Shoprite opens outlet in Kano
KANO (AFP) – South African retailer Shoprite on Thursday opened its first outlet in northern Nigeria, as part of an aggressive expansion drive and defying wider concerns about security in the region. The store in Kano — the north’s largest city and main commercial hub — is situated in the new $110-million (80-million-euro) Ado Bayero Mall that has taken three years to construct and claims to be Nigeria’s biggest. Hundreds of upper and middle class Nigerians thronged the mall as it opened its doors. Private security guards searched vehicles for weapons and explosives and armed police kept watch on shoppers. The new venture, at a cost of $20 million, brings to eight the number of Shoprite stores in Nigeria. A further four of the shops which sell food, goods and clothes are slated to open before the end of the year. “We decided to expand our reach to Kano as part of our commitment to widen our presence in the Nigerian mega cities,” store manager Adulhakeem Abdulganiyu told AFP. “Kano, as a commercial city with its huge population, provides ample business opportunity which we want to exploit.” Kano’s economy has suffered in recent decades, even before the start of the Islamist insurgency, which has claimed thousands of lives in a wave of deadly shootings and bomb attacks. Hundreds of factories have closed because of power supply problems and competition from cheaper Asian goods, putting many people out of work and leaving them unable to provide for their families. Unemployment rates in Kano, which was famous for its textiles and tanneries, are the highest in Nigeria, according to the government.
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