Fire Guts Onitsha Market, Traders Attempt Suicide
OnitshaTraders and small scale industrialists lost goods and
properties worth millions of naira yesterday in Onitsha following an
early morning fire that gutted the polythene dealers market, Nwaizu
Estate, Awada.
Three businessmen, who could not withstand the
enormity of their losses allegedly attempted suicide by jumping into the
raging fire but hey were later rescued by fellow traders.
When
Daily Sun reporter visited the market yesterday morning, billows of
smoke covered everywhere, while parts of the market were still on fire
even as the traders watched helplessly as nothing was recovered from the
inferno.
Scores of distraught shop owners in the market said the
inferno started in the market at about 2am, after a storm with claps of
thunder ripped through the area and a nearby shop caught fire which
spread to the entire market.
Giving further insight on the
incident, the Chairman of Progressive Polythene Dealers Welfare
Association, Mr. Vincent Elechi, said the traders had suffered terrible
losses and regretted that the situation would have been salvaged if the
state fire service had responded promptly.
“From our findings, it
was the electric pole at the entrance of the market that caught fire
when thunder struck. But immediately I got the information, I alerted
the state fire service and they promised to come, but later said they
needed to refill their water tank. By the time they arrived, everywhere
was on fire because our products are highly inflammable. We have more
than 3,000 traders and small scale industrialists here but all our years
of toiling have been reduced to ashes. Though we are still counting
our losses, presently more than N500 million has gone down the drain,’’
he said.
Corroborating the chairman’s claims, the Vice Chairman
of the market, Francis Ubakasi, said some people were rescued from the
fire when they attempted suicide.
He stated that the market
served the polythene needs of Nigerians and some African countries,
while some of them borrowed money from the banks to finance the
procurement of their machine tools.
The traders appealed to the state government to come to their aid to cushion the effect of their losses.
source: Sun News
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