Tag: fire

  • Fire at St. Nicholas hospital

    Fire at St. Nicholas hospital

    Panic gripped patients and staff of St. Nicholas hospital, Lagos Island yesterday, when a fire broke out.

    Many flee to escape being trapped in the inferno.

    Residents and commuters along the Mission Street quickly mobilised people to quench the fire.

    It took the timely intervention of the fire fighters to halt the spread of the fire.

    According to Director of Lagos State Fire Service, Rasak Fadipe, an emergency call about 6pm, alerted them of the fire outbreak.

    “Immediately, we mobilised our water trucks from Onikan and Sari Iganmu stations to the place and by 7:15, our men had put off the fire,” he said.

    The inferno which Fadipe attributed to electrical fault affected only the ninth floor occupied by a law firm.

    No death was recorded.

     

  • N40m goods lost in Kuje market fire

    N40m goods lost in Kuje market fire

    It was a sad day for Kuje traders when many of them lost goods worth N40 million to fire outbreak

    According to an eyewitness, the blaze destroyed so many goods because it could not be controlled due to the haphazard nature of the environment.

    About eight shops were burnt in the incident which is the second time in less than one month that some parts of the market were razed by fire.

    The blaze was said to have been caused by illegal connection of electricity wires by some shop owners.

    While addressing newsmen when he went to inspect the level of damage, the Vice-Chairman Kuje Areal Council, Mr. Mohammed Baba who represented the chairman expressed sadness that the incident had become worrisome as it was the second time the incident has occurred in less than one month.

    He said the council authority will take appropriate measures in compensating the affected victims, even as he added that the council and market managers would meet with the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) to form a committee on how to carry out proper electrical connection in the market in order to prevent future occurrence.

    The Chairman of Kuje Traders’ Association, Alhaji Yunusa Isa sympathised with the affected traders, adding that goods worth N40 million were lost in the fire as a result of illegal connection in the shops.

    Isa, therefore, urged the area council to upgrade the standard of the market and create access road within the market for easy access to the market.

    He advised traders to ensure they switched off all electrical appliances while closing for the day’s business.

    Meanwhile, traders at the market are lamenting over regular fire outbreak in the market, even as they called on the council chairman, Mr. Shaban Tete to expedite action in finding possible solution to the regular fire incidence.

    Mrs. Martha Ikechukwu, one of the traders whose shops were not burnt said that the two fire incidences that had destroyed shops and property in the market is beyond their imagination. She stressed the need for government to seriously look into the situation and find lasting solution to it before it gets out of hands.

    According to Mrs. Ikechukwu, the cause of the fire incidences in the market recently is not clear. I will say that it is something nobody can give explanations to, because it has never happened like this in the past, where fire will destroy shops and property in one market two times in less than 20 days. I believe that there are questions that seriously need answers.

    “I thank God that some of our shops were not affected and I sympathise with my co-traders for their losses. The entire thing is getting out of hands. How can one market experience two fire outbreaks in 20 days? The whole thing is becoming a mystery and nobody is taking serious action to put an end to it. All we hear are promises from the council leadership and no action.

    “The first time fire destroyed some shops and property in the market in December, the leadership of the council, led by Mr. Shaban Tete, visited the market and promised to investigate the cause of the fire incident and find solution to it.

    “Since after that visit, nothing was done. No investigation was carried out to know the exact cause of the blaze. If there was an investigation, it would have helped in averting this recent one. I guess they want the entire market to burn down before they find solution to the cause of it,” she said.

    Another trader who pleaded anonymity said when the council chief visited the market in December and promised to put an end to such occurrence in future, they thought the council leadership would immediately do something to avert future fire incidence. After the visit, no council official visited the market to carry out any investigation or to proffer solution to future occurrence of the incident.

    “One of the problems we have in this country is that our political leaders make promises that they will not fulfill. If proper measures had been put in place to correct the illegal electricity connection that they identified as the cause of the fire in December when the first fire incident occurred, the recent incident would not have happened. They just came here to see the extent of damage done and went to their houses to relax, because it did not affect them directly.

