Tag: Lagos building collapse

  • Photos of Lagos building collapse

    A three-storey building collapsed in Kakawa Street, on Lagos Island on Monday.

  • No building collapsed-LASBCA

    The Lagos State Building Control Agency ( LASBCA ) General Manager, Lekan Shodeinde on Monday debunked stories of a fresh building collapse in the state.

    He said the rumoured collapse of a building on Egerton Street, Oke-Arin Lagos Island was untrue.

    Shodeinde explained a three-floor structure was marked as distressed and undergoing demolition as at press time.

    He added that the demolition of the distressed building became necessary to avert another disaster.

    According to him, the administration of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode will leave no stone unturned to sanitise the building construction industry by removing all distressed, illegal structures and buildings prone to collapse as well as those that were not in conformity with the state building laws.

    Sidewinder appealed to Lagosians to cooperate with government by moving out of all buildings marked as distressed and also stay away from demolition sites.

    Read Also: Four scavengers injured in Lagos building collapse

    He re-emphasised that only LASBCA has the responsibility and professional expertise to determine whether a building is distressed or prone to collapse, adding his Agency is passionately committed to pulling down all the distressed buildings in the state.

    In continuation of the demolition exercise which started last Friday, four buildings were demolished by LABSCA on Monday.

    The buildings are located on 2, Olushi street; 3, Obadina street; 30A, Isale Agbede street and 36, Isale Agbede street, all on Lagos Island.

    This brings the number of demolished buildings on the Lagos island since last Friday to 17 out of the over 150 earmarked for demolition in the area.

  • Four scavengers injured in Lagos building collapse

    Four scavengers were on Monday reportedly injured in another building collapse in Egerton oke Arin square, Lagos Island.

    The Lagos State Emergency Management Agency ( LASEMA ) made this known on its official Twitter handle.

    According to LASEMA, the building had been marked by LASBCA for demolition, which started on Sunday.

    Read Also: No building collapsed, says LABSCA

    LASEMA confirmed that “officials were on top of the building when some scavengers tried to remove the doors on the ground floor and the remaining parts of the building collapsed on them.”

    According to the agency (LASEMA), the four scavengers sustained minor injuries and had been taken to the nearest hospital before the arrival of LRT.

  • I’m afraid to go to school again, says pupil who survived Lagos building collapse

    A Three-year-old survival of the recent building collapse at Ita Faji on Lagos Island, Kabiru Sasore, Monday said he is afraid of going to school again.

    He said he was eating in his class when he suddenly heard a loud sound, thinking it was a bomb.

    “I was eating in my class when my school collapsed, I heard a loud sound, and our school shook and all of us fell on each other. I was afraid and I didn’t want to go to school that day, I later saw a caterpillar. Though I am fine but my back is still painting me and my neck.”

    He said he is afraid to go to school again because he does not want to experience the similar incident again.

    His Aunty, Balikis Muhammed said he was discharged from the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH ) on Thursday, adding that he is still in medication and has an appointment in the hospital next Thursday.

    “His mother, Idera, is not feeling fine due to the shock from the incident; she is currently on admission in the hospital. When I saw him in the hospital last Thursday, when he woke up in the hospital, what he told us was that they bombed his school, everybody shook and it was not fair. He was shouting the name of his friend from the same school who was by his bed side, that one was asleep but Kabiru continuously shouted his name and was banging on his bed till that one woke up, opened his eyes, shouted Daddy.”

    Another survival, Farouk Abimbola, Seven years old, in Primary 3, said he was in his class and lectures were ongoing when the incident happened.

    “We were in the class reading with our teacher when the building suddenly started shacking and it collapsed, I heard a loud sound and I saw pillars coming down. I later saw caterpillar then sand was covering my leg and my head; some people carried and removed me from the sand and took me to the hospital. My leg and my hand are still paining me

    His Aunty, Titilayo Kowobar, said he has been discharged from the hospital but he is still going for treatment. She said his other is currently undergoing treatment in the hospital.

