.”
Obasa
called for the probe of military men stationed at the market since they could
not forestall the riot. He suggested that Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) be
installed there.
Deputy
Speaker Wasiu Sanni Eshinlokun said the market was not well organized, adding
that a visit there would reveal that it is not a conventional market.
Denying
allegations of partisanship, Lagos police chief Fatai Owoseni told reporters at
the command Headquarters in Ikeja that the claims were fabricated and cheap
blackmail.
Owoseni
said he and not the Area Commander or the Divisional Police Officer for Ketu
led the operation, adding that his men did their job without sentiments.
He
also pegged the number of those arrested at 174, adding that investigations
were ongoing to ascertain their culpability.
“Mile
12 is relatively calm and the process of healing has commenced in terms of
dialogue. 174 suspects were arrested and at the moment investigations and
auditing are ongoing.
“It
was miscreants that were involved in that fight and not normal Yoruba or Hausa.
Even when the fight was on, some Hausa hid Yoruba children in their shops,
likewise some Yoruba hid Hausa people in their homes.
“All those trying to play
on ethnic or religious sentiments are using cheap blackmail. It is mere
fabrication that police or security agencies took sides in that fight. We did
our job there devoid of sentiments,” he said.
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