Fashola To Sack 30,000 Katangowa Traders
The popular Katangowa market in Agbado Oke-Odo Local Council
Development Area, LCDA of Lagos State, southwest Nigeria, will soon be
no more. The market is known for second hand clothes business, popularly
called Okirika and spare part trading.
With a population of over 30, 000 traders, the market is one of the
biggest Okirika market in Nigeria. The traders claimed they have been
trading in the area for about 30 years.
Last Thursday, Governor Babatunde Fashola, during a tour of facilities
in the Lagos metropolis visited the market as part of plans by the
government to build a Digital Village that may cost the
government
billions of naira in the area.
The plan was to relocate the traders in Computer Village in Ikeja to the
area. If this is achieved, what is the fate of the displaced traders in
the Katangowa market?
When Governor Fashola was addressed by the traders, he said the
government has no plan to relocate them to another area, as they were
not the rightful owners of the land.
He said the 17 hectares of land being occupied by the traders and
squatters belonged to the state government and the government was not
ready to pay compensation to illegal occupants on its land.
The traders had appealed to the governor to resettle them at Amikanle
area, which the government had earlier promised to do, but Fashola did
not make any commitment to it.
Fashola stated that his administration had kept a track record of
resettling and paying compensation to people who had been displaced from
their lawfully acquired property.
He, however, said that in a situation where people encroached into
government’s land illegally, they should not expect compensation or
resettlement when such property is re-acquired by government.
“As far as resettlement is concerned, we have always played an exemplary
role . We did Isale Gangan redevelopment, we did Oluwole redevelopment
and we resettled the people involved. But in cases where people are
squatters, they have no rights over the property.
“The law does not protect illegality, it protects rights and you do not
acquire rights by acting illegally. Human rights are legal rights; they
are not rights acquired by illegal conduct and we must understand this
in a democracy,” he said.
Fashola challenged anybody who claimed to have been deprived of his
legally acquired property by his administration without getting
compensation to bring forward such claim.
“All of the demolition we did to expand the Badagry Expressway, we are
still giving compensation to the displaced people. The people that are
displaced in Oshodi will soon relocate to a new market that is ready. We
have intervened in Obalende without necessarily displacing the rightful
owners.
“I hope that members of the public will understand that they can’t have a
right to a place by jumping onto the roadside and saying it is where
they must trade. May be, it may be politically popular to agitate
citizens who are not aware of what their rights and obligations are.
“People escalate these things. Some people, societies or organisations
make profit and get grants at the behest of the so-called masses they
claim to be fighting for. The masses don’t have the right to break the
law and if they do, we will enforce it,” he stated.
Mr. Femi Adedeji, who spoke on behalf of the traders, said displacing
the traders from the market would not augur well with them, as it would
have negative impact on them and the state. He claimed that the
government had initially said it would relocate the traders to Amikanle
area of the state.
PM News