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Nigeria's dyed cloth traders feel heat from China, inflation

Adire is a popular tie-dye fabric typically used for traditional outfits worn on special occasions in Nigeria (TOYIN ADEDOKUN)
Adire is a popular tie-dye fabric typically used for traditional outfits worn on special occasions in Nigeria (TOYIN ADEDOKUN)

Despite the rain pelting Balogun market in Lagos, Ajoke takes her time choosing the tie-dye fabric known as adire that she wants to give as a gift.

The popular textile traditionally dyed with indigo is emblematic of the culture of the Yoruba people, one of Nigeria's majority ethnic groups.

The cloth is typically used for traditional outfits often worn by Nigerians for special occasions, weddings and parties.

The 21-year-old customer slides her fingers over different brightly coloured fabrics to distinguish traditional Nigerian cotton from polyester versions made in China.

"It's not expensive," Ajoke remarked, picking up a Chinese-made fabric with purple patterns.

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It costs 3,300 naira (around $2.20), half the price of a locally produced fabric.

As Africa's most populous nation grapples with high inflation that has left many struggling, Chinese counterfeit adire products have become an attractive option.

But the imported textiles are challenging the long-established clothing industry in Nigeria, producers and traders say.

The southwestern city of Abeokuta -- nicknamed the Capital of Adire -- is home to nearly 2,000 merchants and producers, according to government data.

Somodale Akomo Amosa, 86, president of the city's sprawling adire market, said she had watched helplessly as Chinese competition began about 10 years ago.

"Her income has decreased over the years. She has only sold five fabrics in 10 days," one of Amosa's daughters said.

- Competition and crisis -

Adire fabric is produced using the tie-dye technique.

Fabrics are knotted and folded by hand before being dyed to create colour gradients and shapes, said Tunde M. Akinwumi, a retired professor of African textile design and author of a book on adire.

Despite the difficulties, market chief Amosa rejects the idea of Nigerian adire producers using machines to help cut the costs of making their fabrics, as the Chinese do.

The process "would harm the tradition and originality of the products", said Amosa, one of the few adire traders who does not offer the cheaper products among their wares.

As well as competition from China, she blames the economic climate at home for preventing people from being able to buy the traditional cloth.

Nigeria is gripped by its worst cost-of-living crisis in years after President Bola Ahmed Tinubu introduced tough economic reforms when he came to power a year ago.

Ending a fuel subsidy and floating the currency are expected to reap benefits in the long term but the moves have hiked fuel and living costs and sharply devalued the naira.

Some fabrics traders like Christiana Morenikeji Ilesanmi feel they have no choice.

"You are selling more Chinese-made adire, because it's cheaper. We feel bad," said the 56-year-old, who buys from wholesalers in the megalopolis, Lagos.

"Everybody is buying it."

- Saving a 'craft' -

A few minutes' walk from the market, the main adire production centre in Abeokuta also feels the impact.

The number of visitors ordering directly from the centre is falling, a 55-year-old producer said.

"Before, lots of people came here to order dresses for weddings or special occasions, but it's not like that now," she said.

To help the industry, Nigeria's presidency announced in March that it would allocate 400 traders with some 200 store spaces at reduced rates in Abeokuta's vast adire market, under a national business aid project.

Olusegun Obasanjo, Nigeria's two-time former head of state, urged authorities last year to stop imports of counterfeit Chinese adire.

So far, no action has been taken.

In 2020, the national and state government in Ogun where Abeokuta is located launched a website to allow merchants to sell their "original and top-of-the-class" adire throughout the country as well as abroad.

For market president Amosa, keeping adire alive is a matter of pride and tradition.

"Adire production is a family inheritance to us, others have come to learn it from us," she said.

"It is our craft, it is my craft."

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