You are here: HomeNewsRegional2021 01 21Article 409331

General News of Thursday, 21 January 2021

Source: punchng.com

Coronavirus protocols shunned as Lagos auctions 88 vehicles

File photo: Scene of the auction File photo: Scene of the auction

The car park of the Lagos State Task Force on Environmental Sanitation and Special Offences in the Alausa area of Ikeja was a rowdy place on Wednesday afternoon as over 300 Lagosians jostled to buy 88 vehicles seized and auctioned by the task force.

In what appeared a survival of the highest bidder, Lagosians shunned COVID-19 protocols to clinch their desired vehicles.

The Punch had reported that the task force said it obtained an order of the Lagos State Mobile Court to auction the 88 vehicles seized for various traffic violations across the state.

The Chairman of the agency, Shola Jejeloye, had announced that the public auction would hold today at the agency’s car park in the state capital.

Our correspondent, who was at the venue of the public auction on Wednesday, observed that over 300 Lagosians gathered to bid for the vehicles, many of whom did not wear their face masks while a sparse minority who used theirs hang the protective clothing around their chins, leaving their mouths and nostrils uncovered.

“Use you face masks, social distancing please,” said an official who spoke with the aid of a public address system but the bidders paid no attention as they clustered around other officials of the task force. This is particularly concerning amid the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic with Lagos being the epicentre of the infection in Nigeria.

At the public auction on Wednesday, the officials stood on elevated platforms and rang handbells intermittently as they announced the prices of the vehicles while the bidders bellowed their interest to have the vehicles. The officials called a starting price of N100,000 and raised it till the last man standing.

A relatively new red-coloured Toyota RAV 4 was auctioned for N400,000 while some yellow-coloured commercial buses also known as danfos were disposed of for as low as N150,000. Both private and commercial vehicles were disposed.

The names of the highest bidders were written by officials of the task force side by side with the number plates of the vehicles auctioned.

Unnamed officials of the task force were heard telling the bidders that the money must be paid immediately while some bidders engaged in a verbal scuffle over certain brands of cars.

Many Nigerians have since criticised the whole auction process. A popular disc jockey, Obianuju Catherine Udeh, fondly referred to as DJ Switch had appeared in a video of late, censuring the Lagos State Government for being insensitive and too hard on the traffic offenders.

DJ Switch, who is outside the country following the #EndSARS protests in October 2020, said fines could have been imposed on the offenders or they could have been sentenced on community services.