Tag: survivors

  • Death toll in error drone rises to 127 – Survivors

    Death toll in error drone rises to 127 – Survivors

    Survivors of the error bomb attack at Tudun Biri, Igabi Local Government Area of Kaduna State, have reported the death toll from the incident has risen to 127 as of Wednesday evening.

    The survivors, who claimed to have carried out count of the people who attended the Maulud Nabbiy celebration when the the drone attack happened, said several others were still unaccounted for.

    At the Barau Dikko Teaching Hospital on Wednesday one of the victims family, Idris Dahiru said more injured people and dead bodies were brought to the hospital on Wednesday.

    Dahiru, who claimed to have lost 34 members of his family, said:  “This morning, some people were picked in the forest and they were brought to the hospital.

    “The number of injured people has increased to 75, one person had died this morning. Some of the injured persons have been moved to other hospitals. Some have been moved to 44 Army Reference Hospital, One division Nigeria military facility, while some are still here in Barau Dikko Teaching Hospital.”

    It was also gathered as of Wednesday, 120 people were confirmed dead.

     One of the Imams from the area, Alh Ahmed Sanusi, on Monday said they buried 100 people and as of Tuesday, 20 more bodies were recovered by the search team while as of Wednesday, another six bodies had been buried.

    The Nation gathered that one of the critically injured survivors died at Barau Dikko Teaching Hospital.

    Read Also: Abuja One chance victim died before arrival at FCT hospital – Wike’s panel

    One of the survivors, Idris Yalo,  said: “we are still traumatised, some of couldn’t eat since yesterday (Tuesday) because of the condition we are seeing our people in the hospital. One of the injured victims died this morning and he has been buried .

    “We thank the state government. They were kind to our people in hospital. We were sleeping on the bare floor, but they’ve now provided us with beds and mattresses. “The Commissioner just left, she brought food to us. We are happy.

    “Prior to now, we had 66 injured persons in the hospital but the figure has gone up, seven additional victims were brought here yesterday. The seven persons were taken to the Army 1 Division medical facility.

    “Many other victims were not even found. Body parts were picked on nearby trees, roof tops.”

    innocent civilians should be the utmost priority of our armed forces, and any actions to the contrary must be met with swift and appropriate consequences.

    “We urge the relevant authorities to act swiftly and decisively to prevent the recurrence of such a heartbreaking incident and to ensure that justice is served,” he said. 

  • Prayers for victims, survivors of collapsed building

    Sympathisers yesterday gathered on the scene of the collapsed building to pray for the victims and survivors.

    The prayers were organised by the House of Prayers.

    Christian and Muslim clerics took turns to pray for the victims, survivors, and their family members.

    House of Prayers said accommodation and money would be provided for them.

    Pupils from other schools also came to sympathise with the survivors.

    The clerics urged the victim’s families, relatives and friends to take solace in God, saying God gives and takes.

    A minute’s silence was observed for the victims.

    A non-governmental organisation (NGO), the Civil Society Action Coalition on Education for All (CSACEFA), yesterday called on the Lagos State Government to admit pupils of Ohen Private Nursery and Primary School, Lagos Island, in public schools.

    The group said this after donating relief materials to the survivors.

    CSACEFA Acting Lagos Coordinator Mrs. Aderonke Kimemenihia-Eseka said the right to education for the children must not be truncated by safety inadequacy, “which has assaulted our moral sense and has sadly evoked deeper concerns about the role of safety in our educational system.”

    The group, therefore, enjoined the state government to make provision for affected children through the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) for immediate admission into public primary schools.

    This, Mrs Kimemenihia-Eseka said, would not make them miss the present school term.

    Read also: Drama as LASEMA, LASBCA disagree on collapsed building

    The government, she said, should establish more public primary schools to cater for the educational needs of children in communities where private schools appear to be thriving due to the distance of public schools.

    She called for more strict supervision and monitoring of safety guidelines by all schools across the state, especially private schools.

