Daughter
of former Lagos State Governor and the state’s market leader, Folashade
Tinubu-Ojo, has said she never demanded the All Progressives Congress
membership card from traders as a prerequisite to reopening the Abibatu Mogaji
Model Market in Lagos.
A
statement by her media consultant, Gboyega Akosile, on Thursday added that no
money was demanded from the traders before the market was reopened on Monday.
PUNCH
Metro had reported how Tinubu-Ojo led a team of policemen to the market,
popularly called Iponri Market 10 days earlier to lock it up.
Our
correspondent had quoted market sources on Wednesday alleging that Tinubu-Ojo
demanded APC cards and money from traders before the market was reopened.
Akosile,
however, said the allegations were false.
The
statement reads in part, “To set the record straight, the Iyaloja-General
(Tinubu-Ojo) did not demand N5m from the traders and at no time was money paid
to her personally before the market was reopened.
“On
the issue of her demanding APC membership registration card, the
Iyaloja-General did not ask traders to present their APC membership cards as a
prerequisite to the reopening of the market. In fact, only executive members of
the Iponri market held meetings with the Iyaloja-General and those few people
could not have registered for the entire market men and women.”
Akosile
explained that Tinubu-Ojo locked up the market to correct some issues bordering
on “poor sanitary condition, defacing the original structure of the market,
converting shops to other uses, illegal toll collection by some unscrupulous
elements in the market, non-payment of statutory and mandatory fees to the
local government and illegal occupant syndrome.”
It
will, however, be recalled that our correspondent had quoted Tinubu-Ojo in the
Wednesday publication. She said the traders were asked to pay fine.
She
had said, “We have re-opened the market. I sent some people to open it. Yes,
money was collected as fine, which is the norm in the market.”
Our
correspondent re-visited the market on Thursday to speak with more market
sources and confirm earlier information.
A
woman who sold cutlery told our correspondent that money was demanded from the
market.
She
said, “The market was fined. Each shop was asked to pay N1,000.”
The
source pleaded with our correspondent to stop publishing the matter as it was
already generating more conflict.
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