Tag: collapse

  • Why buildings collapse, by SON, Lafarge, others

    Why buildings collapse, by SON, Lafarge, others

    Building construction experts from Lafarge Africa Plc, the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) and others in the housing industry have said the engagement of non-professionals and artisans in the construction of buildings is responsible for building collapse.

    They spoke in Abuja at a stakeholders’ forum organised by SON for the Northcentral Zone.

    The Technical Services Manager of Lafarge Africa Plc, Bukola Adebisi, an engineer, said the quacks lack ed the training and expertise to execute building projects without supervision.

    This reason, he explained, was why the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN)  partnered some stakeholders, including his firm, to produce a concrete mix manual that will serve as a guide in the production of concrete. The  manual is the first of its kind in the industry.

    SON’s Head of Product Authentication Usman Mohammed, who  represented the director-general, said the use of sub-standard building materials was another major factor responsible for building collapse.

    He called on stakeholders in the  sector to eradicate sub-standard products.

    To ensure that only building engineers work on construction projects, COREN has an Engineering Regulation and Monitoring Unit, which monitors construction project, its Registrar, Kamila Maliki, said.

    He added that the five engineers involved in 27 buildings collapses  between 2016 and last year had been sanctioned by the body.

  • The collapse of Kwankwasiya’s test-tube baby

    The collapse of Kwankwasiya’s test-tube baby

    For a myth that took so long to construct, how sad that it took just a fleeting moment for Kwankwasiya to be finally dismantled. Sadder still, unlike the loud song and wild dance witnessed at its christening years ago, there was no ceremony – much less the customary parade of iconic red caps – the day Governor Umar Ganduje of Kano publicly disowned his mentor and predecessor, Rabiu Kwankwaso.

    Speaking in Dakata, the estranged godson described his godfather in very grave terms: “Most contracts undertaken by Kwankwaso were carried out with several misdeeds and betrayals which I’ll soon expose for people to know the calibre of person my predecessor was.”

    Then pressing the equivalent of a nuclear button, Ganduje alleged a grand plot against President Buhari vis-a-vis the 2019 succession: “Some people have been trying to undermine President Buhari with all sorts of things. We’ll not tolerate it again here in Kano because we’re tired of his (Kwankwaso’s) atrocities… People who are now telling all sorts of things are sycophants. They don’t want Buhari to succeed.

    “These people know themselves. When it gets to that stage, I’ll name them one after the other. We’re solidly behind President Buhari and his programmes and the people of the state will not support anyone or groups of people working against President Buhari and his programmes.”

    Indeed, a crisis of confidence had been brewing quietly between Ganduje and Kwankwaso since 2015. At the root is what seems an ego. Things finally went out hands early 2016 when the Kano governor lost his mum. A version of the story has it that Kwankwaso was the first person Ganduje broke the sad news to. But rather than personally attend the burial which happened same day, the former sent a representative. This apparently did not go down well with the grieving governor, considering that the Federal Government deemed it appropriate to send a high-powered delegation and distant friends like Governor Aminu Tambuwa of Sokoto found time to attend despite the short notice.

    When Kwankwaso finally turned up three days later, he, in his own wisdom, put up a carnival of sorts. The story is told that his associates in each of Kano’s 44 councils were mobilized to join his convoy at the city gate in two buses per district. By the time the senator’s caravan stopped in the governor’s native Ganduje village, no fewer than 150 vehicles were counted.

    Given the tension already in the air, the governor’s camp were quick to read politics to Kwankwaso’s showing. In fact, the hardliners likened it to dancing on the fresh grave of the governor’s mother.

    Ganduje himself lent credence to this in his outburst shortly afterwards: “God wanted to expose his (Kwankwaso’s) antics perpetrated against the President, he chose my mother’s death to launch (his) presidential campaign. But we leave him with the people.”

