Featured
Rivers traders lament hike in prices of food stuffs, blame COVID-19

Some of the traders who spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) during a market survey in Port Harcourt said that the rate of increase in prices of food items may soon kick them out of business and bring more hunger in the country.
Mrs Edna Offong, one of the traders who sells bags of rice in the market told NAN that the rate of increase in the price of rice is alarming.
Offong stated that the price of rice has gone up twice in the market before the outbreak of the pandemic.
“The rate of increase in the prices of food is alarming, and I am afraid I don’t know how we are going to survive in this business.
“The price of 50kg bag of foreign rice which we sold at N26,000 before COVID-19, is now N39,000 while a bag of 50kg local rice that we were selling at N17,000 is now N29,000,” she said.
Similarly, Mrs Faith Emezie, another trader who sells bags of beans, told NAN that prices of foodstuff in the market are outrageous.
Emezie lamented that the increase in prices has made her to lose her business capital and slowed down patronage from her customers.
“I am just here because I don’t want to sit at home and see my children cry from hunger, I have lost my capital.
“This is because when I finished selling and I went back to the market to restock, the price has increased more than the money I brought. I ended up buying small quantity of beans which I struggled hard to resell due to the increase in price.
“Remember that children have been out of school since the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic, eating more than when they were going to school.
“This also contributes to the loss in my capital because I feed them from my sales, and I am sure other families are experiencing the same thing as well.
“Honestly, I am pleading with our government to control prices of goods in the markets, so that people will not be selling anyhow they like, not minding if it is suitable or not for buyers and sellers,” she pleaded.
Miss Marian Felix, another trader, who sells condiments attributed the high cost of spaghetti and macaroni pasta, tomato paste, and edible oil in the market to the shutdown by companies during the pandemic.
Felix said that a packet of pasta sold at N200 now sells for N250, while a sachet of tomato paste sold at N50 is currently sold for N120.
She said 4 litres of vegetable oil sold at N3,500 is now N5,000 and 4 litres of red oil sold at N1,500 now sells for N2,500.
“I pray that God Almighty will help our country to come out of this trying times for us to continue to live better as we have been living before the pandemic,” Felix said.
-
Business3 days ago
An Open Appeal To The Gov. Of Bayelsa State, Sen. Diri Douye Regarding The Removal Of My Prominent Billboard On Azikoro Road, Near Ekeki Park.
-
News4 days ago
Police have arrested three suspects who offered a pregnant woman N30 million to terminate her six-month-old fetus for a ritual in Niger State
-
Niger Delta3 days ago
Prophetic Warning: Primate Ayodele Cautions NDDC DG Ogbuku on Imminent Betrayal
-
Gist3 days ago
A housewife in Bauchi has stabbed her husband to death during a dispute over child custody
-
Politics17 hours ago
BREAKING: Wike Faces Another Setback as PDP Rejects Controversial Calabar Congress Report
-
Politics7 days ago
Breaking News: The Federal High Court has ordered PDP to go ahead with its South-South Zonal Congress
-
Politics3 days ago
Tension in Osun: LG Workers Stand Their Ground, Defy APC’s Resumption Order
-
Crime3 days ago
Close Call: Baby Kidnapping Attempt Blocked by Vigilant Residents