As the Lagos
State government commences full implementation of the law banning street
trading in the state today, a showdown seems inevitable between the Task Force,
empowered by law to enforce the ban and the traders.
Governor
Akinwunmi Ambode, last Thursday, ordered the implementation of the law,
prescribing jail term of six months or N90,000 fine, or a combination of both,
from July 1, which was last Friday.
Both buyers
and sellers are now to be prosecuted.
The
Environmental Offences Task Force told Lagos Metro on Sunday, that full
implementation would begin today, until the state is rid of street trading.
Lagos Metro’s
survey since the order was made showed a resolve on the part of the street
traders to call the bluff of the government.
Lagos Metro,
on Sunday, saw street traders carrying on with their activities.
A trader in
Ketu, Ogbonna, said government was yet to enforce the law and news had been
reaching them in the area that total enforcement begins today.
Hawking on
the Ketu , Berger axis Sunday afternoon continued as usual. A few traders were
seen displaying goods of different sizes and shapes, with items like gala, soft
drinks, air freshners and other goods up for sale.
Commuters
plying the Mowe-Ibafo road were also spotted purchasing items from street
vendors.
From Iyana
Ipaja via Lagos/Abeokuta Expressway en route Ikeja, where there was free flow
of vehicles, street trading activities were minimal.
Along the
Anthony, Maryland underbridge area, hawkers seemed to have neglected the area
and no traffic was observed.
The
enforcement of the ban is in line with Section one of the Lagos State Street
Trading and Illegal Market Prohibition Law 2003.
Helen, an
Igbo girl hawking groundnut at Maryland said she had no chioce but to relocate.
Another
hawker said that the ban was a bad one targetted at the downtrodden “like us,
who are on the street struggling to make a living. The government should
reverse the ban and give us the oportunity to make honest living because this
ban will affect hundreds of thousands of young boys and girls, and this will
likely lead to increase in crime in the state. The state has no job for us. The
companies we sell their products and the buyers will surely be affected.”
Meanwhile,
the Lagos State Task Force on Environmental Sanitation (Task Force) said its
operatives will be out today to enforce arrest of traders and hawkers on
streets of Lagos, as well as those who patronise them.
According to
the agency, the enforcement would be done in collaboration with Kick Against
Indiscipline (KAI) and the Mobile Courts.
Governor
Akinwunmi Ambode had, while speaking on a TVC programme, directed
that as from July 1, the arrest and prosecution of those who engage in street
trading and hawking, most especially in the traffic, as well as those who
patronise them.
The directive
followed the death of a street hawker in Maryland area, who was crushed by a
truck, while trying to escape arrest by the operatives of KAI, following which
hoodlums destroyed about 49 BRT buses.
Speaking with
Lagos Metro, the Public Affairs Officer (PAO) of the Task Force, Mr Taofiq
Adebayo, said the agency’s operatives would definitely be out on the streets of
Lagos today, to carry out the enforcement of law against street trading as
directed by Governor Ambode.
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