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Where Stalls Once Stood: Kano Counts Losses in the Wake of Fire

A major fire devastates a Kano market, destroying goods worth about ₦5 billion and leaving seven people feared missing as investigations begin.

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George Chan

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Where Stalls Once Stood: Kano Counts Losses in the Wake of Fire

At first light in Kano, the air often carries the scent of spice and fabric, of metal shutters rising and traders calling out the day’s first prices. But this week, smoke replaced the familiar chorus. A vast market—its narrow corridors once threaded with color and commerce—was reduced to embers after a fierce overnight fire tore through rows of shops, leaving seven people feared missing and goods worth an estimated ₦5 billion destroyed.

The blaze moved quickly, witnesses said, leaping from stall to stall as flames fed on textiles, plastics, and tightly packed wooden structures. By the time firefighters gained control, much of the commercial cluster had been gutted. Twisted iron frames stood where merchandise once hung in bright folds. Charred generators and collapsed roofing sheets marked the outlines of livelihoods carefully built over years.

Local authorities confirmed that emergency responders battled the inferno for hours, working to contain its spread and prevent it from reaching adjacent areas. Traders returned at dawn to sift through ash, searching for salvageable fragments—metal boxes, warped utensils, the faint outline of inventory that once filled ledgers with promise. The financial toll, estimated at around ₦5 billion, is more than a figure; it is capital borrowed, savings invested, and futures interrupted.

Seven individuals remain unaccounted for, according to preliminary reports, casting a deeper shadow over the physical destruction. Families waited along cordoned streets as officials assessed structural safety and combed through debris. The cause of the fire has yet to be determined, though investigations are underway, with attention turning to electrical wiring, fuel storage practices, and the density of stall construction common to large urban markets.

Kano’s markets have long been arteries of trade across northern Nigeria, binding rural producers to city buyers and sustaining thousands of households. In their layered corridors, commerce is both daily ritual and generational inheritance. When fire sweeps through such spaces, it interrupts more than transactions; it unsettles a rhythm that defines the city itself.

As evening approached once more, smoke still curled faintly above the blackened roofs. Traders spoke quietly about rebuilding, about pooling resources and seeking support. In the hush after sirens fade, resilience often begins not with grand declarations but with the simple act of clearing debris, one stall at a time.

For now, Kano counts both its losses and its missing—measuring grief in absence, and value in ashes.

AI Image Disclaimer

Illustrations were generated using AI tools and serve as visual interpretations, not documentary images.

Sources

Kano State Fire Service Daily Trust Premium Times Channels Television

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