    “She is not in the right frame of mind, because her house has also been demolished. Now the family has no where to live; the father hangs around, the mother and Farouk stays with me, while their other children stays else whee,” she said.

  • Aisha Buhari visits victims of Lagos building collapse

    The wife of the President, Mrs. Aisha Buhari, yesterday visited victims of the Ita-Faaji, Lagos building collapse at the Lagos Island General Hospital to sympathise with them.

    She offered her condolences to the victims of the incident, which claimed the lives of no fewer than 20 people, including school children.

    Mrs. Buhari visited women and children wards of the hospital and prayed to God to grant the families that lost loved ones the fortitude to bear the loss. She also wished those still on admission speedy recovery.

    One of the victims and teacher in the school located in the collapsed building, Miss Easter Samuel, expressed her shock over the incident.

    The 19-year-old teacher, who was receiving treatment in the hospital, prayed to God not to experience such unfortunate incident again.

    The Chief Medical Director of the Hospital, Dr. Gani Kale, said 10 children were admitted in the hospital after the incident.

    According to him, three out of the patients have been discharged, having certified their medical fitness. Kale said there was no case of referral to another hospital.

    The wife of the president was accompanied to the hospital by a former Military Administrator of Lagos State, Brig.-Gen. Buba Marwa (rtd.) and a former deputy governor of Plateau State, Pauline Tallen, among others.

  •  Our agony, by survivors of Lagos building collapse

    Some survivors of the Lagos building collapse yesterday spoke of their harrowing experience.

    Bereaved families also recounted the death of their loved ones.

    The survivors, who are in four hospitals, said they escaped death by whiskers.

    They said they were busy with their chores when the building came down.

    Many families flocked Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Massey Street Children Hospital, Lagos University Teaching Hospital and Gbagada General Hospital in search of their loved ones.

    Mr Abideen Olawusi, a businessman and father of one of the victims, lamented the loss of his about-three-year-old girl, Qawiat.

    According to him, his wife is traumatised by the tragedy.

    “I am here to look after Qawiat’s injured sister, Rokibat. Rokibat is seven years old. Their mother could not come to the hospital because the death of Qawiat is taking its toll on her. She is traumatised and not feeling well. I left her in care of my relatives and friends to come and stay with Rokibat, who is injured,” Olawusi said.

    According to him, Qawiat must have died of shock. “When they brought out her remains, there were no signs of injury on her body. She must have died of shock. I carried her, checked all her body, I couldn’t find any part of her body injured. We buried her this (yesterday) morning. It is a sad experience for parents to bury their child after years of suffering from her birth to that age.”

    The three-year-old son of Mr Saheed Owolabi, an official of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA), Ayomide, survived the incident.

    Owolabi said despite his child’s cry that he did not want to go to that school anymore, he forcefully took him to the school that fateful day.

    He said: “What would I have told the world if he had died? That I forced my son to attend school the day the incident took place despite his refusal to go. My son insisted that day that he was not going to school. He said his teacher, Esther Ifeanyi, who was the owner of the school, used to beat him. Ayomide’s mother usually takes him to school, but when he was crying, I told his mother to leave. I carried him, promised to buy him biscuits. At the school, I spoke with his teacher and she promised not to beat him again. On my way downstairs, I looked back, my son was moody. He has not been that way before, so I promised to come and pick him from school.

    “I went to work. It was around 10am that my wife called me that my son’s school building had collapsed. I was shocked. I ran to the school. When he was brought out, he sustained injuries on his head, eyes and cheeks.  It was later that I learnt the school building had been marked for demolition. My son had been in the school since last year.”

    Ronke Pedro told The Nation that she lost her brother.

    “Our 97-year-old grandmother was also affected, but she is receiving treatment at the General Hospital. My brother, Kazeem, who is 37, died. They brought out his bodies around 3pm ,” she said.

    She blamed the government for not demolishing the building after it was marked twice for demolition.

