Accra’s Night Markets on the Pavements
By Solomon Mensah
Traders selling on pavements in Accra |
When
night falls and the “Abayees”are snoring heavily like Okonkwo does in his sleep,
brisk businesses are born on pavements of Accra. The items sold range from
consumable to non-consumable goods. Brassieres, foot wears, jewels, and “kye-bom” with bread are but a few wares that compete with
pedestrians on the pavements and spill over onto the streets of Mayor Okoe
Vanderpuije’s Millennium City.
Clinking
of bells, soothing voices calling on passersby to buy, sign languages and many
more constitute traders’ advertisement. As someone born and bred in the
woodlands of the Brong Ahafo Region, I get curious when I walk in the streets
of the capital. In my part of the world, the sun does not set on traders.
Back
at Dodosuo (my holy village), one has to knock on Maame Kwaayie’s door when it
is 6pm for condiments. And if it becomes your habit to be knocking on traders’
doors after sunset, you can easily be (mis)taken for a witch. But that seems to
sharply contradict the marketing trend in big cities. “Their market knows no
night,” I murmured to myself.
It
is 8:10pm and I am walking down the lane leading from the V.I.P Bus Terminal at
Kwame Nkrumah Circle towards the Ghana Commercial Bank tower. Men, women and
children are seen busily buying and selling. I am so trapped in the crowd that
I have to walk sideways like a man who has lost his bearing to alcohol. A young
woman in her late twenties has the neck buried in the clothing she sells. Her
right leg is mounted on a small post and one hand dipped into the pocket in an
attempt to ‘balance’ a customer. Next to her is another fairly old woman
selling a pile of second-hand clothes.
Asare
Emmanuel sells ladies’ bags. He tells me this lane is the Circle Odawna Market.
On a blue polythene rubber spread on the pavement, his stuffed bags sit like
bull frogs in a swamp. “Oh the night market here is good. I make good sales
each night”, Asare explains why he sells at night.
But
aside this flourishing venture at night, the question as to whether it is good
selling on pavements is what must be the concern of authorities of the city, if
not the sellers and buyers.
Asare’s
friend, Kwabena says the Abayees (AMA city guards) do not allow them to sell on
pavements. He corrects my impression of the Abayees sleeping heartily at night.
For him, the Abayees only sleep with an eye closed.
“They
come here sometimes around 11:30pm after us,” he screams into my voice recorder
and makes a passionate appeal. “Please, tell them we beg them.”
Business
seems to be thriving in the night markets, especially as Christmas approaches.
But this act of indiscipline must not be allowed to continue for long. Pavements
are meant for pedestrians’ passage but not for market. Simple! The night
markets on the pavements have also become safe havens for pick-pockets. They
mingle with the crowd and take advantage of the human traffic to terrorise
unsuspecting passersby.
The
most annoying attitude of traders on the pavement is the fact that they see it
as their right to do what they do. In one of my rush hours to catch Burma Camp
bus at Tema station for lectures, I got humiliated by a trader. My crime was my
unknowingly kicking a pair of shoe he displayed on a pavement.
The
least attempt to rid our cities and towns of such acts of lawlessness is often
met with the accusation of rendering people jobless. But the fact that there
are no jobs does not mean that we should compound the situation with behaviours
that have the tendency of making life uncomfortable for people in our towns and
cities. We must all help the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) to make our city
clean and safe.
The writer is a student-journalist at the Ghana
Institute of Journalism.
Email: nehusthan4@yahoo.com
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