Poor workers, traders can’t afford low-cost housing estates, markets: MURIC

The Muslim Rights Concerns (MURIC), on Saturday, decried the subsisting high cost of government’s low-cost housing estates, saying it would be impactful if those would be pocket friendly to enable people to afford it.
MURIC, an Islamic human rights organisation, said this in a statement in Lagos, signed by its Director, Prof. Ishaq Akintola.
The message appealed to governments at all levels to make houses, stalls and shops in the markets affordable to the common man.
MURIC said that poor workers could hardly afford the price tag of the so-called low-cost housing estates while ordinary market women were driven out of their stalls because they could not pay for the shops built by governments.
“MURIC said the appeal is part of its Sallah message, felicitated with President Muhammadu Buhari, President-Elect Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar, the Shehu of Borno, Alhaji Abu Bakr bin Ibrahim Al-Kanemi, and all Nigerians on the occasion of this year’s Eid al-Fitr.
“In view of the fact that Ramadan is designed to evoke pity and sympathy for the poor in every society, we call attention to the plight of the Nigerian proletariat who toil day and night for our country but who are overworked, underpaid and over-taxed. We solicit for a special focus to the unfortunate phenomenon of redundant low-cost houses purportedly built for workers by the Federal and state governments but whose prices are well above what the poor workers can afford.
“Some of such buildings still remain unoccupied to date. They have become habitats for rodents, reptiles and cockroaches. They are symbols of bad government policies which need to be quickly reviewed.
“More saddening is the plight of poor and vulnerable market women who are driven out of their shops by governments. The shops are pulled down and ultramodern structures are built in their places. Yet governments always put crazy price tags that are unaffordable for the poor market women who were displaced for the new and modern shops.
“This constitutes deliberate dispossession and calculated economic disempowerment. It is sheer impoverishment as well as direct and deliberate attack on vulnerable women. Millions of such women have been rendered poor and driven into lives of slavery, hunger and disease.
“It should be noted that many of these poor market women are bread-winners for their husbands and children. They are responsible not only for the feeding and accommodation of their families but also for the education of their children.
“This obnoxious policy forces the grown-up children and sometimes the mothers to go into crime, prostitution and other evil practices like ritual killings and human trafficking. It is inexplicable, self-defeating and counter-productive for a government that is fighting criminality.
“MURIC singles out the Lagos State Government (LASG) in this hateful policy in its drive for increased Internally-Generated Revenue (IGR). Poor market women have been chased away from Igando, Iyana Iba, Okokomaiko, Ikotun, Oshodi, Mushin, and very recently, the Fruits Market at Ketu Garage in Lagos State.
“Ultramodern shops have been built in those former markets. The result is the massive displacement of poor, vulnerable market women as LASG placed high price tags on the new shops. Where does LASG expect poor market women who are selling pepper, onion, tomatoes, local herbs and other insignificant wares locally called ‘wosiwosi’ to get millions of naira to buy shops.
“The ultramodern shops have been taken over by modern-day capitalist comprador bourgeoisie with easy access to bank loans, connection in the corridors of power and a sinister motive to drive poor market women who are indigenes out of their land for eventual and total takeover of ‘a land without people’ by a people all out for total control of land belonging to others. We warn that these are ingredients for anarchy in the nearest future.
“MURIC advises the Federal and state governments to make their houses and markets people-friendly. Governments at all levels should reduce their greed for immediate recovery of capital invested in housing projects. The practice of selling houses and shops at skyrocket prices should stop. It only succeeds in strangulating the poor in society,” the statement read.
(NAN)
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