    “There are no markets in Kuje. The only market we have is under threat of being burnt down completely and no positive step is being taken by the council leadership to avert it. Nothing is happening in this council. There is no new infrastructure.

    “Other area councils are building model markets and upgrading the old ones for their people. Instead of building better markets for us in Kuje, they want the only one we are managing to burn down completely before they find solution to the fire problem.

    “The chairman, Mr. Shaban Tete should rise to his responsibilities and make things work for the benefit of Kuje people. During the last administration led by Hon. Danladi Zhin, nothing like this happened, because, he always tackled problems immediately before it got out of hands, and he always mapped out ways to better the lives of Kuje people. But we are yet to see that seriousness in this administration,” he said.

  • Fire guts Mile 1 market in Port Harcourt

    Fire guts Mile 1 market in Port Harcourt

    The popular Mile 1 market in Port Harcourt, Rivers, was gutted by an early morning fire that destroyed properties and goods worth millions of naira.

    Eyewitnesses told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the fire started at about 2.00 am on Tuesday and razed the entire make-shift market.

    The fire also affected a two storey residential building housing some lock-up stores.

    One of the traders, Mr. Chimdi Eze, said he lost jewelries worth more than N2 million to the fire.

    Eze said that the painful aspect was that he just received stock worth N600, 000 for the Christmas sales.

    ”I just lost everything to the fire,” he said.

    Another trader, Mr. Chinecherem Ndubuisi, said he lost electronics worth more than N3 million, adding that starting afresh would be very difficult for him since he did not have enough capital.

    Mrs. Ebere Okoye, a trader and resident of the burnt residential building, who could not control her tears, said her entire life savings and properties had been consumed by the inferno

    Ebere, a widow and mother of four, said she did not know how she could provide accommodation for and feed her children.

    “Ever since I lost my husband, life has been difficult and will even be harder now that I have lost everything.

    “Government and well-meaning Nigerians should come to my aid because as it stands now, the only thing keeping me alive is my children,” she said amidst outburst.

    Some others traders told NAN that they did not only lose their goods to the inferno, they also lost cash worth several thousands of naira which they left in the market.

    They said they normally left the proceeds from their last sales in the shops due to the closure of banks.

    Mr. Christopher Uwajeh, an eye-witness, who praised the resilience of the firemen, said the Police and men of the State Security Service were at the scene to curtail breakdown of law and order.

  • Fire razes 25-storey Great Nigeria Insurance building

    Fire razes 25-storey Great Nigeria Insurance building

    THE 25-storey Great Nigeria Insurance Company (GNI) Ltd House on Martins Street, Lagos, was yesterday razed by an early morning fire.

    Two persons were injured and properties worth of billions naira destroyed in the fire which started from the first floor and spread to other floors of the building.

    Officials of the Lagos State Fire Service and other emergency agencies battled for hours to put out the fire.

    Director, Lagos State Fire Service Rasak Fadipe told reporters that his men received a distress call around 6:34 am that the building was on fire.

    He said the fire trucks at Onikan Fire Station, with 10,000 litres of water were mobilised to the scene, adding that on getting there, his men discovered that the fire was huge and that the water would not be sufficient.

    “We had to call for reinforcement from the Sari-Iganmu Fire Station which brought another 10,000 litres of water to fight the fire,”

    “We left the island to as far as Apapa to get a functioning water hydrant. So, if you couple that with the traffic challenge, you will see that the fire keeps coming back.”

    The team, he said, also found it difficult locating the source of fire as the premises had many combustibles.

    “Aside crowd control challenges and the unavailability of water hydrants, we have not been able to locate the source of the fire,

    “It started on the ground floor, which had many combustibles. Several cars were parked in the premises and they also led to the escalation of the fire.

    “Although the structure was built as offices, most people have converted the offices to stores and warehouses.

    “We also suffered from crowd control, with the hoodlums trying to seize our fire equipment from our personnel. They obstructed the adequate positioning of fire trucks and attacked fire men,” Fadipe said.

    He said the fire men also brought aerial ladder used to fight fire in high rise buildings to gain access to the affected floors.