    So far, Kwankwaso has not responded. In the interim, we can only speculate on the real forces fueling the sudden turn of events in Kano today. But one thing is certain: Kwankwaso’s vulnerability is exposed and the durability of his eponymous movement severely questioned. If truly there is any depth to his Kwankwasiya postulation as a tentative preface to a progressive ideology, it remains to be seen in a coherent articulation, beyond the vanishing comedy of the procession of a rambunctious mob in gaudy red caps.

    Obviously, Kwankwaso’s bragging right on the national state today is premised on a claim to the dominion of Kano’s political space. As governor, he delivered all the 44 councils to APC in 2014. To rub it in, he would take space on the front page of leading national dailies to advertise PDP’s humiliation in Kano under his command.

    In the subsequent general elections of March 28, 2015, not only did Kwankwaso also inspire APC to rout PDP in the presidential poll, he made a clean sweep of the senatorial and House of Reps seats as well. He magisterially cemented his invincibility by annexing one of the senatorial seats to himself. But with Ganduje now up in arms, it is obvious Kwankwaso already has an insurgency to deal with at home. The falcon can no longer hear the falconer. Tellingly, members of the Kano Assembly reportedly passed a resolution forbidding the wearing of the fraternal red caps, symbolically marking the severance of allegiance to Kwankwaso.

    From what is now known, questions are bound to be asked about Kwankwaso’s own sense of political judgement from the outset. Before then, no further diagnosis is needed to certify what is already a clear and present affliction: the onset of the familiar post-power withdrawal syndrome. Having been lord and master of Kano for eight years, it would seem Kwankwaso, like most mortals, is still unable to reconcile himself to the diminution of status now as former governor. Alas, Kwankwasiya, contrary to the inaugural promise, has woefully failed to deliver to him a blanket immunity for impunity. In the circumstance, the senator, therefore, deserves our pity.

    Years ago, Pius Anyim Pius found himself explaining to an august gathering why he arrived a national event terribly late. “Please pardon me,” began the then Secretary to the Government of the Federation. “You know, we politicians, our ways are never straight. When we say we’re coming, you can never be too sure because condition may warrant that we make a stop somewhere on the way.”

    Candid as that may sound, the other truth is actually unspeakable. If we bother to dig deeper, we will find that two chief factors make it near impossible for the quintessential Nigerian public office-holder to be punctual. Other than congenital indiscipline, the other would be narcissism rooted in delusion. The political emperor barely sleeps, often busy doing nothing. And that is only because, in his base vanity, he simply can’t bear or imagine, even for a second, moments sleep would naturally steal from him. Being awake forever, therefore, means a carnal opportunity to suck every waking moment of the pleasure possible, the same way an infant ravenously lick the candy wrapping for the last trace of honey.

    After rail-roading his deputy to succeed him, it is only human that the least Kwankwaso would have expected is that the existing sitting order in Kano’s temple of power remain. His Ganduje gambit in 2015 was no doubt a novel card on the table. Indeed, the nation’s memory was already littered with the relics of succession experiments that had failed. In Enugu of 2007, for instance, Chimaroke Nnamani had dusted up a political nobody, Sullivan Chime, to succeed him as his second term was nearing end. But no sooner had INEC declared the latter governor-elect than he dramatically declared a fatwa on his political benefactor, thus exposing the inherent deformity of Nnamani’s Ebeano movement.

    Elsewhere in Cross Rivers, with his childhood buddy, Liyel Imoke, riding to the Calabar White House in 2007, debonaire Donald Duke thought he had found a perfect guy to sustain his legacies like the Tinapa Project. But not only did they begin to have disagreements shortly afterward, they practically were no longer on greeting terms by the time Imoke’s first term ended in 2011.

