Engineers in Nigeria’s financial
capital, Lagos, on Wednesday ordered urgent structural tests to be carried out
at a popular preacher’s church after 70 people were killed in a building
collapse.
The Lagos State Building Control
Agency daubed red X-marks on buildings in the sprawling compound of
televangelist TB Joshua’s Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN) in the city’s
Ikotun area.
South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma
on Tuesday said 67 of his compatriots were killed when a guesthouse for
Joshua’s foreign followers collapsed at the site last Friday.
But rescuers said the death toll had
since risen, as a hunt for survivors neared a close.
“We have to ask for the tests
because of what has happened,” LASBCA general manager Abimbola Animashaun told
AFP at the scene, pointing to one building which had an extra three storeys
added.
“This one has been overloaded,” she
said. “If a disaster can happen here, we don’t want it to happen elsewhere.”
The structural integrity inspections
should take 10 days to complete before a report is submitted, she added.
According to Joshua’s website,
scoan.org, three of the church’s previous buildings were destroyed before the
new church — described as an “architectural masterpiece” — was built.
“There was only one architect
involved in the planning — the Holy Spirit,” he said.
The preacher, known to his followers
as “The Prophet” because of his purported visions and miracles, has not
publicly commented on the deaths.
Instead he has tried to shift
suspicion on to Boko Haram militants and a low-flying plane seen over the
building before the collapse.
Since Friday, he has only posted a
series of Bible verses on his Facebook page and Twitter account. On Tuesday
night he tweeted: “Hard times may test me, they cannot destroy me.”
The investigation will look at
Joshua’s claim of low-flying aircraft, Lagos state commissioner for town
planning and urban development Toyin Ayinde told Nigeria’s Channels television.
Initial indications were that the
building came down because extra floors were being added without strengthening
the foundations and samples would be taken from the site, he added.
- Rescue effort -
Rescue workers were meanwhile
picking through what remained of the guesthouse using excavators and even their
bare hands in the hope of finding more survivors.
The southwest coordinator of the
National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Ibrahim Farinloye, said the rescue
operation was likely to end later on Wednesday.
“We have 70 dead, 131 rescued
alive,” he said. “Early this morning, we got two (bodies). Since day break we
got three. Yesterday night we had two, making seven.”
A woman was pulled alive from the
building on Monday and escaped with minor injuries, fuelling hopes that others
may yet be found alive.
“The challenges are coming much
more, so we have to slow down our recovery,” said Farinloye. “If we say we
should rush or give time limits, definitely it would affect somebody or
survivors.”
There was a large police presence at
the church and onlookers were moved away. A team from a Chinese engineering
firm were seen on site helping rescuers.
The Lagos state government, NEMA and
the South African authorities have all complained that Joshua, whose followers
include top-level politicians and presidents, was not co-operating.
Rescuers were prevented from fully
accessing the site until Sunday, raising fears that some of the victims could
have been saved earlier.
Nigerians took to social media to
voice their anger at the incident, arguing that Joshua should not be above the
law.
Zuma said five South African church
tour groups totalling about 300 people were thought to have been at the
Pentecostal church at the time of the tragedy.
One South African travel agent, who
asked not to be named, said some of the survivors flew back from Lagos on
Sunday but were too distraught to recount their ordeal.
“It’s a sensitive issue. They don’t
want to talk to anyone about what they saw. They are in shock, they are
traumatised,” he said.
Vanguard Report
Structural Tests Ordered For Synagogue Collapsed Building
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Wednesday, September 17, 2014
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