I am writing this piece after holding a series of
conversations with Lagos street traders and hawkers who seem not be aware of or
are just indifferent to, or may be they are intrigued by, the fact that the
State Governor, Akinwunmi Ambode has declared on television that the state
government is prepared to enforce an existing law banning street hawking. The
relevant law, the Lagos State Street Trading and Illegal Market Prohibition
Law, 2003 prescribes a punishment of N90, 000 or a six-month jail term, for both
the buyer and the seller of any goods or services on the streets. So I
asked this vendor, who kept pushing copies of the day’s newspapers in my face,
so close, you wouldn’t even be able to read the headline free of charge.
“My friend, are you aware that what you are doing is
illegal? You never hear say Governor Ambode don ban street trading?”
“That one no concern vendor oh. Na these other people wey
dey sell chewing gum and water dem dey talk about”
“No. Street trading is street trading. You are hawking
your newspapers, why don’t you get a shop or a stand?”
“Make I open shop to sell newspaper? Na for inside traffic
people dey buy newspaper, oga?’”
“I just hope they won’t arrest you. The fine is N90, 000 or
six months in jail.”
“Oga, you wan buy paper? Which one you wan buy, I beg.
See, the thing be say, for this Nigeria, anytime wey anybody reach power,
dem go just dey do wetin dey like. Dey no dey pity we poor people at all.”
I laughed and drove off.
“Water! Water!”, I yelled at a young man carrying a small
basket of drinks. He ran to the car from the other side of the road,
side-stepping a Keke Marwa and almost colliding with a motorcycle.
“How much?”
“N100”
“Can I buy because I hear the Governor says they should
arrest anybody that is hawking anything in Lagos. And this is Agidingbi oh, too
close to Alausa. Please.”
“Oga buy wetin you wan buy. If we no sell water for traffic,
you know how many people go don die for inside go-slow. When traffic start now,
even Ambode go buy water for inside traffic drink.”
“Oya, bring it quickly. Don’t let those LASTMA people see
you.”
“Which LASTMA people? Oga, relax. Na we-we. As we dey this
street so, nobody fit remove us.“
As I listened to his attempt to share his knowledge of the
streets, I heard the clanging of a bell. A bicyclist was approaching, a
mini-cooler, hanging conspicuously in his front. Fan Ice! Fan Milk! A
young girl passed, carrying a tray of groundnuts. The early morning
traffic was beginning to build up, 24 hours after Governor Ambode huffed and
puffed on television about street hawking.
I immediately remembered Olajumoke Orisaguna, the Nigerian
Cinderella, who made it from street hawking to the runway. It occurred to me to
ask one of the hawkers.
“Do you know Olajumoke?”
“Do you know Olajumoke?”
“Olajumoke, oni bread. Oga you sef, e ti jasi. Don
Jazzy, Baba. If Olajumoke no sell bread for street, how dem for discover say
him get talent. Oga, as you me so, I be student oh for Polytechnic. The
money I make from the street, that ‘s what I use to maintain myself and one
day, if I become Governor in this country, I‘ll remember and I will not ban
street hawking.”
That was some sobering thought. The sociology of street
trading is worth understanding. It is mostly a source of employment for many
persons with low income and low education, and in its more structured format, a
large part of the informal sector in many parts of the world. For the buyer who
has been demonized along with the seller in the Lagos state law, street trading
actually provides easy access to a lot of goods and services, and when you are
trapped in the ubiquitous traffic hold-ups across the city, running into hours
oftentimes, it helps to just look out the window and buy any food item ranging
from fish, to fried meat and shrimps, loaves of bread, biscuits, gala, meat
pie, water, beer and any other drink. If it is a rainy day and you need to step
out of the vehicle, you can buy an umbrella while in the traffic. You can also
get served hot milk, tea or coffee, or have a shoe-shiner give your shoes a
new, clean, gleaming look.
On a sunny and humid day, and you are thirsty, you can have
very cold fan milk, or any other drink to cool down your system.
Pop-corn, roasted maize, walnuts, name it, everything is available by the
roadside, as the traffic crawls. If you have issues with your phone, or your
wrist-watch, or even your clothes, you can buy new ones on the streets.
Books, musical CDs, electronics, even sex toys, and aphrodisiacs. There
is a special connection between traffic and street trading. But there are
also challenges for all parties involved: for the buyer, you could get sold
fake or risky stuff, and your money could be stolen – always collect the goods
and your change before you hand over any amount.