    Indeed, very rare it is in Nigeria’s peculiar political landscape for an incumbent governor to allow his deputy succeed him like Kwankwaso enthusiastically did last year. Many quickly interpreted that as the political circumcision and confirmation of Ganduje, who had cut his first tooth in politics as Personal Assistant to Kwankwaso in the early 1990s, as the new heir apparent to the Kwankwasiya stool. A maximalist, Kwankwaso did not stop there. He also ensured that Hafiz Abubakar, his old classmate at the Kaduna Polytechnic more than forty years ago and his one-time Political Adviser and Finance Commissioner, was made Ganduje’s running-mate.

    With that, the flanks were supposed to have been secured for Kwankwaso’s complete dominion of Kano’s political space in the foreseeable future. Alas, that prospects now look threatened.

    Taken together, the chief lesson to be drawn from the Ganduje/Kwankwaso conundrum is that there is no substitute for substance. There is no short-cut to political immortality other than working selflessly for community in way that your name eventually get etched in people’s subconscious, not necessarily while still in power. What will endure has to grow. Without God’s approval, the architect, however aggressive, soon finds he toiled in vain. Really, only a deluded leader is carried away by the glut of cenotaphs named after him while still in office. Or when disciples, out of sycophancy, begin to dress like him or make a badge of his name to pick crumbs from his golden dining table. The true test of a leader is whether the same folks will still obey their command when they are no longer in a position to doll out cash or favour.

    Those who, therefore, assume they can inherit the future by disguise or condoning the obscenity of hero-worship today will sooner than later realize it is all an exercise in futility. Ahmadu Bello, for instance, earned immortality in the north by the durable castle he built in people’s minds, not the financial empire bequeathed to his brood. Awo’s fur cap assumed transcendental halo only after his transition. In contemporary terms, Bola Tinubu today has grown much bigger out of office than when in power only because yesterday he was willing to die for his convictions in the grave hour when compromise was more convenient and lucrative. Greater is he who is able to exercise authority in the society without political power.

    In Kano, the gloves are now obviously discarded as the ancient megalopolis south of Sudan braces for certain political turbulence ahead.

     

    • First published in March 2016, this piece is rerun to provide a backdrop to the infighting currently bedeviling Kano APC
  • Town planning consultant calls for building audit in Lagos

    Town planning consultant calls for building audit in Lagos

    A town planning consultant, Mr Makinde Ogunleye, has called for a comprehensive auditing of all new and old buildings in Lagos State to curb the menace of incessant building collapse.

    Ogunleye, a former Chairman, Nigeria Institute of Town Planners (NITP), Lagos State Branch, made the call in an interview with news men on Friday in Lagos.

    He urged the state government to urgently embark on the building audit to enable it to take appropriate steps to avert the collapse of distressed buildings.

    According to him, majority of collapsed buildings in the state were dilapidated.

    “Audit of building is all about conducting an integrity test on a building, to ascertain the stability of the structure.

    “It will reveals the structural capacity of a building, giving the signs of dilapidation,” he said.

    Read Also: Lagos seals Badoo kingpin’s properties

    Ogunleye said that audit of all buildings in the state would not take more than three months to be completed, if the government could be proactive about it.

    “After the audit, an immediate removal of all identified non-remedial distressed buildings, as well as structures blocking access and drainage alignment, must follow,” he said.

    Ogunleye also advised the state government and residents of the state to develop maintenance culture of the buildings, saying that poor maintenance could lead to early collapse of buildings.

    “If Lagosians can ensure proper maintenance and servicing of their buildings, the issue of building collapse will be curtailed,” he said.

    NAN

  • Reps to probe Etisalat’s collapse

    Reps to probe Etisalat’s collapse

    The House of Representatives yesterday mandated its Committee on Telecoms to probe the collapse of Etisalat Nigeria (now 9mobile).

    According to the lawmakers, one of the reasons for the probe is to protect the interests of Nigerian subscribers and other stakeholders.

    The resolution of the House was sequel to the adoption of the prayers of a motion by a member, Hon. Saheed Akinade-Fijabi.

    The lawmaker noted that Etisalat Nigeria (now 9mobile) commenced business in Nigeria in 2009 after acquiring the unified access licence spectrum in the GSM 1800 and 900 megahertz (Mhz) bands from the Nigeria Communications Commission (NCC) in January 2007.

