NEWS
Breaking: Protest rocks Kogi State as traders decry high cost of food items
Many Nigerians across the country are joining in on the protest against the harsh economic conditions during the Bola Tinubu-led administration.
Joining the nationwide protest, the Kogi State traders organized a large-scale demonstration on Wednesday to express their sorrow which centered around the constant rise in food items.
Market women and men joined the protest in the streets of Lokoja, the state capital, and cried out over the ever-increasing prices of essential commodities and how it has affected patronage of their businesses.
TopNaija gathered that there was a fresh round of protests in Suleja, the commercial nerve centre of Niger State which is only a few distances away form the FCT, Abuja
The angry Nigerians had stormed the streets on Wednesday, according to photographs obtained by SaharaReporters, calling on the President Bola Tinubu-led government to end the hardship and unbearable inflation on the land.
In Lokoja, the traders closed their shops as they no longer got patronage due to the high cost of commodities.
During the protest, a trader who was simply identified as Mrs Ladi, who deals in rice and beans, said the astronomical increase in the cost of the commodities had affected her business capital as she has continued to record low sales.
Mrs. Ladi, who lamented that she could hardly make profit after trading was quoted as saying “Mudu of rice which was selling for N800 now cost N1,700. This is because a bag of rice which cost N35,000 has now increased to N65,000. With this, we cannot make our own profit.”
She said that “This is the reason we are calling on the government to come to our aid by subsidising commodities grown in Nigeria. We are tired of low sales.”
Also, another protester, Mrs Laruba, who sells palm oil, lamented that she usually travels to Kogi East to purchase the commodity. But she expressed regrets that the business is no longer profitable.
Laruba added that by the time she calculated her expenses and subtracted the same from the cost of the items, buyers often felt cheated.
Another trader lamented that despite efforts by traders to part with some profits on goods, poor patronage has become discouraging.
The trader said that “There is nothing to show for our efforts in terms of expected gains or profit. We are only praying that our labour should not be in vain at the close of trading activities.”
For Mrs Adah, a vegetable trader, the Nigerian Government should address the astronomical increase in the cost of food items.
Adah said that “Prices of pepper, rice, beans among others have all gone up and the hike in price cuts across every item. To worsen the situation, the government is not helping matters.
“We are pleading with the government to assist us with a view to ensuring the reduction in the price of food items. We are only managing to eat. The hike in the price of commodities has almost eroded our profit.”