Residents and denizens of the area were also seen shrugging as they watched the exercise and sympathized with the victims who were lamenting and watching helplessly as their shops (containers and shanties) were being crushed.
Some of the shop owners in the area were also seen, rushing and evacuating some of the wares in their shops; while some benevolent individuals were seen assisting some of the victims to recover the remnants of their goods and properties from the demolished shops.
When contacted, the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of ACTDA, Ven. Amaechi Okwuosa said the demolition exercise was in tandem with the state government’s commitment to safeguarding lives and property of the citizens.
He explained that the shanties were constructed under the high tension cables, which is unhealthy, condemnable, and strictly prohibited by the law.
According to him, the owners and occupants of those shanties were earlier served several warnings and given enough grace to vacate the area before the demolition, but they ignored and neglected the notices.
He said, “We’ve been warning them for a very long time, posted notices there, telling them to leave, but they neglected that.
He added that the government is not indulging in the exercise to hurt or cause hardship for the people, but doing so for their own good and safety.
Some of the roadside traders whose shops were demolished, Mrs Ebere Igwe (a beer parlour owner) and Nancy Okafor (a food vendor) acknowledged that they were served several warnings earlier, but said the government took them by surprise and should have given them more time to get shops elsewhere.
On their own parts, a mechanic workshop owner in the area, Mr Obinna Nwafor; a barber shop owner, Mr Lucky Onuigbo, and a provision store owner, popularly known as Papa Ejima lamented that their shops were not under the high tension but were also demolished during the exercise.
Recall that Abakaliki Street is one of the most popular places noted for night life in the entire Awka capital city and its environs, hence government’s change of its name to Club Street in 2018.