    He said it thus became Nigeria’s fourth largest telecoms network operator with over 21 million subscribers and controlling about 12.9 per cent of the country’s market share.

    He said: “Etisalat Nigeria was formerly owned by three shareholders, namely Emirates Telecommunications Group Company (40 per cent), Mubadala Development Company, Abu Dhabi (45 percent) and EMTS Holding BV (15 per cent);

    “Aware that Etisalat Nigeria obtained a loan of $1.2 billion (N377.4 billion) in 2013 from  13 Nigerian banks which involved a foreign-backed guaranteed bond to finance a major network rehabilitation, upgrade and expansion of its operational base in Nigeria;

    “Etisalat Nigeria had so far paid about half of the initial loan amounting to about N504 billion with total outstanding sum of about $574 miliion but had reneged on its debt servicing obligations after the intervention of the NCC and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to restructure the loan and new repayment deadline.”

    Fijabi expressed concern that the failure of Etisalat to meet its debt servicing obligations with the banks since 2016 resulted in its foreign major shareholders pulling out and eventual take-over of the company by the banks.

    He however said the take-over of Etisalat, which was renamed 9mobile by the banks, is a clear violation of Section 38 (1) of the Nigerian Communications Act, 2003.

    According to him, the Act  provides that “the grant of a licence shall be personal to the licensee and the licence shall not be operated by, assigned, sub-licensed or transferred to any other  party unless the prior written approval of the Commission has been granted”;

    When the motion was put to a vote by the Deputy Speaker, Yussuff Lasun, it was passed by a majority support of lawmakers and referred to the House Committee on Telecoms.

    The Committee is to report back in eight weeks for further legislative action.

  • Govt, BCPG seek collaboration on building collapse

    The Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Mr. Abiola Anifowoshe, has said rofessionals’ contributions and ideas from residents will be further explored to stem the rising incidence of building collapse in Lagos State.

    He spoke at this year’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Building Collapse Prevention Guild (BCPG), which held in Lagos.

    Anifowoshe explained that the state, under Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, placed high premium on regulatory authorities’ collaboration with other stakeholders. This, he said, is why the administration welcomes suggestions, brilliant ideas, technical and professional advice towards curbing the menace. With this, according to him, the hydra-headed problem of building collapse in the state will be checked.

    Anifowoshe further said the state was ready to provide necessary assistance  in tandem with constructive engagement and high point of planning inclusion as contained in the state’s urban governance.

    Also at the event, Director-General, Lagos State Safety Commission, Mr. Hakeem Dickson, contended that the spate of building collapse suggested that some professionals could have been cutting corners, by either using substandard materials, or not complying with set standards. He said the governor was worried about the spate of collapse, especially those involving buildings under construction.

    According to the host and BCPG President, Mr. Kunle Awobodu, one of the major problems of building collapse is the total disregard and wilful violation of the law. Awobodu, who is worried by the development, explained that in an organised society where the laws of the land are strictly adhered to, building collapse is an aberration.

    “A person, who cheats on the recommended setbacks is aware that he has created problems of insufficient ventilation, lighting, parking space, privacy and protection from fire incident in the adjoining or neighbouring buildings. The two-storey building that collapsed at No. 68, Herbert Macaulay Way, Ebute Meta in Lagos on August 31, 2017 affected the four-storey building on No. 66 simply because No. 66 reduced the setback specified by the building regulation,” he explained.

    The BCPG President regretted that while building law provides for minimal airspace of three metres between a building and its fence at the sides and the rear, including six metres in front, sadly, according to him, most developments are at conflict with this specification. “This type of situation,” he said, “is an indication that the developer of such buildings, including the supervisors, must have disobeyed many other specifications in the building construction process.”

