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My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba - Politics - Nairaland

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My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by simpleseyi: 8:15am On Jan 15, 2016
MOST people think there is only one market at Oshodi in Lagos and this market was in the first week of January, 2016, demolished by the Lagos State government. There are actually more markets in this ever bustling place, each flowing into another. The one destroyed is known as Owonifari Electronics Market, located directly under the bridge of the Oshodi-Apapa Expressway. For some rea- son, up to 70% of the traders at the Owonifari Market are from Ihiala in Anambra State and environs. Therefore, I should have more than a passing interest in developments in the market, including its recent demolition. Indeed, I did play some role in the drama surrounding the market in the last two years.

Towards the end of January, 2014, leaders of the Owonifari Market Traders Association visited me in my residence in Lagos with a passionate plea that I speak to the then Lagos State governor, Babatunde Fashola, to postpone the impending demolition which had been planned since 2007 as part of the strategic effort to make Lagos a megacity. The government had reasoned that the open market was awfully located, right under the very busy Oshodi bridge with absolutely no safety facilities. If a tanker had over the years fallen from the bridge, as has in recent times become almost a common occurrence on the Ojuelegba bridge in Lagos, the fatalities would have been unimaginable because of the large number of traders. It had about 500 registered traders, but in reality there were some 2,000 traders at the Owonifari Electronics Market; each trader sublet his or her stall to three others.

The Lagos State government did provide an alternative market but the traders rejected it for sundry reasons, including the fact that the structures are storey buildings, rather than bungalows which they preferred for ease of moving their goods. They were not persuaded by the explanation that land is a very scarce commodity in Lagos in view of the state’s small geographical size and the exponential growth rate of its population currently put at 21million. Nor were they interested in the argument that electronics dealers in bigger markets on Lagos Island have their stalls in storey buildings, to say nothing about manufacturers in China, Hong Kong, Singapore and elsewhere producing in high rise buildings. I was to understand from Kalu Onuma, the efficient head of the Ndigbo Lagos secretariat, that the Igbo leadership in Lagos has for long been advising the market leaders unsuccessfully to drop their opposition to doing business in stalls located in storey buildings.

Frankly, the leadership of the Owonifari Market is difficult. It hired the services of Ben Nwabueze, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria and Africa’s most engaging constitutional law scholar as well as the founding secretary general of Ohaneze Ndigbo, in their fight against market relocation. They quickly disagreed. The traders now turned to Jimoh Lasisi, SAN, a fine gentleman. He took a dispassionate look at their case and told them that the law was not in their favour, all the more so since the Land Use Act vested land ownership in the state governor. The traders had relied on a letter from an official of the Federal Ministry of Housing to argue that the state government had no right over them since they were operating under a Federal Government bridge. Jimoh asked them to look for a negotiated settlement. That was how they approached me.

Immediately the governor set the February 14th date for a meeting with leaders of the Owonifari Market, I contacted, among other influential Igbo people in Lagos, the following persons to join us: Anya O. Anya, president of Ndigbo Lagos and a multi-award winning professor; President of Aka Ikenga, Goddy Uwazurike, a lawyer; Charles C. Ifeanyi, former deputy chairman of the Council of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry and former president of the Lagos State branch of the Association of Anambra Town Unions who retired from the Customs service as the number three man; Joe Anyigbo, the first African to become an executive director and later acting chief executive of the American petroleum giant, Chevron; Pat Utomi, a highly respected scholar at the Lagos Business School; and Emmanuel Chukwuneta, an engineer and entrepreneur, whose firm was instrumental to the building of the multibillion naira Lagos Trade Fair Complex. Fashola, serious as ever, had assembled a large team of relevant permanent secretaries, commissioners and special advisers. Those of us on the traders team went through the prepared speech once again and agreed on the prayers, but I was taken aback when the traders suggested that I plead with the governor not make any declaratory statement. I was actually infuriated. How could the governor be asked not to make a declaration at such an important meeting? The traders took the opportunity of my private audience with Fashola just a few minutes to the commencement of the meeting to request Chiefs Ifeanyi and Anyigbo, two highly respected traditional title holders in my Ihiala hometown and who are particularly close to me, to prevail on me to change my mind. They succeeded. I, there- fore, found myself awkwardly pleading with the governor before this impressive audience not to make a declaratory statement. He must have felt embarrassed, but nevertheless obliged. He took copious notes of every speech.Fashola did ask the traders some soul-searching questions: “Do you think, in all honesty, that history will forgive me if a tanker loaded with petrol or kerosene or gas should fall down from the Oshodi bridge and wipe out thousands of you doing business under it? Many of you travel to China and other countries for business, but would you like your partners to visit your shops under the bridge? Would you like your children to join you in trading under the bridge after you have trained them in universities?” Rising to his feet as he was about to depart the hall, the governor added: “You have been in conversation with the state government for years over the relocation of the Owonifari Market without reaching an agreement. You are free to meet me anytime you want me.”