    He said the first to the third floors of the building were affected, adding that the battle to put out the fire was still on at the time of filing this report.

    Fadipe said his men faced crowd challenge on arrival, adding that they battled the crowd to gain access to the building.

    He said the thick smoke from the building also posed a challenge to his men, who had to use breathing apparatus to enter the building, adding that the cause of the fire has not been ascertained.

    Fadipe said officials of the Federal Fire Service and their United Bank for Africa, UBA, were on ground to complement the state fire service men.

    The incident caused traffic grid-lock on Martins and adjoining streets as vehicles sought alternative routes out of the area.

    Spokesperson, National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, Ibrahim Farinloye said the fire took a combined fire service team an estimated 12 hours to fight.

    He said no life was lost, adding that one of those injured is a Senior Fire Officer of the Federal Fire Service, Obiah Onoh who was attacked by hoodlums.

    As at 4pm, the fire men including those from the military and private organisations were still battling to bring it under control.

    Eyewitnesses said the fire started on the ground floor, where many cars were parked.

    The Nation learnt that residents in the area were able to salvage five cars before smoke engulfed the place.

    When The Nation visited, those with offices and warehouses on the premises were scampering to salvage their belongings.

    Some workers at the building looked confused; others who stood in clusters lamented the loss of personal effects kept in their offices.

    One of the workers, Musiu Ahmed said he got to work about 7am to meet the building razed.

    He said some people kept diesel on the ground floor, wondering if that could have led to the outbreak.

    “You know that this ground floor is supposed to be solely a parking lot, but some people have turned part of it to warehouse. Could it be the diesel that people keep here that caused this fire?” Asked Ahmed.

    Ahmed, who said his office was on the second floor, thanked God that no life was lost.

    However, another fight ensued between officials of the state government and NEMA, with the Commissioner for Special Duties, Wale Ahmed, ordering Farinloye to vacate the premises.

    The battle for supremacy between NEMA and Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) has become a recurring decimal emergency sites, leading to the agencies not working together.

     

  • Fire razes hostel

    Fire razes hostel

    No fewer than seven rooms in B Block in Jubril Aminu Hall of Residence of the Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto (UDUS) were gutted in an afternoon fire on campus.

    The fire, which source could not be ascertained, raged on for hours as efforts by students to put it off were futile. The Sokoto State Fire Service could not be reached while the incident lasted. A handful of the school security personnel doubled the efforts of student to put out the inferno. Occupants of Rooms 13 to 19 were the worst hit as fired burnt their properties.

    An eye witness, Habeeb Olororo, said the incident was caused by a faulty electrical appliance.

    “At about noon, I was sitting close to a tree when I noticed a burning flame coming from the hostel area. I quickly rushed to the scene but I met a few students and some security personnel struggling to put out the fire. So I joined them. Later, the fire escalated and spread to other rooms,” he stated.

    When contacted, the Dean of Students’ Affairs (DSA), Dr Ibrahim Magawata, said investigation had begun to ascertain the cause of the fire incident, saying nobody was hurt by the fire.

    Students, who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE, said fire incident was becoming rampant, urging management to put an end to it.

    “Fire razed a part of this hostel last May. And now, students’ properties have been consumed again by yet another fire breakout. What is the management doing about this? We cannot fold our arms and let another fire outbreak destroy our properties,” said a student who did not want his name in print.

     

  • Three feared dead in Ibadan tanker fire

    Three feared dead in Ibadan tanker fire

    •Five hospitalised

    A petrol tanker exploded yesterday on the Iwo/Ojoo road in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.

    Three persons were feared dead. Five people sustained serious burns.

    Eight shops and two Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs) were razed.

    The incident occurred at Orogun Junction between 11am and 1pm.

    An eyewitness, Dr. Ayo Osisanwo, said the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) tanker exploded while trying to offload fuel from another tanker that fell.

    Those injured were rushed to the hospital by the State Ambulance Service.

    Fire Service men, who were called to the scene, ran out of water and waited for hours for supply.

    Victims wailed uncontrollably as the fire spread to surrounding buildings.

    There was a traffic gridlock and motorists were directed to a single lane.