    He continued:“Such a person, who could have taken the risk of leaving a permanent evidence of disregard for setback regulations, will not hesitate to disobey other specifications such as concrete mix ratio and steel reinforcement, bar spacing that will remain hidden after construction. Obvious compromise on setbacks in many locations in our society heightens our suspicion and our fears that quality of several buildings has all along been compromised.”

  • Tackling the menace of building collapse

    Tackling the menace of building collapse

    Worried by the resurgence of building collapse across the country, stakeholders in the construction industry are canvassing appropriate standards in the sector. They are also proffering training, retraining and certification of personnel in construction to stem the tide, writes MUYIWA LUCAS.

    Building collapse has remained a source of concern to many stakeholders and the government. This is mainly because of the  lives lost in some instances and the financial setback as well as the psychological impact on the citizenry.

    This is why states, especially Lagos, have provided guidelines on land use designation to guarantee orderliness in development. It is believed in some quarters that the state’s Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development (MPP&UD)’s rapid response to requests for planning information ensures that the public is adequately informed on land use zoning, permissible use, plot size, building coverage and height, setback, airspace and parking requirements, in addition to other sundry standards for potential developments. These have helped in curtailing ibuilding collapse in the state.

    This position was re-echoed by the state’s Commissioner for physical Planning and Urban Development, Mr. Abiola Anifowoshe, who, in April, this year, at a ministerial briefing to commemorate Governor Akinwunmi Ambode-led administration’s second anniversary, rejoiced that “there was no single case of building collapse in the state in the last one year.”

    Although Anifowoshe’s submission went unchallenged, not many agreed with his position. In a twist of fate, barely 24 hours after his submission, a building under construction in Lekki area partially collapsed. The building is at NICON Town Estate, off Admiralty Way, Lekki.

    Again, on May 29, 2017, a three-storey building at 24, Daddy Aladja Street, Oke Arin on Lagos Island, undergoing renovation collapsed. Similarly, on July 22, 2017, another building went down at 7, Saidu Okeleji Street, Meiran in Agbado Oke -Odo Local Council Development Area (LCDA) of the state. Also, on July 25, 2017, another building at No 3, Massey Street, Lagos Island, collapsed in the morning, during a rainstorm. The structure was initially planned for a three-storey building before another floor was added to make it four.  Another three-storey building on August 28, 2017, at Saka Oloro Street, Ilufe Road, Alaba International Market, Ojoo, collapsed.

    The seeming resurgence of building collapse in the state, according to the second Vice- President of the Nigerian Institute of Building (NIOB), Mr. Kunle Awobodu,  was not unexpected. He explained that going by the trend, only the unconcerned, who are not monitoring construction activities in the state, would be deceived by the temporary respite in building collapse.

    He warned that barring any shoring or stability mechanism, sub-standard buildings constructed in the past would eventually fail, leading to collapse, adding that what boggled built environment observers’ minds was that building collapse resumed after the Lagos State Government recruited 395 construction professionals, mostly young graduates, to improve on the monitoring capacity of the Lagos State Building Control Agency (LABSCA).

    “The irony is compounded by the fact that the buildings that have been falling lately were those under construction. From the Building Collapse and Prevention Guild record, 81 buildings collapsed in Nigeria in the past five years,” he noted.

    Awobodu, who is also the president of the Building Collapse Prevention Guild (BCPG), blamed the recurring menace on challenges of enforcingf building laws. He said the absence of a building code, which ought to guide building construction in the country has been an encumbrance.

    He added that nations with effective building codes hardly have cases of building collapse. The NIOB chief is convinced that if the National Building Code could be passed into law and abided by, the frequency of substandard construction would be very low.

    He, however, explained that it was pertinent to understand the significant difference between monitoring of building development and supervision or management of building production process. The latter, he said, is the appropriate approach to ascertaining constant quality control on site, which unfortunately has been stifled by quackery and flagrant non-compliance to due process.

    Monitoring of sites by government officials, he said, is at intervals and mainly to verify the conformity of building construction with the approved building plan.

