Two more bodies were pulled out early Wednesday from the
debris of a collapsed Lagos high-rise building, bringing the death toll to 22
people, the emergency services said.
The 21-storey building was still under construction when it
crumbled on Monday in the upscale Ikoyi neighbourhood of Nigeria’s commercial
capital.
Rescuers said Wednesday they had recovered 22 dead bodies so
far and rescued nine people who survived, but construction workers feared
dozens of their colleagues were trapped inside.
“We recovered two male bodies early this morning, bringing the toll to 22,” Ibrahim Farinloye of the National Emergency Management Agency told AFP.
The number of survivors still stood at nine, he said, adding
that search and rescue operations were still on.
Hope of finding more survivors appeared to dim as the rescue
operation entered the third day on Wednesday.
“We won’t give up until we reach ground zero,” Farinloye
said, adding that bigger equipment was brought in Tuesday evening for the
operation.
He had earlier said rescue workers had been communicating
with other survivors still trapped under the destroyed building.
Distraught relatives and friends of the victims have been
besieging the scene since Monday, seeking information on their fate.
Two other smaller buildings in Lagos also collapsed on Tuesday
following heavy rains in the densely populated city a day earlier, though no
one was killed, he said.
Building collapses are tragically common in Lagos and across
Africa’s most populous nation where substandard materials, negligence and a
lack of enforcement of construction standards are major problems.
– ‘Like his own daughter’ –
Lagos state police said it is too early to determine why the
Ikoyi building collapsed, but Lagos emergency management agency manager Femi
Oke-Osanyintolu said infractions had been committed in its construction.
“We are going to get to the roots of the matter to prevent a
recurrence,” he told AFP.
About 20 onlookers, including family embers and friends of
the victims, were at the site Wednesay morning.
A friend of a victim who did not want to be identified
“because it won’t change anything”, said that “what they are doing is a
retrieval operation, not a rescue operation”.
Damilola Otunla, 29, sat on the pavement across the street
pursuing a three-day vigil for her brother Bob-Oseni Wale, 50, believed to have
been inside the high-rise when it collapsed.
When she heard news of the disaster on Monday, she
immediately rushed to the scene from her home in neighbouring Ogun state.
Wearing the same grey hoodie, black shorts and flip flops
since Monday, Damilola looked sad, her eyes empty, as she recalled how her much
older brother acted like a father.
“He took me like his own daughter,” she added.
She was angry with the slow pace of the daily rescue
efforts, which had not started as of 8:30 am Wednesday.
“It is like they have made their decision already,” she
said.
Other family members were also at the scene.
Bob-Oseni lives in the US state of Maryland but had been
home for the past few months and was visting a friend working on the building
site, his family said.
He was meant to fly back on Monday when the tragedy
happened.
In one of Nigeria’s worst building disasters, more than 100
people, mostly South Africans, died when a church guesthouse crumbled in Lagos
in 2014.
An inquiry found the building had been built illegally and
had structural flaws.
Two years later, at least 60 people were killed when a roof
fell in on a church in Uyo, the capital of Akwa Ibom state, in the east of the
country.
AFP
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