The Jabe Market (French: Marché de Jabe) is a public market in the Bwiza zone of Mukaza Commune, Bujumbura, Burundi.

Jabe Market
Marché de Jabe
Market
Jabe Market is located in Burundi
Jabe Market
Jabe Market
Coordinates: 3°22′16″S 29°22′17″E / 3.37113°S 29.37130°E / -3.37113; 29.37130

Events and issues

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A fire broke out at Bujumbura Central Market early in the morning of 27 January 2013 and destroyed the market. Nothing was done to rebuild that market.[1] Traders moved to the Jabe Market, Ruvumera Market and Bujumbura City Market, which flourished as a result.[2]

Jabe Market historically specialized in used shoes and different kinds of leathers.[3] The market contained more than 2,500 stands.[4] A January 2014 report described unsanitary conditions at the Jabe Market, with a mountain of bad-smelling garbage piled up near the market. However, some traders said the pile of waste was useful, since they could find objects in it they could repair and resell.[5]

In 2016 seven markets in Bujumbura were closed so they could be rehabilitated with funding from the European Union, including Jabe.[6] Traders were given a deadline of 18 January 2016 to vacate their stalls. Temporary sites were allocated for the markets. The site for the Jabe Market had not been allocated, since the land was not available yet.[7]

On 14 January 2016 it was reported that Jabe Market would temporarily move to the grounds of Bwiza Municipal High School. A week before the move, the grounds had not been prepared. The school was concerned about noise and the problem of sharing latrines. The traders were concerned about the distance from the old market, although they had been reassured that rehabilitation would only take five months.[8] When the rehabilitation of Jabe Market by the Getra company started, the used shoe traders moved to Bujumbura City Market.[3]

In June 2018 the rehabilitation work on Jabe Market was very advanced.[6]

In September 2020 Bujumbura Mairie ordered that all vendors of used shoes at Bujumbura City Market had to return to the rehabilitated Jabe Market.[9] The Bujumbura City Market (BCM) commissioner said the return to Jabe market would badly affect the BCM economy. The BCM had invested large amounts in developing a space for the used shoe traders, and there were many other reasons why the move would be wrong.[3] Although there was some resistance, the traders soon found they had a large, airy area to place their stands, and within a month customers were returning.[9]

See also

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References

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Sources

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