Street
hawkers in Lagos now risk up to six months in jail and a fine if they are
caught © Pius Utomi Ekpei (AFP)
|
Every morning, Mama
Biliki prepares small bags of popcorn outside her ramshackle house in Ajegunle,
one of Lagos' poorest neighbourhoods, to sell by the roadside for ₦50 each.
AFP
report continues:
On
a good day, she reckons she can earn about ₦5,000 (US$16, €15) hawking them to
pedestrians and motorists stuck in the traffic jams that plague Nigeria's
biggest city.
But
the governor of Lagos state, Akinwunmi Ambode, is getting tough on street selling,
leaving Mama Biliki and others like her with an uncertain future.
"I
appeal to the government to allow us to hawk on the streets since we don't have
money to rent a shop, so we can continue to feed our families," she told
AFP.
"Even
those with a shop, they don't sell as much as me who hawks in the streets.
There are so many taxes on shops that it doesn't allow them to make a
profit."
- A nuisance and a threat
-
In
Nigeria's financial hub, a noisy, overcrowded melting pot of some 20 million
people, hawkers can be seen everywhere, snaking between the cars in choking fumes
and oppressive heat.
Hungry
drivers or passengers in packed "danfos" (public minibuses) can buy
snacks of spicy plantain chips and roasted peanuts, and quench their thirst
with cold drinks.
It's
possible to do some grocery shopping while the traffic idles in snaking,
honking queues: pre-packed fruit and vegetables and dried noodles from boxes
are offered hopefully at car windows.
Elsewhere,
there are Nollywood DVDs on sale at traffic lights; hats from every Nigerian
region; basketball hoops; mobile phones; and at Christmas time, a whole variety
of festive decorations.
And
it's always clear when there's a fuel shortage: hawkers sell rubber pipes and
plastic funnels to get petrol from the jerrycans of illegal roadside traders.
Goods are seasonal and predictable.
Inflation
in Nigeria rocketed to 16.5% in June, driving up the cost of living,
particularly for fuel and food ©Pius Utomi Ekpei (AFP)
|
But
now the hawkers -- who provide a measure of service to gridlocked commuters
with no time to shop -- risk up to six months in jail and a fine of ₦90,000 if
they're caught.
Governor
Ambode called the petty traders an "environmental nuisance but also... (a)
security threat to citizens".
"Street
traders and buyers will henceforth be arrested and prosecuted," he said in
a statement earlier this month.
"The
Task Force on Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences has been mandated
to ensure the law of the state against street trading is enforced to the
letter."
- Negative effect -
For
the traders, though, the crackdown could rob them of a lifeline. Despite
Nigeria's nominal status as Africa's leading economy, most of its 180 million
people live in dire poverty.
Shedrach
Ogona, who sells cooking utensils on the road, said: "We're not criminals,
we have (qualifications). We're trained. Most of us are trained in one thing or
another.
"Please,
let the government do what is reasonable."
Kingsley
Shokun, who sells books, said many of the hawkers were not on the road by
choice. "We're not enjoying selling here," he protested.
Nigeria's
economy has been built on oil but with global prices low since 2014, the flow
of money has dried up -- not that it ever reached the majority in the first
place.
Inflation
rocketed to 16.5% in June -- the highest for nearly 11 years -- driving up the
cost of living, particularly for fuel and food.
Nigeria's
dependence on oil has been laid bare, with little domestic manufacturing or
industry to plug the gap. Unemployment among young graduates has been estimated
at nearly 45%.
According
to Chinedu Bosah, secretary of the Campaign for Democratic and Workers' Rights
(CDWR), banning the hawkers could have a negative effect.
One
hawker was knocked down by a truck as he tried to evade arrest.
"What is going to be the alternative? The alternative will only be crime. And the government keeps spending money for security, reinforcement. It doesn't pay society," said Bosah.
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