Agriculture
Eid-el-Kabir: Price Of Rams Skyrocket In Lagos
Just few days to the Eid-el-Kabir festival, prices of rams and goats have continued to skyrocket in Lagos while prospective buyers are grumbling, a Tide source reports.
Some buyers, who spoke in separate interviews with our Correspondent in Lagos, lamented the high cost of rams slaughtered by Muslims as part of the ritual to mark the Eid-el-Kabir.
The Tide checks at the markets indicated that the prices of rams ranged from N30,000 to as high as N150,000 as against N20,000 and N80,000 during this period last year.
A School Principal Alhaji Idris Ibrahim, told newsmen that the situation had forced him to settle for only one ram as against three he usually slaughtered for the festival.
“I have no option than to settle for only one this time because of the high cost of rams.
“ This is against my usual practice of buying three rams for the festival,” he said.
A Civil Servant, Mr Abiodun Oladosu, said that the cost of ram had eaten up his salary for a whole month as his savings for the commodity could not meet up.
“I have to look for extra money to be able to buy my choice as the price of the ram is too high,” said the civil servant.
He said that what compounded the situation was the absence of any price control mechanism moderating the annual sale of the rams.
“There is virtually nothing we can do as government itself is powerless regarding the control of the sale of the commodity,” he said.
Mrs Afusat Alatishe decried the high cost of the rams but expressed optimism that the price would still come down as more rams arrived before the festival proper.
“The high cost of these rams has remained a source of concern to some of us bread winners who buy more than one for the family.
“I am optimistic that the price will still come down as more rams arrive before the Eid-el-Kabir,” she said.
Reacting to the complaints, Alhaji Haruna Usman, the Chairman, Ram Sellers Association, Iganmu, Lagos chapter, blamed the high cost of the rams on inadequate supply from the northern part of the country.
He said that the five trailers received by the association so far fell short of the 13 trailers which were received at this time last year.
Usman identified insecurity occasioned by the activities of the Boko Haram sect, especially in the northern part, as being responsible for the low supply.
Other factors, according to him, were high cost of transportation, high cost of animal feeds which rose from N200 to N1,200 per bag and taxes paid to the Lagos State Government for the use of public spaces to sell the rams.
He appealed to the buyers to exercise patience, saying that the price would come down as more rams were expected in the state before the festival.