Opinion
Tackling Menace Of Street Trading
From Eleme Junction
to Oil Mill Junction, Rumuokoro to Rumuokwuta Junction, and from Artillery Junction to Mile 1, the situation is the same. Traders have taken over the major roads and streets in Port Harcourt, selling everything from wrist watches, recharge cards, hardsets and accessories, snacks, fresh fruits to beverages and electronics.
Some roads like Creek Road in Port Harcourt township have been rendered impassable by traders who display their articles of trade on the road and carry out their trading with impunity.
Prior to the immediate past administration of Gov Rotimi Amaechi, many people constructed kiosks and shops by the road-side, but government demolished them to give Port Harcourt a befitting look. Sadly, despite this drastic measure, street trading and hawking have continued to thrive in the Garden City.
Apparently, oblivious of the risks associated with street trading and hawking, and its menace to the environment, many people are increasingly participating in road-side merchandise. Some of the hawkers often get hit by moving vehicles; resulting sometimes in permanent injury or even death. Yet the business continues to boom.
The most disturbing thing is that while these traders are obstructing traffic on major roads with their business activities, many stalls in various markets in the city are unoccupied. For instance, at Creek Road Market where almost all the traders are on the road, many stalls inside the market are empty begging for occupants.
What beats one’s imagination is that government could allow this hazardous business to continue even when it had been outlawed. Section 11(xx) and 35(i) of the Environmental Sanitation Authority Law of Rivers State (Cap52), Laws of Rivers State of Nigeria, 1999,stipulates some penalties for engaging in peddling goods on the roads.
“It is a criminal offence punishable with three months imprisonment for any person to sell or offer for sale, any goods or other articles of trade at traffic light junctions or any other unauthorised places in Rivers State”, stipulates the law.
The law further states that upon prosecution, convicts are liable to a fine of not less than N10,000 but not more than N50,000 for a first offender and not less than N20,000 or imprisonment for a period not exceeding three months for subsequent offence. Incidentally, making a law is one thing and enforcing it is another. We keep chunning out laws in Nigeria, without enforcing them.
Undoubtedly, the problem of street trading continues to persist in the state because of the non-enforcement of the law to the letter.
Government must be firm in enforcing the law if the menace of street trading and hawking must be tackled effectively. That is why one must commend the recent efforts of the current administration in the state to dislodge street traders in Port Harcourt.The ministry of Environment, Ministry of Urban Development, Environmental Sanitation Authority and other relevant authorities should take all measures necessary to arrest the situation. Allowing street trading and hawking to go on unhindered will certainly negate the policy of the present administration to beautify Port Harcourt through its urban renewal programme.
One area that the authorities need to consider critically is the issue of dearth of affordable shops which has often been given by traders as the reason for trading on the streets. The cost of renting market stalls must be made affordable to the small scale traders that majorly constitute bulk of street traders if the dream of stamping out street trading must be realised.
Some people have also suggested that alternative places should be provided for the street traders since the stalls in most markets are above their reach. I beg to support the idea.
Most importantly, government should address the plight of the street traders and hawkers, especially those who took to that line of business due to unemployment and poverty. Reports from opinion polls carried out by many media organisations in the past revealed that a good number of hawkers are graduates who decided to hawk when they couldn’t find any paid job.
It is a fact that we need to make our environment, state and country look decent like many other countries of the world. But it is also true that we cannot achieve these without first of all taking care of the human beings that inhabit these places. Nigeria is blessed with abundant resources which are daily lavished on irrelevant things. If we invest some of the wasted fund on employment generation and poverty alleviation, certainly, the number of street traders and hawkers will reduce drastically.
Calista Ezeaku
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