Arinze Chijioke

Inside a section of Enugu’s Auto Parts Market at Coal Camp, Chidiebere Emeh and her younger sister are bent to the ground and picking up all that is left from the rubble after their shop was raised down by fire.

On Tuesday, December 12, Emeh’s family shop was packed full with bolts, nots and other spare parts. Customers were trooping in and out, picking items, making payments and exchanging pleasantries. Now, everything is gone. The shop. The products.

Signboard showing the market

It started at exactly 12 am on Wednesday, December 13 2023. Eneh was still asleep when she got a call from one of her siblings who told her that there was a fire outbreak and that their shop was affected.

“When I got to the shop at 8am, I could not hold it, I did not know it was this devastating, we lost a lot, running into millions. Now, we are helpless, we don’t know where to start from,” she said.   

Eneh and her sister picking up what was left after the outbreak

All that is left from the shop-which used to be handled by Eneh’s mother before she passed – are scrap metals. Eneh says she and her siblings are putting them together to see if they can sell to dealers in scrap.

“We are going to sell it way below what we bought,“ she said.

The Eneh family shop is only one out of several shops that were destroyed as a result of Wednesday’s fire outbreak. The President, Enugu Motor Spare Parts Dealers Association, Mike Nome, said that at least, 15 shops filled with vehicle spare parts and other goods were affected as a result of the fire outbreak.

Eneh says the outbreak was devastating

Sources said that the state fire service arrived about 20 minutes after the incidence and tried to put out the fire. They said it would have spread beyond the shops that completely got burnt.

One of the officers, identified as Chigozie Ugwu, died in the process of trying to put out the fire.

The Director, Enugu State Fire Service, Okwudiri Ohaa, said that his officers went to the scene with fire trucks and fourth the fire for about three hours because it was intense, coupled with the materials that were on fire, including condemned tires.

Fidelis lost everything

Fidelis Okoye claims that he lost over 6.5 million as a result of the fire outbreak. He was asleep when he got a call from his neighbour who told him that his shop was on fire.

“It was around 2am, Immediately, we started coming to the market. Before we got here, half of the shop was burnt,” he said.

Okoye, who sells car security gadgets, tracker, timer, seat covers, wheel covers and Car CDs, could not go in to rescue anything, not even the money he kept inside the shop he was supposed to use for the burial of his in-law and for sorting other family issues.  

Spare parts now scrap metals

“I could not control myself when I got the shop, I wanted to go in as the fire raged. I don’t have money to eat and to take care of my family now,” a devastated Okoye said.

Okoye has six children, four of them are in secondary school. Others are in primary school. He said that one of his daughters only returned recently and was planning to return to school. Now, there is no money to give her.

Worst in terms of impact

Sources who spoke to this reporter said that this is not the first time that the auto parts market, known as Tinker is recording a fire incidence. However, it is the worst in terms of impact, having resulted in the loss of a life and several shops.

“It has become an annual occurrence and usually happens during the period of December,” said Uchechukwu Ekwunife, who also lost his shop to the fire outbreak.

“I have witnessed at least four of this kind of incidence inside the shop.”

Ekwunife says outbreak the worst in terms of impact

Ekwunife sell all kinds of electrical parts, from horns to fog lamp and wires.

Like other shop owners, he was in his sleep when he got a call about the fire outbreak at 12:30. It took him 30 minutes to get to the shop. When he arrived, he could not believe his eyes.

“I started crying as we watched our shop going up in flames. With the help of some people, we brought out some of the products. Roughly, I lost about N3million in the incidence,” he said.

I hope I can sell the ones I brought out because some of them are damaged.

Ekwunife handles the shop with his mother after his father passed in 2015. Since the incidence, he said that his mother has not been herself because this is the only source of income and what is helping her train five children.

Burnt spare parts

Ekwunife has already arranged some of his goods inside several bags and waiting to sell them off as scrap.

“I can’t plan my day at the shop again, I just take whatever I see. It was different before.”

While describing the incident as devastating, especially at this period of economic hardship, he called on the state government and other well-meaning Nigerians to come to the rescue of the affected traders who had lost everything.

Iyika just restocked his shop

Jude Iyika had just returned from the market days before the fire incident. He claims to had spent N3.5 million on all kinds of auto parts.

When he received the call at 1pm, he got into his car and drove down. Apart from his goods, Iyika was also worried about the N3million he claimed to have collected from two clubs where he belongs and make contributions, including Ifeadigo Age Grade and Umu-Ele Enugu branch.

Iyika says he just restocked his shop for the season

“Because we were approaching Christmas, I decided to collect the money-over and keep for group members so that when it is time to share, I can give it back to them as the chairman.”

When he got to the shop, he started breaking it, hoping that he could at least, bring out the money for the groups.  But the smoke from the fire was unbearable. He gave up.

“I had to visit the hospital after the struggle, I don’t know what to do. I want the government to help because I have lost everything. I have about four kids and my wife,” he said.

He said that members of the groups have come and seen the destruction for themselves and that he is now in talks to see how he can pay back the money.

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