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Nollywood Veteran Actor, ‘Agbako’ is dead

  Veteran actor, Abdulsalam Sanyaolu, popularly known as Charles Olumo and Agbako, is dead. A  statement by the president of Theatre Arts and Motion Pictures Practitioners Association of Nigeria (TAMPAN) , Bolaji Amusan, popularly known as Mr Latin on Instagram on Thursday.   He wrote, “#tampanglobal announces the passing of Pa Charles Olumo Sanyaolu, fondly known as AGBAKO. Details of the burial arrangements will be shared at a later time. Good night father, 25/02/1923 to 31/10/2024.”   Nollywood actor, Jide Kosoko, also confirmed Agbako’s demise as he wrote: “Good night ooo, Baba Charles. a.k.a Agbako, 101 years, ba wasa ba. R I P.”   Agbako clocked 101st this year.

Osun Residents bemoan high cost of food items

 


Residents of Osogbo in Osun have bemoaned the high cost of food items in the state, urging the Federal Government to urgently establish price control boards to regulate cost of staple foods.

A cross section of the residents, who spoke  with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday in Osogbo, said the increase in the  prices of basic food items in the markets was alarming.

Mrs Bolanle Raji, a baker,  decried the sharp increase in the cost of all baking items  and other food items in the market.

Raji, who described the price increase  as frustrating, said this was due to inflation and increase in the cost of fuel.

“Before now, we were buying a bag of sugar for N35,000 to N40,000, but now, a bag of sugar has now doubled in price.

“A crate of eggs was betwwen N1200 and N1500 before,  but now it is N3500 to N3700.

” Icing sugar was sold at N950 to N1000, but now it is N2500.

“In my own opinion, the increased price of fuel is the reason.

” Every industry buys fuel for production, for transportation and at the point of selling the end product, they increase prices to make sure they do not run at a loss.

“In most cases, the marketers are not transparent in their sales. They take every opportunity to increase the cost of items knowing fully well that the consumers do not have a choice but to buy at any rate,” she said.

Raji appealed to government to set up a regulatory body to monitor the prices of food items, adding that the poor can no longer breathe.

Another residents, Miss Opeoluwa Oyetunji, a medical practitioner, said that traders sell their wares at different prices due to lack of price control.

“You should not really stand in one place to buy food items because a lot of the people selling are opportunists.

“In the same market, you see a particular item selling for N3000,  but if you go to another place, it would be N2,700 or N2,500”, she said.

Oyetunji appealed to government to find a lasting solution to the exploitation of the poor masses by traders.

 Similarly, Mrs Isabella Williamson, a housewife, said foodstuffs were now expensive and becoming out of reach of the poor.

Williamson said that a bowl used to measure cassava flour (garri) used to cost N600, but now sold for N1,200.

“Garri, when it was N600, people thought it was expensive, and it kept increasing till it got to N1,500.

“A measuring bowl (congo) of beans is now N3,000 from N1,700. The prices vary these days in the market and traders are selling as they like.

“ Everybody is blaming the hike in fuel for the increase in prices.

“Even farmers are also attributing ewedu leaves (jute leaves) to unstable dollar rates. Do we use dollars in Nigeria?”, she said.

Williamson  appealed to government to do everything possible to stabilise the economy.

A visit to major supermarkets in Osogbo revealed a sharp increase in the prices of items such as vegetable oil, soya oil, rice, sanitary pads, detergent, among other items have seen an increase in prices.

Workers in the visited supermarkets, who chose to remain anonymous, said prices escalated due to inflation, increase in fuel prices and the unstable dollar rates.

An attendant in one of the supermarkets said the price of five litres of vegetable oil used to be between N5,500 and N5,800.

“Now, King’s Vegetable Oil goes for N13,560 while a three litre bottle is now N8,100.

“For Mamador Vegetable Oil, the least one which is 500 millilitres goes for N1,500 which used to be sold for between N600 and N700 before”, she said.

(NAN)

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