Opinion
Begging And The Lagos Example
Every government’s policy can hardly be accepted by all. Hardly had there been any government’s policy that was favourable to the entire populace. It is therefore not surprising to hear of controversies and arguments being generated by Lagos State government’s effort to rid the state of beggars.
Some people particularly human rights activists, have described the recent arraignment of 39 beggars at a special court in Lagos as the height of insensitivity on the part of the government.
They described the new Lagos State law which outlines new regulations restricting the movement and activities of beggars within Lagos metropolis as harsh. A position which was supported by the Lagos State Association of Baggars during a protest.
However, the Lagos State Government has maintained that several efforts had been made by Babatunde Fashola’s administration to change the fortunes of the beggars but many of them prefer begging.
The Special Adviser to the State government, Dolapo Badru, was quoted as saying that government decided to commence the prosecution of beggars because it had exhausted all avenues to take them off the road including trying to make some of them earn a trade.
Going by the government’s argument, it may not be proper to blame the government for taking the “harsh” steps. The truth is that measures have to be taken to check the growing number of beggars in majors cities in the country. You see them everywhere; at motor parks, bus stops, churches, mosques, major roads, etc.
They have evolved many strategies to extort money from the public. Some complain of lack of money to pay hospital bills, transport fares and in some cases to buy food.
Recently, a scene was created in a church in Port Harcourt when a healthy looking woman who claimed to be a widow approached another woman, begging for money. The second who was obviously infuriated by the demand flared up “what do you mean you are a widow? Is being a widow an excuse for you to be going from one church to another, harassing people? I am a widow too and I don’t beg. You had better go and find something doing, and stop embarrassing yourself”
The so-called widow raised her voice in defence of herself, asserting that instead of stealing, she would continue to beg.
What about able-bodied men and women who move from one commercial bus to another preaching and at the end of the exercise demand money from commuters which will be used to spread the gospel. Glorified beggars.
There are various tricks people used for begging. Some use sick people to beg. They carry sick people in wheel-barrows or keep them at a spot and use their horible pictures to beg for alms. They claim that the money raised is used for the sick people’s treatment.
Some beg under the guise of one deformity or the other. Some parents and guardians even use their children, relatives and wards for the business.
For some, especially those from neighbouring countries who take optimum advantage of our porous borders to infiltrate the country, begging is a family business, an industry of sorts.
These groups of family beggars, including the men, their wives, and children, have become a nuisance in many urban cities. The men sit at a nearby spot and watch their wives and children beg for alms. Their children usually rough-handle passers-by to extort money from them.
However, we cannot claim ignorant of the fact that beggars abound who are forced into the trade by certain unbearable factors. The harsh economic climate in the country has forced many to take up begging in the streets. Some beg out of sheer desperation after making several futile attempts to get reliable jobs. Some of them are forced into begging in the dire need to make ends meet.
It is therefore important that for the menace to be drastically reduced, the federal, state and local governments should create more jobs and give employment to the teeming crowd of jobless people. Many of the destitutes roaming the streets are quite ready to work if given the chance.
Government should set up a public welfare scheme which among other things would carter for the needs of unemployed persons. Effort should also be made to encourage unemployed persons to start their own businesses instead of looking up to government for employment.
Government agencies like National Directorate of Employment (NDE) should strive to expand the scope and focus of their work to incorporate more unemployed persons, especially those roaming the streets, begging for money.
As once suggested by a public speaker, there should be sincere effort to reduce corruption in the country as that is the root cause of all the problems in the country. If the billions of naira embezzled by our leaders and public office holders were put into developmental projects and agriculture, many beggars wouldn’t be found in the streets as we have them today. There is therefore the need for us to have a responsive, sincere and accountable government at all levels whose desire will be to make life more meaningful for the governed instead of siphoning the public fund for their own selfish gain.
I think other governors should emulate Gov Fashola in his effort to make life better for the beggars. Governors and their wives through their pet projects should make effort to rehabilitate beggars in their states.
These efforts should transcend the mere provision of employment for them. Psychological dimension to begging should also be considered.
Calista Ezeaku
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