Lack of ventilation market is a problem that is felt by both ... customers by merchants who spend their days working. In addition, they grumble against the big annual amount for booking stalls. Issoop Aumeer, an old farmer and greengrocer, who has been doing this for over 40 years, says with dismay: "The current market is unstructured unlike the former where we receive many more customers. Currently, there is less because it is too hot, the tile is too slippery foodcourt and a good number of people have fallen. " He also speaks of interference and the high cost for the provision of stalls, a sum of money that merchants can not recover in most cases because they have lost some of their customers. "Sometimes I do not work for Rs 500 to Rs 600 per day and I often returned home with wilted vegetables."
The side of the foodcourt, a merchant, dholl puris' and cakes - who prefers to remain anonymous for fear of being penalized - screaming ... It was to express his anger against the authorities, she said, it does not given a proper shop to work. "I have no room to move, I feel compelled to spill over the passage of my clients and I fined I pay by tapping into my savings." She does not know where to turn to because she's tired, she said. "We pay large sums for shops but some merchants are privileged foodcourt, she loose aloud. I'm the only person in my family to work to feed my children and it is not easy for me ends meet. I made several complaints but there was no result until now. "
Then it was the turn of the Craft artisans market to complain that discharges water when it rains. They also deplore the limited space but they take their troubles patiently and try somehow to survive. "We built here when the Craft market was not yet completed and we lost some of our customers the old market, says Rehad Oozeer exercising for 20 years, but we try to overcome the slope and slowly.