The sellers always have to contend with physical risk and
sexual abuses, run-ins with extortionist law enforcement officials,
nerve-wracking exposure to the elements, and competition for space.
People sell on the streets because they cannot afford to rent shops or
erect structures, and in any case, government is often part of this problem.
Markets are taken over by the authorities with the intention to modernize them,
but when the shops and stalls are built, the original traders can no longer
afford them because they would have been taken over by the rich and prized beyond
the reach of the poor who are then forced onto the streets, thus deepening the
agony of the displaced and the marginalized. This is the story of Tejuoso
market in Lagos, as is the story of others across the country. If street
traders had a choice, they would also acquire permanent structures where they
can display their wares in safety. If they could help it, they will also sit in
the comfort of air-conditioned vehicles. Traffic and street trading
further define an existential part of the urban social order, and in Lagos as
elsewhere, the character, pulse and soul of the city.
The convenient tendency for government officials is to
dismiss the street as the haunt of miscreants, criminals and the dubious and
street trading as a nuisance to the social order. This is what Governor
Ambode of Lagos has done. The trigger for his televised sanctimony is the
recent clash in Lagos at Maryland and Ojota, involving the law, traffic
and street traders with tragic consequences. We are told that Kick Against Indiscipline
(KAI) officials had given a hawker the chase, that fateful day. As the young
man ran across the busy expressway, he found himself in front of an on-coming
state-government owned BRT bus, which crushed him instantly – his intestines
gouged out. This resulted in mob action.
In the process, 49 BRT vehicles, belonging to the state government were torched, and according to the Governor, it will cost the state government “almost N139 million to put those buses back on the road.” The Governor sounds as if the loss of these buses is more painful than the death of Nnamdi, the street hawker who was chased to his death. Haba, Governor, se oro ni yen! The Governor needs to be reminded of the over-zealousness of KAI-LASTMA officials and the recklessness, also, of BRT bus drivers, and the fact that N139 million may replace buses, but it will not replace a life that has been lost. It is also hard to believe that the Governor’s position is based on the outcome of investigations, which try to distance the state officials from the accident, and even if this is so, the decision to exhume a law that is to all practical purposes, a dead law, only enforced opportunistically, does not fully address the issue. A law is dead as an instrument of social justice when it is openly defied, disregarded, resisted and attempts to enforce it are openly ridiculed, and the state itself finds its application difficult in the face of the people’s preferences and choices. The test and impact of any true law is in its application.
To get hawkers off the streets, government must provide
alternative opportunities and invest more in social capital. The menace of
traffic hold ups should be addressed and a proper transportation network must
be in place. Shops and stalls must be affordable and accessible and
markets should be located in user-friendly locations. Street hawkers are
constrained by their social circumstances, most of all, by poverty. To check
street trading, government must also address the rising threat of rural-urban
migration. Lagos as a growing megalopolis is the destination of choice for all
kinds of adventurers from Nigeria’s hinterlands, they arrive in the city, and
having nothing to do, they manage to buy a basket, or a tray, which they fill
with goods that may not be up to N5,000, and they jump onto the streets,
struggling to earn a living as the traffic crawls.
To push them out is to destroy the only dream they have of remaining human. The state government should take a second look at the law: perhaps the most urgent thing is to insist that anyone of school age, must not be found hawking, during school hours. And no matter what, Governor Ambode should not rob us of the humour of the streets, a rich therapeutic part of life and living in Lagos. I remember as I say this, those young, nubile girls on the streets of Lagos who sell drugs and local herbs. They all have the same qualifications: their front-lamps are permanently in the North, staring directly into a man’s eyes. The girls are coy, friendly, optically tempting, and they only target men as customers. Even when you insist you don’t need what they sell, they won’t let you be.
“Oga, buy this tablet now. Or taste this drink. Madam will
thank you for it.”
“Madam? She must not even know I spoke with you!”
“But she will thank you, I swear.”
“You have used it before?”
“Hen hen.”
“Okay. But before I buy anything, I must test it. And na me
and you go test am. Enter moto, make we go.”
“Hen, go where? Oga, go test am with Madam for house.”
“No. I will test it on you first. Fine girl, you dey fear?”
Oftentimes, this is followed by much laughter with the girl
scampering off…
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