Gaseous
emission emanating from hundreds of small generators envelop the
atmosphere, polluting the air, contributing to the depletion of the
ozone layer. Deafening noise from the generators pollute the ambience
unabated. The environment is unkempt with filth in every nook and
cranny. Squatters have converted makeshift structures into their
permanent abode.
This is Alade Market located at
the heart of Ikeja, capital of Lagos State, and the third largest mega
city in the world. The situation at this market is very sad. Traders
have resisted several attempts by the Ikeja Local Government to rebuild
the market to befit the mega city status accorded Lagos. The market sits at the hub and commercial centre of Lagos. An aerial view of the market depicts the opposite of what a modern market in the hub of Lagos should be.
A
front view of the market portrays a repulsive image. Some metres away,
the frontage is always messy irrespective of time one visits the market.
Vehicles are often park just about anywhere creating undue congestion
just before Allen roundabout. This is not because the market does not
have parking lots of its own, but the parking lots have been illegally
converted into shops.
Investigation revealed that there
are over 200 illegal shops all over the place, apart from about 300
shops that were legally constructed. In April, 2013, a fire gutted the
market, compromising the structural integrity of many structures in the
market, according to a test carried out by the Lagos State Ministry of
Physical Planning and Urban Development.
According to a
report signed by a Director in the ministry, D. A. Rufai a test carried
out after the fire outbreak revealed that the structures had become
defective and the market seriously overcrowded. The report specified the
need to rebuild the market, which had been in existence for 30 years.
Aside
the report, the market has been converted for dual purpose. There has
been complaints that hundreds of traders have turned the market into
their residence. Several traders use their shops for dual purposes,
first for trading and second as residence, which has altered the
original plan of the market. Also, noxious emissions emanating from over
200 generators that power different shops in the market has devastating
effects on human health. Traders are daily confronted with carbon
emitted by the generators.
According to the Executive
Secretary, Ikeja Local Government, Adekunle Adeokun, the dangerous
emission from the generators are life-threatening, while the storing of
petrol in the market to power the generators could lead to fire outbreak
any time.
Residents of the area had for long been
calling on the Lagos State Government to salvage the situation of the
market to protect the ambience and to lift the status of the market to
befit the mega city status of Lagos.
Residents are of
the view that Alade Market is a disaster waiting to happen. Though there
are plans to develop the market, the traders are resisting the proposal
of Ikeja Local Government to relocate them to a newly built market.
Recently traders in the market protested to Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s
office, accusing the Ikeja Local Government of trying to forcefully
evict them from the market. The protesters were led by Sulola
Odunsi-Daina.
Odunsi-Daina said relocating the market
would lead to loss of patronage and displacement of about 1,000 shop
owners and traders. According to her, there “are 300 shops and 700
K-clamps, thereby bringing the number of traders to 1,000. Odunsi-Daina
admitted that a new place had been built for the traders, but noted
that only 120 shops “have been built. What will be the fate of about 880
traders? The new site is not environmentally friendly because it is
close to canal. It is not habitable. Aside, it is a slum. The shops
there are a far cry from the ones currently in Alade Market.”
The
Iyaloja of Ikeja, Mrs. Adia Apena faulted the claims of Odunsi-Daina
that there was a plan to forcefully evict the traders from the market,
saying that the plan to rebuild the market had been in the pipeline
about a decade ago, adding that ever since, the traders had been told
that they would be relocated for works to commence on rebuilding of the
market.
“Since another place has been provided for
them, it becomes imperative for them to cooperate with the local
government and the developer. But the developer and the market leaders
have to agree on terms and conditions of re-allocation. Once this aspect
is resolved, the traders will relocate to the new site,” she said.
Also,
the council’s Executive Secretary, Adeokun, said there was no plan to
forcefully evict the traders from the market. “The traders are
economical with the truth because the council has no plan to forcefully
evict them from the market. We are only discussing terms and conditions
of relocating to the new site, which the developer, Master Reality
International Concept Limited said, is 65 per cent completed,” he
explained.
He added that the current status of Alade
Market is a blemish on Africa’s model megacity, stressing that the
council proposed to turn the market into a first-class centre of
commerce in West Africa.
“The proposal has been on for
one decade. In 2005, all the stakeholders agreed to relocate from the
market because it no longer befits the megacity status of Lagos. Had it
been the traders relocated when the proposal to redevelop the market was
first conceived one decade ago, Alade Shopping Mall would have been the
first shopping mall of international standard in Lagos State.
“The
proposal of the shopping mall would have been open in Ikeja before the
advent of Shoprite. The rationale behind the conception of the proposed
shopping mall has to do with the need to build a befitting centre of
trade and commerce safe and secure for business transactions.
“The
market was originally constructed more than 30 years ago. The market
has lost its beauty; become structurally weak and did not fit into the
status of Lagos mega city again. The shortcoming calls for the need to
dismantle the market and develop a befitting one. All the stakeholders
earlier agreed to the relocation plan. Originally, the current Alade
Market, “has only 300 shops, but the entire market has been converted
into shops, which violates the initial plan of the market. There are
over 200 generators in the market. This portends grave consequences if
the situation continues. It has to be arrested now,” he explained.