    Men of the Nigeria Civil Service Defence Corps (NCSDC) and the police were on the scene.

  • Egypt: From flame to fire

    Egypt: From flame to fire

    •Revolts are rarely won by those who start them

    THE land of the Nile has become a pool of blood. As things stand, only a miracle will prevent Egypt from descending to the very portal of civil insurrection and war.

    The tragedy now gripping Egypt is of immense portion. Two years ago, Egyptians of all stripes protested to rid themselves of a haughty, arrogant dictator who sought to turn his evil fortune into a perpetual family dynasty.

    Yet, a terrible omission was committed. Now, the county pays the dear costs of this error. In ridding themselves of the dictator, the people thought they were also ridding themselves of the dictatorship and the political culture upon which it was founded. They mistakenly thought the man was the institution. He might have personified the system but he was not the system. They tossed him and began to celebrate. The work was but half done. The dictator had been removed but the system upon which his arbitrary tenure was built remained intact.

    For all of their novel, internet-savvy political activism and old-fashioned street protests, the agents of civil society were either naïve about the intricacy of their political system or were exhausted from the exertion already made. They relaxed after merely achieving the removal of one man from office. To their current lament, they left unharmed his political structure and the aura of power that structure had acquired.

    In beginning this revolt, the secular political activists gave Egypt hope. In not being disciplined, visionary and sufficiently organized to bring the revolt to conclusion, they unwittingly placed the people in a harsh vise that now taxes and tolls them. Payment is being demand and is being demanded in lives and blood.

    It is a terrible disgrace not to combat injustice. Yet, it is almost as hapless to fight it incompletely. As such, Egypt serves as a fine lesson how to start a modern protest as well as a terse manual on how not to finish one. What began as a political awakening has quickly transformed into a national wake, a mournful dirge heard in all corners of the ancient nation.

    The architects of the Egyptian dawn are mostly invisible now. The manner in which they constructed a diffuse, loosely organized protest movement made it difficult for the authorities to contain the protests. But it also made it impossible for the organizers to transform this amorphous group into a political movement with positive, soundly-defined objectives. Because of this fault, the political ground was ceded to people and groups who had something other than democracy at heart.

    Put another way, there were three main groups in Egypt on the day of Mubarak’s exit from power. There was this inventive but disorganized assemblage of civil society and secular organizations. Then there was the military, the most organized and powerful governmental institution. The people erred, thinking Mubarak had made the military when it was the military that had made the strongman. Without the military, Mubarak was an infirmed old man. The military without Mubarak remained its powerful self. Third, there was the Muslim Brotherhood and its large universe of supporters.

    By virtue of its lack of political organization and funding, secular civil society disqualified itself from seriously competing for national leadership. Civil society proved adept at causing disruption such that Mubarak was troubled out of office. United about whom it did not want, civil society was incapable of forming a solid coalition around what and whom it wanted to fill the political vacuum civil society had authored.

    Battle for control of the nation boiled down to a contest between the military and the Muslim Brotherhood. The present crisis is a turf war between these two politically unimaginative, power-oriented rival groups that care little for the condition of the general population. Both groups seek for national power. Neither cares for democracy.

    From the beginning of the crisis, the military saw itself as the only truly national institution. Its generals also had too many significant political and economic interests to cede national leadership to any group uninitiated in their ways and inimical to their interests. Given its very nature, the military, in its most charitable disposition, was inherently hostile to democracy. However, after Mubarak’s ouster, the group decided to play coy, like a venomous snake pretending to slumber. Yet, at the right moment, it would strike.

    The dominant wing of the Muslim Brotherhood, symbolized by ousted President Morse, also cared too little for democracy. A conservative, pragmatic lot, they played the game of ballot and vote, understanding their established organizational spread and power gave them a distinct advantage in the early elections that had been scheduled. They exploited the advantage and won. Although rising to power through democracy, they were too willing to clip the very democracy that had just taken them to the place of power.

