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Ban on street vendors threatens livelihoods
http://www.pix-aid.org/articles/30/1/Ban-on-street-vendors-threatens-livelihoods/Page1.html
By IRIN News
Published on 15 July 2008
Ban on street vendors threatens livelihoods
But from 1 July, Lan will no longer be able to sell her packets of sticky rice in the city because street vendors will be banned from commercial streets. Lan says her family will starve. "We will all go hungry," Lan says. "We are poor people. We have no land. We are dependent upon the street." Mobile vendors have been an integral part of Hanoi's street life for centuries. Women in conical straw hats, balancing twin baskets suspended from bamboo poles, are one of the city's most enduring images. Selling goods from bamboo baskets and bicycles also provides income to villagers with little education and few other means of support. According to the Asian Development Bank project, Making Markets Work Better for the Poor, an estimated 5,000 mobile vendors – mostly women - operate in the city centre. Like Lan, most are the family's main breadwinners.
The ban is designed to make the city more habitable, says an official from the Hanoi Trade Management Division, who asked not to be named. "It is to beautify the city," he said, referring to Decision 02, which bans mobile vendors from 62 streets. "Hawkers are a major reason for traffic problems. We believe that once the ban is enforced it will help improve urban sanitation, food hygiene and ease congestion." On the run Hanoi has no programmes to help mobile vendors find alternative employment. No NGO has taken up their case. These traders do not belong to a labour union. Because they are literally on the run all the time, they are notoriously difficult to organise. "What will we live on?" asks Ng Thi Hoa, pausing nervously before setting down her baskets. If she stops too long, police can give her a Green Ticket, which varies from 20,000 (US$1.15) to 50,000 dong (US$2.90) depending on the infraction and is supposed to go to a street cleaning and waste removal fund.
"The new ban essentially recognises that they can carry out activities but in restricted areas," says Moustier. By establishing that they are legitimate, it would be easier to organise street vendors and minimise harassment from officials, Moustier argues. For now, Hoa's plan is to outrun the police when the ban goes into effect, making working conditions even more desperate. But with all her family's land gone and two children back home, a life on the run, she says, is better than starvation. This article provided by IRIN News. |