    According to him, the frequent failure of pile foundations in recent time aroused the interest of BCPG Kosofe Cell which covers an expanse of weak soil terrain. The cell, he further said, organised a well-publicised forum where deep foundation practitioners, drillers, rig operators and other stakeholders revealed some sharp practices in the geo-technical and foundation sector. The consensus was a clarion call to the government to sanitise that sector.

    Also identified is the lack of maintenance. To tackle this, the BCPG Ikeja Cell, according to Awobodu, organised a seminar, which attracted estate managers, landlords, landladies, building professionals and other stakeholders. The need for building owners and managers to allocate or reserve a percentage of the rent for maintenance of their buildings was also emphasised.

    To Awobodu, the use of sub-standard sandcrete blocks for building also causes building collapse. “The prevalence of sub-standard blocks in the building market due to rising cost of block production, especially cement price prompted the BCPG Igando- Ikotun Cell to organise a workshop for block moulders or manufacturers on the importance of quality.

    “It, therefore, recommended the institution of block production monitoring mechanism by the Standards Organisation of Nigeria and other relevant agencies,”he said.

    Awobodu further disclosed that in July, the BCPG Ikorodu Cell addressed the issue of quality in steel reinforcement bars. “Some of the reinforcement bars being used for construction are produced from scraps. Steel manufacturers, distributors, suppliers, construction professionals and iron benders were in attendance to educate the people more,”he said.

    To him, the solutions to building collapse should be derived from its causes. “If competent professionals are backed by the law to handle construction, from design through to post construction stages, there would be less crisis in the building construction sphere of Nigeria. The responsibility of appropriate designs should rest on qualified architects and engineers while that of the building production management should be borne by the professional resident builders,” Awobodu said.

    The BCPG Technical Committees, he said, investigated the collapsed Synagogue Church building and that of Lekki Gardens. “The BCPG reports, which unravelled the actual causes of the two collapses, are currently being used by the government in the prosecution of the two cases in court,” he said.

    This is a departure from the past where developers of collapsed buildings were left un-prosecuted.

    The National Board of Technical Education, he said, has evolved a system of assessing the competence of building artisans towards skills and knowledge upgrade, through its National Vocational Qualifications Framework. “The NIOB is saddled with the responsibility of awarding the certificates, which naturally will help overcome the challenges of poor workmanship in the Nigerian building construction industry,” he said.

    According to Awobodu, the BCPG, a non-government organisation, with special interest in construction, has a philosophy which focuses on prevention rather than solution after collapse, adding that being proactive is better than a reactive approach.

    This, to him, is why the organisation has been embarking on activities, which promote standard construction in Nigeria. “For instance, builders and carpenters identified some faults in the timber products being used for roofing. Sizes of woods have been reduced below the recommended standards. Moreover, immature trees were being logged  and sold to the market. These shortcomings have undermined the resistance of some roof to severe wind pressure, leading to collapse,”he said.

    Attempts by The Nation to speak with Anifowoshe in the last three months have met brick walls, as questionnaire sent to him by email through the Ministry’s public affairs department and subsequent reminders have remained unanswered up till the time of going to press. The public affairs department was also several times contacted on phone but was told Anifowoshe was on Umrah (less hajj). Calls after his return from the trip also yielded no positive response.

    However, going by LABSCA’s recent activities, a respite might be in the offing. Last month, the Agency began the first phase of demolition of distressed houses across the state. The agency has identified 114 buildings to be demolished in the state, with approval for 57 to be demolished in the first phase of the exercise.

    According to LASBCA’s General Manager Lekan Shodeinde, the demolition will be done in phases immediately funding is available to the agency. “We have approval to pull down 57 houses, but we are starting with 13 out of the 34 buildings we have identified on the Lagos Island and which we have fund for. So, as we get more funds we will continue with the exercise,” he said.

