Bayelsa Govt imposes multiple
taxes as water vendors decry and protest
The water vendors popularly
known as meruwa, have downed tools to
protest multiple taxation from Bayelsa Environmental Sanitation Authority.
It was gathered that the water vendors, dominant suppliers of
water have commenced a five day warning strike in the state capital Yenagoa
resulting to acute water scarcity, a move calculated to highlight the value pf
their services following failure of government to provide affordable portable
water..
Residents depend entirely on
the water vendors for water supply as the state capital lacks public portable water
supply system.
It was gathered that in desperate attempt to boost
internally generated revenue by government the water vendors were compelled to pay
monthly fees of N3,000, in addition to N100 daily tolls they hitherto paid to
operate.
The water vendors who kicked against
the N3,000 monthly levy said that the government was insensitive to the plight
of residents who spend between N350 and N500 daily on water for domestic cores
and additional N150 per bag of sachet water.
Mr Festus Ebitimi,a resident who express sadness over the
development said, the situation is very deplorable and an additional burden to
the residents in Yenagoa who do not have tap water or alternative.
He said that it was absurd for
the government whose primary responsibility it is to provide water to abdicate
the responsibility and to impose exorbitant
tax on water vendors who are in business because government failed to provide
public water supply in the name of enhanced revenue at the expense of the people.
He, urged the state government to look into the matter as water
is an indispensable necessity without alternative, adding that the present cost
of water at N20 was already a big financial burden to families.
Mrs Queen Abide, a road side
food seller, pleaded the with the Sanitation Authority to have a rethink on the
levy in the interest of the poor masses, following the economic hardship.
She, implore the state government to look into the matter and
handle it with carefulness for the general interest of the people that do not
have private boreholes in their compounds.
Abide, advice them to take a peaceful protest to the state
chairman of the authority's office to lay their grievance and plead for
reduction of the tax rather that withdraw their services.
One of the water vendors Mr Abdulahi Musa said that they have
decided to withdraw services and abstain from selling water to the public,
adding that anyone anyone who breaches
the pact will have his cart the water confiscated.
He appealed to the Sanitation Authority to reduce the tax so
that they can have income to provide for their families as increasing the cost
of water to residents would become unbearable as most households are indebted
to them..
Musa, said if they insist on the tax, they will left with no
choice than to increase thecost of water from N20 to N30 per 20 liters.
He noted thal already most
households who depend on them for water daily cannot cope with the present cost
and were owing them for water earlier supplied to them.
“The economic meltdown is
taking a lot of toll on us because civil servants are owed salaries by
government running into five or six months can no longer pay for water supply
and they need water everyday, we keep supplying on credit.
“Recently some were paid half
salaries and we are being affected as the limited income of our customers is an
obstacle to our business,” Musa said
Another water seller, Amed Abubakar, said he will have to leave
the water business if they do not reduce the tax, saying that the inablility of
some residents to pay for water supply had affected the welfare of his family.
He, said that the cash crunch had made water business unprofitable
as past administration have not subjected them to multiple taxation.
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