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Sunday 1 October 2017

See Nigerian mother of 9 who raised 5 graduates with proceeds from yam roasting and beans business

A Nigerian mother of nine children, Mrs. Franca Nwosu, has narrated how she sponsored the university education of five of her children from the proceeds of her yam and beans business.
The Minna, Niger State resident, who sold roasted yam along with the busy Shiroro Road, spoke to Punch’s Northern City News on Thursday and stated that she started the business about 15 years ago.

The trade, she says, lifted her family above poverty as her husband’s meager earnings from his welding workshop were inadequate for the family upkeep.

She also added that the business was doing well in spite of the economic downturn in the country.

Mrs. Franca Nwosu said:

“I started this business over 15 years ago and with the proceeds, I was able to train five graduates. So, as far as I am concerned, the business is booming, no matter the hardship in the country, people must eat, you cannot avoid food.“
My husband is a welder by profession but with the current situation of things in the country, what he is getting cannot sustain the family; so, I engaged myself in the yam roasting business to support him so that our family will not suffer.”

 Mrs. Franca Nwosu opens for business at 7am every day to serve her customers who comprised commercial motorcyclists, artisans, pedestrians, and motorists.

Nwosu told Northern News that she roasts no fewer than 150 tubers of yam each day, noting, however, that the economic recession had forced her to reduce the quantity to 100 tubers.

A motorcycle operator, Samuel Edom, said he patronized Nwosu daily because her serving was affordable.

“With between N50 and N100, I can feed myself and this is far cheaper than eating at a restaurant where a plate of food would cost me between N300 and N400. Almost all the Okada riders in town have their lunch at her spot.
“I leave home early for my Okada business, so, most times, I have no other choice but to patronize the roasted yam seller because I cannot afford to go back home for a meal.”
Another motorcyclist, Abubakar Mohammed, also told Northern City News that roasted yam was the cheapest food anyone could get in Minna.

“I patronize Madam Nwosu because I can afford roasted yam compared to other foods in town. We (Okada riders) are comfortable with her roasted yam; most of us eat there two times a day and she sometimes sold on credit to us, she is our ‘mother’ in town,” he stated.

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