    Last November, President Morsi decreed a usurpation of legislative and judicial power. If taken literally, the decree made him a 21st century pharaoh. What further undid him was his conservative economics. If a leader is to quickly curtail the people’s newly-acquired freedom, at least give them cheap bread. To remove both is to call forth disaster. Morsi did this by imposing a dire economic austerity on the pained nation. Morsi ran into trouble not because of Islam or of brotherhood. His trouble was that his mindset led him to classical economic policies when progressive, at least Keynesian, policies were the only logical escape from calamity. As such, he became more the brother of conservative western economists than of the average Egyptian. Again, there was no innate problem with the Brotherhood as a political force. Islam, as a religion, does not detest democracy or progressive economics. The tragedy is that the particular leaders of the Egyptian franchise of the Brotherhood proved too undemocratic and economically conservative for the exigencies they faced. Had the Muslim Brotherhood selected more progressive economic and political policies, their man might still be in power and the streets moving more toward tranquility than anomie.

    Ironically, the conservatism of the Muslim Brotherhood is a by-product of the very state it has been fighting the past eight decades. Although it has been the main organized opponent of the military government, the Brotherhood also has been allowed to exist, even if sometimes on the fringes of legality, because its leadership is not so unlike the military’s. This has made it part of the nation’s institutional establishment, meaning it has been inculcated into the governing system more than it would admit. As such, the Brotherhood leadership, in many ways, is the un-uniformed mirror image of the military’s general class. Save for one thing.

     

    The military’s leadership is politically more adroit. In comparison to the Brotherhood’s leaders, one group looks like a gang of experienced, cynical men while the other appears to be a cackle of adolescents. After Mubarak’s departure, the military’s objective was to regain power. Their strategy would be that of driving a wedge between the Brotherhood and secular society. The Brotherhood won the election. Begrudgingly, civil society accepted the results and decided to give Morsi a chance. However, this was not the making of an alliance or even a gentlemen’s agreement. In effect, civil society had placed Morsi on probation.

    Not wanting to push civil society and Morsi together, the military kept its powder dry at the time. As Morsi gained power, the military entered agreements with him protecting their base but also tacitly encouraging him to nip the frail democracy by arrogating power to himself. Exploiting Morsi’s clumsiness, the wedge was driven between him and secular society.

    Encouraged by the military, civil society took to the streets. What was done to Mubarak, the groups now did to Morsi. The military deceived the civilians that their coup would be a temporary corrective, saving democracy from the paddle-handed Morsi. The civilians swallowed the bait because they never liked Morsi and because they entertained the fantasy of gaining the upper hand in new elections if the Brotherhood were duly disgraced if not completely shackled.

    The civilians gave the military their blessing. Nobel Prize winner Mohammed el-Baradei allowed ambition to get the better of him by agreeing to join the caretaker government the military established. This lent civilian color and legitimacy to what was a military coup against an immensely unpopular Morsi.

    Had the civilians been wiser, they would not have accepted the military’s gift. They should have realized the military is not in the business of giving more than it takes. Had they not accepted this easy route, enough people might have been amassed to force Morsi’s exit or his change of ways.

    In a series of adroit if immoral maneuvers, the military exploited the differences between civic society and the Brotherhood to grab power.

    Recognizing the importance of strong institutions, the military is not satisfied with clipping Morsi. They seek to decimate the Brotherhood. In this way, the military believes it will not face another organized rival for decades. Within the space of two years, the military has serially duped the civil society and the Brotherhood, getting what it wanted as a result: It controls the levers of national government. However, this comes at high price that continues to increase. Hundreds die by the day and night.

    The military’s strategy has proven successful. They have civil society in their hip pocket and now dragoon the Muslim Brotherhood. Their goal is to drive the Brotherhood toward violence. The more violent the Brotherhood’s reply to the government’s muscle, the more the military shall crackdown, claiming the Brotherhood is terror inspired. This dynamic will lessen the already slim chance of a rapprochement between the Brotherhood and civil society. The Brotherhood would deem civil society responsible for the suppression in the first instance. Moreover, secular groups now fear the Brotherhood might become more radicalized due to the violence. Secular groups will fear a more vengeful Brotherhood’s inclusion and participation in politics and governance.