The
Executive Secretary said there was no way the council could forcefully
evict the traders without providing the right alternative. “We cannot
throw them out. We have a relocation plan for them. The developer has
started developing the new site, which has bigger parking lots and other
facilities. We have purchased 350 KVA generator that will serve the
entire market; so, there will not be need for each shop owner to bring
in their generators.”
Managing Director, Master Reality
International Concept Limited, Lai Omotola said Alade Shopping Mall was
structured around a Build, Operate and Transfer (BOT) arrangement and
designed to fit into the megacity status of Lagos State, adding that the
concession agreement to redevelop the market was struck on 17 August,
2010 with Ikeja Local Government.
According to him, the
agreement includes the relocation plan for the traders currently
trading in the market, adding that about 200 shops had been completed on
the new site. “About 126
shops are half done. So, we have built 326 shops. These are more than
300 shops originally built in the market. The concerned traders are the
root cause of the relocation crisis in the market. The concerned traders
are not actually the legal tenants of Ikeja Local Government. Most of
the allotees are not using their shops for private businesses.
The
allotees have been renting out their shops to the concerned traders
over the years. As we speak, there is conflict between the concerned
traders and the allotees. So, the concerned traders are the ones
protesting against the relocation plan. But the good news is that some
of the allotees have started paying money.”
“The new
site is 65 per cent completed. The market people are part and parcel of
the relocation plan from the inception. The traders were part of the
ground breaking and had visited the relocation site at different times
after we started the construction of the temporary market,” he
explained.
Omotola stated that after visiting the site,
the market wrote a letter to the local government complaining about the
relocation site. The letter was signed by the Iyaloja of Alade Market,
Mrs. Elizabeth Adenuga and dated 11 July, 2014. The letter contained a
nine-point demand, aimed at making the relocation site conducive.
In
the document, the market women asked the council to provide adequate
security, transformers, day care centre, drainage channels, health
centre, additional shops, access road, beautification of the
environment, adequate toilet facilities, parking lots and modalities of
the allocation of shops.
The local government assured
the market women of fair treatment. In a reply dated 11 August, 2014,
the immediate past Chairman of the local government, Wale Odunlami said
the shops would be allocated to original owners, noting that the council
did not recognise those trading in the market illegally.
According
to him, the issue of drainage had been resolved with the Office of
Drainage Service, Lagos State Ministry of the Environment to protect any
form of flooding, adding that the drainages would be well-channelled
and a link bridge constructed over it. This, he said, formed part of the
terms and conditions agreed upon in the Memorandum of Understanding
(MoU) between the developer and the ministry.
The
five-page agreement, which was mediated by Lagos State Ministry of
Justice, was signed by the then Permanent Secretary, Drainage Service,
Muyideen Akinsanya in the presence of Mr. Olakunle Adegbite of the
ministry and the Managing Director of Masters Reality International
Concept Limited, Omotola.
Odunlami,
thus, said the drainage “has been resolved,” noting that an arrangement
“has been made for day care centre, health clinic and car part.”
Contrary to the Alade Market where parking is a challenge, the former
council chairman said the proposed car park “has parking lots for about
100 vehicles of different categories.”
Currently, the
value of shops in Ikeja ranges from N400,000 to N500,000. But Odunlami
noted that the local government had subsidised rent “to N150,000 for a
shop and N50,000 for a K-clamp per annum in order not to impoverish the
market women.
But Omotola lamented that despite the
assurance by the council, the market women did not make commitment,
saying that the bank had refused to release more money unless the market
women show commitment as the bank does not want to continue financing
the new site when the relocation issue had not been addressed.
“The
bank wanted to be sure of the repayment of the facility we have taken
to execute the project. That was why the local government asked them to
begin to pay so that the developer can complete the relocation site. The
traders need to show commitment so that the bank can see we have agreed
on the relocation plan. That is why the local government wrote them a
letter directing them to start paying their rent.
“The
relocation site is more spacious than Alade Market. The new site is
built on 32 plots while the Alade Market has just 16 plots. So, there is
no need for the market women to complain about space. All the
facilities they have demanded for are already part of our original plan.
Their concern has been addressed. But the market people are not
cooperating enough with us to execute the project,” he decried.
He
lamented that the approach of the market people to the relocation plan
had grave effect on foreign direct investments (FDIs) and public private
partnership (PPP) arrangement in Nigeria, lamenting that their approach
was affecting its business already.
“We are indebted
to the bank. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has issued a directive,
asking all the debtors in a letter to pay up by July 31. The names of
all debtors that fail to comply before the deadline would be published
in national dailies and blacklisted from borrowing. The implication is
that such debtors will no longer have access to credit facilities to
fund their business initiatives and projects. That is the end of
business for such debtors. If the bank cannot borrow you money, how can
you do business? Other subscribers think the project is a fraud and
scam,” he said.
Omotola appealed to Governor Akinwunmi
Ambode to resolve the impasse because “our investment suffers serious
setback and our overseas investors are threatening to recall their
funding,” adding that the deposition of the market people was a negative
advertisement for the PPP.
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