    “Government should ensure those buildings that failed integrity tests are demolished. We lost a lot of lives here; many of them are our children.  There are many other buildings on Lagos Island that have been marked for demolition but they are being repainted. We need to put a stop to this insensitive attitude that is killing us,” Pedro said.

    Another survivor, Khalid Amoo, received a cap from Lagos State Governor-elect Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu yesterday when he visited the survivors with the Deputy Governor-elect, Dr. Obafemi Hamzat, at the hospital.

    Sanwo-Olu, Amoo’s aunt said, removed his cap and put it on the boy’s head.

    She said he prayed for him that he would grow up to be a governor.

    Lagos State Commissioner for Health Dr. Jide Idris told The Nation last night that the death toll had increased from 18 to 20.

    “The last person that was brought out of the rubble around 3am was dead,” he said.

    Idris said 42 survivors were being treated in six hospitals.

    “We have some at Onikan, Massey Street Children Hospital four were referred to Gbagada General Hospital, eight were taken to LASUTH and one in LUTH. They are all responding well to treatment,” he said.

    A building opposite the collapsed building was demolished yesterday.

    Lagos Island East Local Council Development Area Chairman Mr Kamal Salau-Bashua, who supervised the demolition, said the building failed the integrity test.

    He urged residents to give information on buildings with defects.

    National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) Director (Search and Rescue) Air Commodore Akugbe Iyamu was at the scene yesterday.

    He visited the General Hospital to commiserate with the victims, their families and the State Government.

    He assured the relations of the victims that the Federal Government was working with state officials on how to assist  them.

     

     

  • Building collapse: Injured pupils are in stable condition – Doctors

    Some of the injured pupils in the building collapse at Ita-faji, Lagos Island, on Wednesday are in stable condition and still receiving adequate medical attention in some hospitals in Lagos.

    A visit by our Correspondent to the General Hospitals in Marina and Gbagada in Lagos, on Thursday showed that some of the patients had been stabilised, while others were still being attended to.

    Names of the patients in stable condition had been pasted at the General Hospital on Wednesday for easy identification of the victims by their relatives.

    Relations of some the victims expressed gratitude to God for the survival of their children, thanking the medical team for their care.

    They expressed joy that their loved ones had been stabilised and were receiving the needed treatment.

    Dr Ismail Ganikale, the Medical Director, General Hospital, Lagos, told said that no new victims of the school building collapse were brought to the hospital.

    “No new casualty has been brought in and we are doing the best we can to mop up,” Ganikale said.

    He said that the management had rallied the medical team and were doing some mop up in order to get the actual number of casualties.

    Also, Dr Saliu Oseni, the Chairman, Lagos Chapter of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), said that the association had been going round the hospitals to monitor the treatment of the victims.

    “So far from what we gathered, the last set of patients that were brought to the Lagos General Hospital came in last night and we have yet to receive new patients as at this morning.

    “Most of the patients came in through General Hospital and Massey Children Hospital from where they were referred to other hospitals, including Lagos State University Teaching Hospital; Mainland General Hospital and General Hospital, Yaba.

    “We are aware that there is a patient at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital LUTH), Idi-Araba.

    “We have about six patients in Gbagada General Hospital; the actual statistics will not be clear until everything is okay.

    “We have quite a number of casualties, but we cannot ascertain the number.

    The chairman said that doctors were on ground and managing the situation.

    He said that there was an issue of need for blood during the emergency rush on Wednesday, but had been tackled.

    Oseni, who expressed appreciation for the efforts made by the state government on emergency care, said more could still be done to make it more functional.

    “We can still make our emergency unit, trauma unit to be more functional, especially at Gbagada Hospital and toll gate; so that we have adequate attention to victims of this type of incidence.

    “Then, we also want to appeal to the government to ensure that all these patients are tracked and their bills are sorted out so that none of them is disadvantaged with the fact that they do not have fund to take care of them.

    “I am sure machineries are being put in place to ensure that is done; hopefully at the end of the day we will be able to save those that are alive.

