This is a common trend in Nigeria and a part of everyday
life. On a daily basis, you see young children, both male and female between 7
and teenage years with their wares, running after moving vehicles on highways. Snacks,
drinks, household items, vegetables and fruits constitute the major goods they
hawk.
While some pray for traffic jams so they sell their goods,
others take advantage of bus parks, bus stops, streets, markets and any other
public place with a lot of people to sell their wares. Some of these children
hawk in groups, moving from one location to the other from morning till late in
the evening.
One cannot argue the fact that the reason for this is
economic hardship. Why Hawkers Won’t Leave Nigerian Highways People need to
survive and will resort to whatever means to achieve this.
Even people who have shops and stalls still resort to
hawking. They have boys and girls who take some of the goods from the shop to
the highways and streets, maybe because they do not want to lay all their eggs
in one basket.
The fact is, half the children hawking on the street are not
sent by their biological parents. Most times they are taken away from the
village by a relative on the pretext of giving them a better life in the city.
In the end, they end up on the street hawking.
The dangers of street hawking are numerous. Many children
have been hit by moving vehicles, resulting in their death. Some of the girls
have been raped and some have been used for ritual purposes.
The Nigerian government has been fighting against this. The
government in some states has declared a total ban on street trading. Agencies
have been set up to catch offender. Sometimes they arrest those hawking but
these hawkers have refused to be deterred. Instead, when they sight officials
of these agencies, they begin to run helter skelter, looking for where to hide.
Some years back, the Lagos State Government came up with the
Kick Against Indiscipline, KAI, to enforce the ban on hawking on its roads.
Despite this, hawking has increased rather than reduce. You still see hawkers
all over the place. Last year, the State Government of Plateau had put a ban on
street hawking in Jos, the state capital.
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