  • Building collapse death toll now eight

    Building collapse death toll now eight

    The death toll in Tuesday’s building collapse yesterday rose from two to eight.

    The grim task of rescuing the trapped took the better of the day before the operation was called off last night.

    An eight-year old surviour, Wuraola Afolayan, said she saw a ray of light and pulled her younger brother towards it before they were rescued.

    The kids were among 15 others rescued from the building which caved in at Massey/Karena Street.

    The six more bodies were recovered between 1am and noon by Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) with the help of floodlight. The rescuers worked despite the hostilities of some miscreants.

    Afolayan, who was brought to the scene when Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) in charge of Operations, Imohimi Edgal arrived, said they were sent by their parents to buy beans.

    She said: “Our mother sent us to buy beans. When we got there, the building just fell. We were in a dark place when I saw light and so, I pulled my brother and we followed the light. That was how we were seen and rescued.”

    Eleven-year-old Hassan Ajetunmobi was also rescued from the debris around 3:30am. He was injured on his right leg and left hand.

    Awolowo Toyin, Amoo Zainab, Kofo Rotimi, Adau Akeem, Ufodike Innocent, Adebayo Olugbemi, Leonard Bernard, Adawo Adidat, Rahmon Rasa, Amoo Sherifat, Ajetunmobi Oyindamola, Amidu  Lamou and Qudus Ojoye were rescued on Tuesday and rushed to Lagos Island General Hospital.

    The bodies of Lawal Mabolaje, 15 and Ibrahim Bello, 26, which were among those recovered from the rubble, have been collected by the relatives.

    The miscreants went wild around 2am, when Bello’s body was found.

    When LASEMA and Nigerian Red Cross (NRC) officials took the body bag to a waiting van, the thugs demanded to see it and their wish was granted.

    Rather than allow the family to take the body away, they attacked the officials who carried the body bag, threatening to kill them.

    Two of them lifted their clothes up and showed the officials guns. They accused the rescuers of killing Bello.

    Explanations by the LASEMA crew that the victim was brought out from under a beam fell on the hoodlums’ deaf ears. They assaulted a Red Cross official.

    To ensure peace, LASEMA General Manager Adesina Tiamiyu ordered the emergency workers to withdraw from the site for the miscreants.

    Following their withdrawal, relatives of those still trapped went after the hoodlums and also invited the police to chase them away.

    The hoodlums eventually gave way for the rescuers to continue their work and Ajetunmobi was rescued.

    It was gathered that residents last week prevented the firm that mounted a mast near the building from installing an industrial standby generator on the penthouse.

    The government has begun investigation to ascertain who approved the installation of the mast on the structure.

    It was gathered that a telecommunication’s firm paid a relative of the building owner for the mast. The relative has since moved abroad.

    Tiamiyu said the mast might have contributed to the building collapse, adding that investigation would determine the cause.

    He said the building and others around it would hardly pass integrity test, appealing to the residents to consider their safety first.

    According to him, 15 persons were rescued. He put the casualty figure at eight.

  • ‘Save polytechnic education from collapse’

    National President, Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), Comrade Usman Dutse, has raised the alarm that polytechnic education may collapse, if nothing urgent is done to rescue it.

    Dutse, who sent a Save-Our-Soul (SOS) message to the Federal Government, also enjoined union members to support their leaders to confront the challenges.

    He spoke at the opening of the 88th National Executive Council, (NEC) meeting of the union at the Federal Polytechnic, Ado-Ekiti.

    He noted that the meeting was to review the challenges and chart the way forward for polytechnic education in Nigeria, urging stakeholders to continue to work together to ensure industrial peace in the sector.

    In his welcome address, the out-going chairman of ASUP, Federal Polytechnic, Ado-Ekiti, Comrade Tunji Owoeye, urged the union to fight for the establishment of a polytechnic commission which, he said, would improve how polytechnics are run.

    He said the government must demonstrate the political will to establish the body, like the universities, nomadic and primary commissions.

