CLI: Lagos announces total ban on cart pushers

Cart pushers

Cart pushers: Two cart pushers die in a fight over who should carry some goods purchased by a trader at Cemetery Market in Aba, Abia State.

Cart pushers

By Kazeem Ugbodaga

The Lagos State Government has announced a total ban on the operations of cart pushers and wheel barrow in the State, as it begins full implementation of the Cleaner Lagos Initiative, CLI.

The government said on Staturday that activities of cart pushers and wheel barrow operators were inimical to the environmental cleanliness in the State.

Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Tunji Bello, in a statement said with the flag off of the CLI, the continuous activities of cart pushers would pose a threat to the success of the initiative.

According to him, investigations had also revealed that the cart pushers were responsible for most of the illegal dumping of waste in canals and road medians at night which caused flooding, adding that aside constituting environmental nuisance, they were also traces of security threats.

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“What the State Government has discovered is that these set of people use the night to perpetrate all sorts of dastardly acts. They dump refuse indiscriminately on the median of major roads and highways. They also pose serious security threats because they use those carts to hide arms and ammunitions and hide under the guise of carrying refuse to rob unsuspecting residents,” he said.

Bello stated that government had finalised plans to ensure that the CLI would cover every area of the State and ensure that refuse were well packed and collected, urging residents to desist from patronising them or risk prosecution.

“The State Government has declared zero tolerance for the activities of cart pushers and wheel barrow operators. Security agencies in the State have been directed to ensure that those found still operating are arrested and prosecuted according to the State Environmental Laws.

“The law also applies to residents who patronise cart pushers. It is an offence and the State Government would not hesitate to enforce the law to put a stop to such practice,” Bello said.

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