  • Building collapse: Red Cross, others appeal for blood for victims

    The Nigerian Red Cross (NRC) has appealed for blood donations for victims of the collapsed building on Lagos Island.

    Mr Olakunle Lasisi, Secretary of NRC, Lagos made the appeal in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday in Lagos.

    Publication trending on social media to appeal to the public for blood donations

    Speaking on the hashtags #DonateForItafaji and #savetheitafajichildren trending on social media, to solicit for blood donations from the public, he said Red Cross would partake in the exercise.

    Lasisi added that he spoke with the Lagos State Blood Transfusion Service on Wednesday, and confirmed that the information was true.

    “They said, yes, they are aware of it.

    “It was launched by the MD of the General Hospital, so they can have enough blood in the bank to assist the casualties of the collapsed building.

    “When an incident like this happens, blood donations is always required to meet the demand of those in need of blood transfusion.

    “It is a good opportunity for the blood bank to replenish because there are people who want to assist.

    “Some of our members who are due for blood donation will be available,” he told NAN.

    Lasisi commended the Red Cross volunteers and other agencies such as LASEMA, LASAMBUS, NEMA, FED FIRE and Nigeria Police, whose efforts ensured that lives were saved.

    “We left the point at about 12:30 am; we were moving out the debris there.

    “There are a lot of agencies and two construction companies also assisting.

    “The data we were able to collate tells us that we have about 45 persons that were evacuated and a good number of them are students,” he disclosed.

  • Mother, daughter die in Lagos building collapse

    Mother, daughter die in Lagos building collapse

    A 30-year-old woman, Basirat, and her two-year-old daughter, Bisoye, were yesterday killed in a building collapse in Lagos.

    Five-year-old Moyin, the eldest daughter of the deceased, sustained injuries and was rushed to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) by emergency workers.

    It was gathered the building at 7, Saidu Okeleji Street off Alaro in Meiran, caved in around 11:30am while it rained heavily.

    The deceased were said to be washing clothes outside when the building collapsed.

    Operatives of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) and the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) were said to have arrived the scene in time to rescue Moyin, who was trapped under the rubble.

    It was gathered the collapsed building was a bungalow under construction.

    The corpses were moved to mortuary by the State Environmental Health Monitoring Unit (SEHMU).

    Officials of LASEMA, Lagos State Fire Service, Nigeria Police Force (NPF), LASAMBUS, RRS and Red Cross were present at the scene of the incident.

    General Manager LASEMA, Adesina Tiamiyu, said proper investigation would be conducted on the incident by appropriate agencies.

    He advised owners and developers of buildings in the state to adhere to the codes and physical planning laws to avert unnecessary loss of lives.

    Officials of the Lagos State emergency agency LASEMA have been working on the scene to rescue occupants of the building.

  • One injured in Lagos collapsed building

    One injured in Lagos collapsed building

    At least one person sustained injury on Thursday after a building under construction collapsed in Ikeja, Lagos.

    The incident occurred at about 3:00 p.m. at 21, Makinde Street Alausa, barely 24 hours after the Lagos State Building Control Agency (LSBCA) served a stop-work order on the building.

    The Nation gathered that a pillar at the back of the building cracked, causing the structure to tilt sideways, resting on another building.

    About five workers said to be in the premises at the time of the incident, our correspondent learnt jumped on the roof of an adjourning building but only one of them was injured.

    According to the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA), the two-storey building collapsed from the base because of structural defect.

    LASEMA’s General Manager, Adesina Tiamiyu, said occupants of the adjoining building were safely evacuated.

    He said: “Occupants of adjoining building around the partially collapsed structure were safely evacuated, while the vicinity of the partially collapsed building was cordoned off to prevent any form of movement.

    “No life was lost, but a male adult who was working in the collapsed building sustained injury and was treated immediately.

    “Proper investigation would be conducted on the incident while the collapsed building will be recovered by controlled demolition so as to ensure utmost safety of lives and properties.”

    He advised developers to ensure they abide by building regulations and employ the services of certified engineers for building construction to avoid incidents such as this.