    “The commission is a must and it is this generation of ASUP that should muster and exert all vehement solidarity towards any action declared by NEC at achieving it,” he said.

    Owoeye praised the Polytechnic Rector, Dr Theresa Akande, for her understanding, saying the institution led in the full implementation of CONTISS 15 as well as prompt promotion of workers.

    Akande called on the Federal Government to implement the recommendations of the Needs Assessment carried out for the  polytechnics some time ago “to enable a turnaround for the better for our polytechnics in the country.

    “Our sector is facing unimaginable challenges which are threatening to drown our existence as polytechnics,” she lamented.

    Urging the government to  honour its agreements with the academic communities, Akande said proper funding and equipping of polytechnics would help reduce incessant unrest as well as improve the standard of education.

  • REDAN blames building collapse on lack of professionalism

    Real Estate Developers Association of Nigeria (REDAN), South-West zone Chairman, Mr. Taiwo Ogunbodede, has condemned the series of building collapse in Lagos State. According to him, they are caused by action, inaction, negligence and lack of professionalism. REDAN, he explained, will always stand for and advocate standard, ethics and structure, and will not support any short-cut in the building process.

    Ogunbodede, while commiserating with the families of victims in the various building collapse incidents and the state, however advised builders and developers to adhere strictly to rules and guidelines laid down for construction and development process.

    According to him, one of the major causes of building collapse is the failure of builders or developers to stick strictly to the right quantity and quality of building materials. Besides, he admonished that the appropriate human resources should be deployed to do construction works, adding that only professionals and certified engineers should be contracted in any building projects.

    The REDAN Southwest boss advocated that quacks and non-building professional should not be used on any building projects, and contractors should ensure constant and adequate education and professional development by upgrading their skills and knowledge. This category of professionals, he advised, should ensure that their designs are reviewed and approved by the appropriate authorities before commencing any major building project, and should desist from the habit of not engaging the services of qualified building engineers.

    Ogunbodede rued the lackadaisical attitude of some building contractors, which he said may continue to pose problems in the construction industry if not properly dealt with .

    According to him, property owners and developers should ensure that they put in place a proper maintenance schedule for their buildings as this will make such a building remain in perfect condition.  “Proper maintenance culture must be cultivated for the avoidance of building collapse as even the best constructed buildings needs to be maintained properly,” he said.

    He added that the absence of a National Building Code (NBC) may have been responsible for the reccurrence of building collapse, hence, the urgent need for the passing the NBC into law. This, he said, will regulate and stop the use of non-professionals and quacks in the building and construction industry.

    “The National Building Code regulates the conduct and operations of professionals and stakeholders in the construction industry,” he argued.

    Ogunbodede also disassociated REDAN and its members from all building collapsed cases, calling on Lagos State to ensure a close and strict monitoring of all ongoing projects in the state. He also called for the sanctioning of any developer, builder or landlord, associated with any form of building collapse.

  • Why buildings collapse, by expert

    Experts in building construction have blamed the government, contractors and professionals for the incessant building collapse in the country.

    The Chairman, Committee of Directors of Works and Physical Planning of Nigerian Universities, Mr. Mohammed Aminu Sambo, who addressed reporters yesterday, identified non-involvement of relevant professionals, and emphasis on the procurement act, which says the lowest responsive bidder wins the contract, regardless of whether the rates are reasonable or not, as some of the factors which engender building collapse.

    Sambo also identified corruption among government officers, who collude with contractors to defraud the government at the expense of standard and quality work, as a factor.

    He regretted that the government, which should be at the forefront of ensuring that quality is not always compromised, is most times indifferent.

    He also identified the unpatriotic and greedy roles of some “unprofessional contractors” who use inferior materials and employ cheap labour to maximise profit at the expense of lives.

    Sambo appealed to the government to always ensure that relevant agencies saddled monitoring and ensuring compliance standards function well, and with all sense of patriotism. He said those found wanting for defrauding the government should be punished to deter others.