Owonifari Market leaders left the meeting satisfied. But curiously none has bothered to take my phone calls or return them, let alone visit me, since the meeting. They all ignored my text messages about the need for a follow-up a meeting with the Lagos State government. On January 6, my wife called from Lagos while I was still holidaying in my hometown to break the news of the demolition of the Owonifari Electronics Market. Quite a number of the victims are my own relatives.

•Adinuba is head of Discovery Public Affairs Consulting.

SOURCE: http://sunnewsonline.com/new/my-role-in-oshodi-market-demolition/

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Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by Realdeals(m): 9:14am On Jan 15, 2016
The traders goof
Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by asEdeyHOT: 9:19am On Jan 15, 2016
We are tired of all these noise

The Government has made the right call

Anyone that does not like it should go back to Ihiala village.

For all the noisemakers, hope u read the OP

Under the Land Use Act of the state. The land belongs to the state government

13 Likes

Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by YoruBanger: 10:02am On Jan 15, 2016
asEdeyHOT:
We are tired of all these noise

The Government has made the right call

Anyone that does not like it should go back to Ihiala village.

For all the noisemakers, hope u read the OP

Under the Land Use Act of the state. The land belongs to the state government

KPOM!

2 Likes

Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by gurnam: 10:24am On Jan 15, 2016
Obviously all those IPOB touts that have been insulting the government have no idea of the background of the story.

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Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by Flyoruboy(m): 10:26am On Jan 15, 2016
Smh. Yorubas are too diplomatic, to a fault sef. I hope this attitude won't be our undoing someday, especially as it relates to our dealings with other ethnicities.

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Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by Alphaoscar: 10:36am On Jan 15, 2016
I still don't understand why group of people should be holding a state to ransom and be dictating where to develop and where not to develop.



Our governments should toughen up abeg.

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Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by gurnam: 10:40am On Jan 15, 2016
I love the Northerners, they know how to deal with this sort of issue without it rearing it ugly head up again

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Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by seunny4lif(m): 10:52am On Jan 15, 2016
Story story
Who no like Lagos should go back to his/her village grin
Abi which kind thing be this angry

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Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by seunny4lif(m): 10:54am On Jan 15, 2016
Bros the I too good of Yoruba na problem for future cos the thing taya me
angry
Flyoruboy:
Smh. Yorubas are too diplomatic, to a fault sef. I hope this attitude won't be our undoing someday, especially as it relates to our dealings with other ethnicities.

3 Likes

Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by Flyoruboy(m): 11:09am On Jan 15, 2016
seunny4lif:
Bros the I too good of Yoruba na problem for future cos the thing taya me
angry

I tell you. These people will never tolerate a quarter of the poo we allow them get away with in our domain. Even some of them acknowledge their own excesses. It's sicknening really.

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Re: My Role In Oshodi Market Demolition - By C. Don Adinuba by seunny4lif(m): 12:27pm On Jan 15, 2016
Bros, I don stay east before dem wicked towards each odas and are not to friendly toward outsiders but are quick to play victims in another man's land....
Na still dem fall black Africa people hand for Tripoli, Libya becos of post in Africa market, killing each oda becos of post angry angry
Flyoruboy:


I tell you. These people will never tolerate a quarter of the poo we allow them get away with in our domain. Even some of them acknowledge their own excesses. It's sicknening really.

2 Likes

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