Boy, 12, shot dead, 8 injured as traders, natives resist demolition
of main market
Twelve-year-old Somtochukwu,
the son of a petty trader in Owerri, was yesterday allegedly shot dead by
soldiers brought in by the Imo State Government to provide security cover for
the men it engaged to demolish the Owerri Main Market.
Several other people, including the former youth
leader of Owerri, Leoard Ebubeagu and seven others, sustained bullet wounds as
the Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha kept his promise to forcefully eject
the traders at the ancestral market and part of the popular Ama Hausa quarters
also along Douglas Road in the city.
Sunday Sun gathered
that youths of Ohaji/Egbema were allegedly hired by the Deputy Chief of Staff
(Operations), Mr. Kingsley Uju, to thwart the resistance of the youths of
Owerri, who tried to stop the demolition of the market. It was further learnt
that the hired youths allegedly looted the wares of the traders who could not
remove their goods from their shops before the commencement of the demolition
exercise.
Governor Okorocha had last Thursday issued a
24-hour-quit order to owners of shops in the market, popularly known as Ekeukwu
Owere, to vacate the market or have their wares destroyed in the demolition
exercise.
But, as early as 6 .30am, over 200 armed security
agents from the Army, Department of State Services, Police, Nigeria Security
and Civil Defence Corps, Imo State Security Network and the Imo Community
Watch, had already cordoned off Douglas Road where the market is located.
Similarly, Mbaise Road, Emmanuel College junction and Fire Service Roundabout
leading to Egbu/ Mbaise Road were equally manned by armed security agents.
The security agents had shot sporadically into the
air supported by the Ohaji/Egbema youths, who carried cudgels in a bid to prevent
the traders, especially women from retrieving their wares. The action of the
youths from Ohaji/Egbema, with the support of the security agents caused a
clash between them and the youths of Owerri town and the affected traders.
In
the ensuing melee, Somtochukwu, who was trying to retrieve his mother’s wares
was shot dead by one of the soldiers. Leonard Ebubeagu was shot on one of his
legs and seven other persons also sustained gunshot wounds.
Ugo Mere, one of the youth leaders from Umuonyeche
Owerri, told Sunday Sun: “By
6.30a.m (yesterday), we discovered that the police and other security agents
who were armed had blocked all the access roads leading to Douglas Road.
We
also noticed that about four bulldozers had arrived the market. Before we knew
what was happening, the boys from Ohaji/Egbema had started smashing open the
lock-up shops at the market including those at Rotibi Street across Douglas
road but the Owerri youths had to repel them.
After awhile they reinforced and
came back in larger numbers, accompanied by the armed security agents. It was
in the resulting skirmish that one young boy, Somtochukwu, was shot dead
instantly. Seven other persons sustained gunshot wounds including our former
youth president Leonard Ebubeagu, who was shot on one of his legs.”
Also, lamenting the situation, Madam Abigail Nkwo,
said that she only got to know about the sudden quit order late Friday night as
she had been away for about two weeks.
“I lost all my goods because I deal in foodstuff and
worst of all was that the army people would not allow anybody to get their
items even when the demolition had not gotten to the place.
I don’t know what
kind of government this is, a government that has been causing the people pain.
I learnt that the governor said that he wants to expand the road and that is
why he has decided to demolish the place,” she said and rhetorically asked,
“Are we going to eat road?”
It was the same sad story for Jonas Eke who deals in
clothing materials. He decried the activities of the government which he said
no matter how well intentioned had robbed the people of their source of
livelihood.
“I don’t understand what Okorocha wants us to do
because right now, I have lost all the materials I have in my shop because
before I came, they had broken it open and looted the goods and I had just
restocked it. The governor said we should go to Egbeda, but that place is not
even ready and now my shop has been demolished because it is located in one of
the buildings that was first demolished by the bulldozers,” Eke lamented.
Meanwhile, the President General of the Owerri
Community Assembly, Felix Ngoka, a knight in the Anglican Communion, described
the demolition of the ancestral market of the Owerri people as an act of
lawlessness, saying that the matter was already before the court of law which
had earlier granted an injunction restraining the governor from interfering
with the market until the substantive suit filed against the government was
disposed of.
“The matter is still in court and the court gave an
injunction restraining the government from interfering with the market, but
what the governor has done today is nothing but lawlessness when the matter has
not been determined by the court of law.
We are law abiding people and you saw how the
governor used armed security agents and thugs to forcefully eject the people of
Owerri from their ancestral market,” Ngoka said.
He added that the governor had earlier informed them
that he wanted to modernize the market last year but we he was told that place
is an ancestral market where the women of Owere sell their vegetables and other
foodstuff, that it was the only market that Owerri people have, and that it had
been existing for almost 200 years even before Nigeria became a country.
Recently, the governor, he said, had indicated that he wanted to build a modern
school on the site of the market, stating that the traders should relocate to
Ohii in Egbeada in Mbaitoli Local Government Area.
Ngoka further stated that they had suggested to the
state governor a number of times to fence off the market from the road in order
to reduce the traffic grid lock experienced on Douglas Road by street traders
but that he had refused to do that because he has a special interest in the
location of the market.
Sunday Sun
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