    The military has succeeded in reshaping the political landscape to fit its narrow interests. Politically, the nation is fragmented and the military is the only coherent institution to be found. Secular society is reeling, not yet fully understanding how massively it has been hoodwinked by the men in uniform whom they thought were bumbling fools. The Brotherhood is fragmented between those who want to fight and those who futilely believe an armistice with the military is possible. The pacifists hope against reality. The fighting is not because something has gone awry. This is all part of the grand design of the military’s return to power.

    By violently polarizing the situation, the military seeks to limit the options of the international community, especially the Western powers, to two. Either stand with the known entity, the military, or walk the unfamiliar path with the unknown entity, the Brotherhood. America had already tacitly endorsed Morsi’s ouster when its top diplomat proclaimed the military was trying to “restore democracy.” President Obama issued a recent statement deploring the military crackdown. But all the American did was cancel a nonessential joint military exercise. He did not and likely will not suspend military assistance in any significant degree.

    Clearly, America frets more about the Brotherhood and its ilk than about the military. American love for democracy in the Middle East ends when a purported “Islamicist” wins a national election. At that point, the hidden caveats and conditions for American support for democracy surface. Do not be taken by public statements by Obama Administration officials and Republican Party leaders such as Senators McCain and Graham. In public, they condemn the military’s street war. In private, they likely signal their acquiescence to the dirty campaign.

    America has not fought dreaded Islamicists in far away, isolated Afghanistan to watch them gain a foothold in the most strategic nation in the Arab world. The Suez Canal, that vital international military and commercial shipping route and dual gateway into the Mediterranean and toward the Persian Gulf, is an Egyptian artery. This is one of the most important channels of water in the world. America would rather it held by those to whom it gives billions of dollars of military aid than by a more radical version of Morsi. Without a cooperative Egypt, Israel’s geopolitical exposure increases exponentially. This cautious American president will do nothing that will be construed by conservative critics as impairing Israel.

    Moreover, America has seen what a mess they made of Libya by executing an established strongman. Thus, although the Egyptian military is killing people at a much faster clip than Gaddafi did, the cries that the military is “killing their own people’ are predictably absent. If the choice is between a possible more radicalized, vengeful Brotherhood and the military, the West will dance and wed the military. General el-Sisi knows this. He shepherds the situation toward this result that suits his personal and organizational interests. In other words, Egypt might have gone through these last two years of protests, crashed hopes, rising frustrations and now crimson tragedy just so an old dictator can be replaced by a more acrobatic and strategically clever one.

    In this, sober lessons abound.

    Incomplete reform quickly leads to complete regression. There will always be a backlash against reform. Ironically, the less vigorous the reform in altering the power equation between rival national institutions, the more potent shall be the conservative backlash.

    While anger may stir the people to protest, they must be careful. Quick resort to violence never serves the people. It serves those who wield the instruments of destruction. Last, a political or social movement must have a positive final goal. In Egypt, the movement only had a negative initial goal: the removal of Mubarak. After that, the people’s movement dissipated. Establishment operatives were allowed to seize the reins; they guided things back to the way they were. In the next weeks and months, violence will likely be the way of Egypt. The nation moves from the possible dawn of a new day into the darkness of nights already long passed. The violence and death are sad. Sadder still is the likelihood that these losses come only to install a dictator perhaps more agile and dangerous than the one first deposed. Getting rid of the strongman is but a half remedy. A viable democratic alternative must be the final, purposeful objective. In the absence of such a destination, the people run into the danger that the strongman they bind may be replaced by one they cannot bind.

     

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  • Eight die in fire, auto accident

    Eight persons have been confirmed dead while 20 others sustained various degrees of injuries in a fire accident that occurred in Birni Maza along Lapai-Lambata-Abuja road in Niger State.

    The fire accident which occurred on Friday night involved a petroleum tanker and two Toyota cars.

    The six occupants of the Toyota cars including the drivers were instantly burnt beyond recognition while the driver and the conductor of the tanker sustained high degree of injuries.

    The fire started when the two Toyota cars trailing the tanker, whose fuel was leaking, scratched their bottom plates on the trail where the fuel had poured on.

