Home News 3 die in Enugu as traders protest return-to-business enforcement (See video)

3 die in Enugu as traders protest return-to-business enforcement (See video)

7 min read
0
0
74

At least three people have reportedly been shot dead when protests spontaneously erupted in some parts of Enugu on Wednesday.

Traders and business men and women had taken to the streets in protest against the closure of their shops and offices by state government, which made good its threat to closedown businesses that failed to open on Monday in response to the sit-at-home order imposed by the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPoB).

Policemen dispatched to disperse the protesters were said to have shot live bullets into the crowed.

The protests, which started at the Ogbete Main Market, the largest market in the state, and one of the biggest in the South East, quickly spread to the nearby Ogui Road, with protesters creating burnfires in the middle of the roads and chanting antigovernment slogans.

Leaders of the Ogbete Main Market, where many shops were locked by the government enforcement team, had decided not to open for business on Wednesday in solidarity with their members whose businesses had been closed, following the government’s directive.

Angry youths and other residents, who make their daily living from the services they render at the market, began the protest. But it quickly spread as other residents joined, swelling the number to thousands, leading to the barricading of all the roads leading to the Ogbete Market and the adjoining Okpara Avenue and Ogui Road.

The protesters lamented the desperate state of the state’s economy, and wondered why Governor Peter Mbah’s priority was to shut down businesses where the masses eke out their daily living.

The also accused the governor of infringing on their rights to freedom of choice, wondering how it affected governance if people decided not to open their shops on a particular day.

“This government is cruel and not focused”, one of the protesters said. “How does it concern them if we decide not to go to work on any particular day. It is within our rights to decide on when and how to do our business, as long as we do not infringe on the law”.

Another protester also accused the government of abdication of their responsibilities and demanded restoration of the security in the state before trying to ban the sit-at-home.

He said: “As I am talking to you now, people are kidnaped in many parts of the state every day. It is almost impossible for people to travel to Nsukka because of the fear of kidnappers. People are afraid to travel through the Four-Corner area to Onitsha and Udi, because of kidnappers. Even in Enugu here, people are robbed and kidnapped routinely, and the government has not even said a word about it. Yet they will lock our shops because we want to stay away from the harm that could possibly come to us if the IPoB people begin to attack us for violating their sit-at-home order.

“We want to do our business. We are not happy staying away from our businesses every Monday. But the government should first get rid of the criminals that attack us on Mondays when we open for business so that we can find it safe to open our shops and conduct our businesses”, he said.

Another trader accused Mbah of dereliction of duty and wondered if forcing traders to open their shops on Monday was the most important issue facing the state.

“Look at the roads here”, she said. “They have been taken over by refuse heaps. All the major roads in the city have been converted to dumpsites. How will a governor that cannot rid the state of dirt be able to rid the state of insecurity and make it conducive for business”?

Upon assumption of office on 29th May, Mbah placed a ban on the IPoB-imposed sit-at-home order, and threatened to punish civil servants and private businesses that fail to be at work on Mondays.

The governor’s order coincided with the resumption of violent crimes and kidnapping in many parts of the state, and citizens blamed it on the governor’s order.

Load More Related Articles
Load More By Breezynews
Load More In News

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Check Also

NNPC boss to protesters: We’re not responsible for fuel price hike

NNPC Limited (NNPCL) has stated that its Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO), Mallam Mele…