Officials of the Alimosho local government area of Lagos state demolished at least 100 shops at the Rauf Aregbesola Modern Market in the Iyana-Ipaja area of the state on Saturday.
A correspondent of NAN, who visited the market, said some of the traders were running helter-skelter to remove their goods and valuables.
Some of them said they got to the market in the early hours of the day to see that some of its shops were being demolished without any prior notice from the local government.
Other claimed that they got wind of the development through telephone calls from market members that had got to the market at dawn.
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Adegbite Omoluabi popularly known as ‘Baale’, secretary of the market, said he had no prior knowledge of the demolition.
Omoluabi said: “I don’t know anything about this demolition, I don’t know what is happening. It took us by surprise. I was called on my cell phone that shops were being demolished.”
He said the traders could not fight the government and win, hence had to agree to whatever the government wanted.
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Ajose Laoye, another trader, who deals in toiletries said: “This is the height of impunity, it is madness, there was no notice, we got to the market to see this.
“If we were given notice, one or two occupants among 100 shop owners would have packed out.
“Each of us bought his or her shop with huge amount from one of the past administrations of the local government. ”
Laoye, who decried that the market leaders had run away, claimed she kept some money inside her shop which she alleged had got missing.
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Similarly, Bukola Alao, another trader in the market, said that the officials of the council came to the market early in the day to paste notices of demolition.
“Immediately they had done that, they began to demolish after taking the photographs of the pasted notices,” Alao said.
Alao, however, described the officials as “narrow minded and wicked”.
Rasheed Ijadunola, a trader, said the council had, two years ago, made the move to demolish the market for redevelopment.
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However, town planners from the state ministry of physical planning and urban development stopped it, he said.
According to him, the town planners, in a letter to the council and the leadership of the market union, said the site could not accommodate two storey- buildings as planned by the council.
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Ijadunola said he lost about N3.5million in the demolition apart from N800, 000 he used to buy the shop in 2002.
He, however, urged the council to consider the occupiers of the shops first after the completion of the redevelopment.
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He appealed to the LG that it should ensure the cost of leasing the shops out then to his members should be affordable.
Olaide Okupevi, another occupant of one of the shops said: “This is not good, it is unfair and unjust. I was still in bed when some of my neighbours called me that our shops were being demolished without prior notice.”
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Okupevi said the market union and the council had not reached an agreement on the development before the demolition, saying that she bought her own shop for N850, 000.
Udechukwu Onyekachi, a fabric dealer, said he lost about N500, 000 worth of clothes to the demolition.
Responding to an SMS which NAN sent to Jelili Sulaeman, executive secretary of the council, said: “Sorry, I’m busy. Call back later’’.
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