    The bottom plates then ignited and caught fire. According to eyewitnesses, the incident happened very fast and did not give the occupants of the vehicles a chance to escape.

    The fire was so intense that even the villagers who came to rescue the accident victims were also affected in the accident as they sustained various degrees of injuries.

    The Director General, Niger State Emergency Management Agency (NISEMA), Mohammed Shaba confirmed the incident stating that the dead victims were buried at the spot of the accident while all injured victims were rushed to the Federal Medical Centre Bida and the rural hospital in Lapai.

    He, however, said that two of the injured victims died on Saturday morning.

    According to him, eight deaths have already been recorded while twenty others sustained various degrees of injuries.

    Shaba said, “As I am talking to you now I am on my way from Lapai to Bida where some of the victims with various degree of injuries are hospitalized.”

    He then attributed the cause of the accident to the poor state of the road leading to Abuja, “I can tell you the cause of the accident is the dilapidated nature of the road, it is unfortunate the road that links the Federal Capital Abuja and the Southwest is in that shape, we appeal to the federal government to do something about the road.”

    In a similar vein, the Emir of Lapai, Alhaji Umar Bago has commiserated with the families of those who lost their lives in the accident while praying for those who sustained injuries to have quick recovery.

    He commended the prompt response of the state government and NISEMA on emergencies in the state while calling on government to ensure the repairs are done on the roads to prevent future accidents.

     

  • Fire destroys property in Galadimawa

    Fire has damaged a block of five shops with goods worth thousands of naira at Galadimawa village,Abuja.

    The shops include a provision store, salon, a patent medicine and interior decoration facilities as well as mattresses and rugs mini depots.

    A correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) who witnessed the incident, reports that the fire, which started at around 1a.m.on Sunday, lasted for an hour and was later put off by fire fighters from the Federal Fire Service.

    The fire is suspected to have been caused by electrical faults from one of the shops.

    Mr Emeka Obi, an eye-witness, told journalists that the owner of the mini depot got supplies twice a year.

    According to him, the proprietor of the depot recently got supplies for the second half of the year and everything had been destroyed by the fire.

    Obi said: “Only God can intervene in my friend’s business.”

    Residents of the village, who praised the Federal Fire Service for its prompt response, called for well known emergency numbers for the public to reach the department.

    Mr Paul Ikyado, a resident of the village, said the level of destruction caused by the fire would have been averted to a reasonable level if the firemen were reached on time.

    “When the fire started, we were helpless, we had no emergency number or contact of the fire service.

    “The rugs and mattresses caused more fire and the electrical fault from the ceiling made the fire spread faster.

    “The items lost in this fire would have been less if we got the fire men on time,” he said.

    Ikyado called on government to enhance the services of the fire service by providing short, prompt and popular emergency numbers for citizens’ safety.

    Some of the shop owners were not residents of the village and could not be contacted immediately.

    Confirming the report, Mrs Eugenia Osuagwu, Chief Fire Assistant, Federal Fire Services Command Headquarters, said that no life was lost.

  • Family of 6 die in Port Harcourt fire

    A  fire incident  that started around 2 pm on Saturday consumed a family of six in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.

    The family included  three sons and a daughter, aged seven, nine, seventeen and twenty two, as well as their parents.

    Two other daughters of the deceased parents were not at home when the fire started.  They had  relocated to study and write the ongoing Senior Secondary School Certificate examinations.

    The unfortunate incident happened at No. 17, New Estate Road, Railway Quarters, old Port Harcourt Township, popularly called.

    The deceased husband who was  a taxi driver and his wife   a petty trader had  their property completely burnt, while neighbours made efforts to ensure that the fire did not spread to other apartments in the quarters.

    The cause of the fire could not be ascertained last night, but sources said a loud explosion was heard, probably from the apartment of the deceased.  The  neighbours reportedly  scampered  for  safety, leading to confusion.

    The weeping landlord of the compound, who pleaded not to be named, described the incident as really pathetic.

    Rivers State Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Angela Agabe,  confirmed the incident, but that the details were still sketchy at press time.