The Anambra State Government has reached an agreement with traders at Onitsha Main Market on a phased remodelling of the commercial hub, following consultations aimed at preventing widespread disruption to trading activities.
Chukwuma Soludo said the remodelling would be carried out in stages to ensure that business operations continue while critical infrastructure upgrades are undertaken.
Why this project needed a reset
The planned redevelopment initially raised concern among traders, who feared prolonged closures and income losses. Market associations had appealed for assurances that any renovation would be structured to protect livelihoods.
Government officials said the phased approach emerged from these engagements, designed to allow sections of the market to remain operational while others undergo renovation.
What traders pushed back against
Traders had expressed worries over displacement, access routes, and storage during construction. Representatives insisted that any upgrade must be transparent, predictable, and inclusive, given the market’s role as one of West Africa’s largest trading centres.
The new framework, they say, offers clearer timelines and communication channels.
How the state plans to manage the transition
According to the state government, remodelling will prioritise safety improvements, drainage, fire prevention systems, and improved stall layouts. Officials said trader associations would be consulted at every phase to address emerging challenges.
Temporary trading arrangements will be introduced where necessary to limit economic disruption.
Why Onitsha Main Market matters beyond Anambra
Onitsha Main Market is a major commercial artery serving traders across the South-East and beyond. Any disruption has ripple effects on supply chains, pricing, and regional commerce.
Analysts note that a carefully managed remodelling could strengthen the market’s competitiveness and resilience.
Why this agreement changes the tone
The compromise signals a shift from confrontation to collaboration, with both government and traders acknowledging the need for infrastructure renewal without undermining economic stability.
For the Soludo administration, the deal also serves as a test case for participatory urban redevelopment.
What this process quietly decides
If successfully implemented, the phased model could set a template for market redevelopment across Nigeria—showing that urban renewal and livelihoods do not have to be mutually exclusive.
Failure, however, would reinforce scepticism toward government-led redevelopment projects.
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