    “A quality assurance seal that must only be handed over to supervised and monitored schools after health and safety audits. We recommend this activity to take place annually. The government should extend the School-Based Management Committee (SBMC) model to cater to private schools and strengthening existing SBMCs in public primary schools,” she said.

  • Survivors recount lucky escape

    THE recent horrific accident in Iworoko-Ekiti, Irepodun/Ifelodun Local Government Area, Ekiti State, has thrown the community into deep mourning and sadness. Socio-economic activities in the university community have also been paralysed by the fallout of the fatal crash.

    And overwhelmed by the grief occasioned by the tragedy, Iworoko youths, after the accident, barricaded the dual carriageway that passes through the community to ventilate their anger towards the tragic loss of their loved ones.

    The accident, which occurred last Saturday night at about 8:45pm in the town’s market, claimed no less than 15 lives.

    Among the dead were students of the Ekiti State University (EKSU), a corps member, residents, traders in the market, a nursing mother and child.

    The ugly incident was allegedly caused by a sudden brake failure of an articulated vehicle fully loaded with customised bags of rice bearing the picture and name of a lawmaker representing Ondo Central at the National Assembly, Senator Tayo Alasoadura.

    The truck crashed through three shops and a small commercial bus known, locally known as “Akoto,” which was carrying some passengers, before ramming into a mini market at the centre of the town.

    One of the shops, a barbing saloon, was densely crowded with residents and students charging their cell phones inside and outside it.

    But for the ongoing industrial action by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), the casualty figure could have been higher because the market where the truck ran into, according to a source, used to be densely populated by EKSU students whenever the school is in session.

    Wailing profusely, a grandmother, Raliat Karimu, mourned the death of her relative, Funmi, who died with her son and granddaughter in the accident. She lived at a house located on 5, Layelu Street, behind the three shops destroyed by the truck.

    The bodies of the deceased were deposited at the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital (EKSUTH) morgue, while the survivors were receiving treatment at the same hospital.

    A worker in the hospital, who craved anonymity, confirmed that 12 bodies of those who lost their lives in the accident, including students of EKSU, have been deposited at the state morgue.

    He added that four injured victims of the accident are receiving treatment at the Accident and Emergency Unit of the hospital.

    Angry Iworoko youths, shortly after the crash, barricaded the dual carriageway that passes through the community and chased away a towing truck of the State Traffic Management Agency, saying that it had come too late to rescue the victims.

    Ekiti State Governor, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, commiserated with the people of Iworoko and families of the dead over the accident.

    The governor, who had earlier directed the Deputy Governor, Otunba Bisi Egbeyemi, to pay a condolence visit to the community on Sunday morning, said in a statement that he was saddened and disheartened by the news of the fatal  accident. Fayemi, who noted that many lives have been lost to the recklessness of many trailer drivers, said government might be compelled to re-introduce some old laws and previous arrangements to deal with the menace.

    He urged the community leaders and families of the victims of the accident to remain calm, even as “we collectively mourn the death of our beloved ones in the unfortunate incident.”

    The governor lamented: “This is a huge tragedy and a painful experience, not only for the families of the victims but for all of us.  We share with the people of Iworoko and families of the victims the pain and sorrow of the unfortunate development.

    “Government will also look at areas of support with a view to ameliorating the pains.”

    Deputy Governor, Egbeyemi, visited the hospital along Adebayo area of the state capital and assured the injured victims that their bills would be paid by the state government.

    Describing the accident as the most fatal in the last few years in the state, a sympattiser prayed that God “would grant the relations of the deceased the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss”.

    A leader of the Tipper Drivers Union in the state, Ganiu Tijani, stressed that the driver must have dozed off before ramming the ill-fated truck into the market.

    Tijani said: “I want to believe that the driver of the truck must have slept off before he rammed it into the market. If not, he would have been able to manoeuvre the truck, hit the culvert on the road and prevented this tragedy.

    “The fact that the vehicle jumped over the road and rammed into the market speaks volumes about the driver’s carelessness”.

    Barely six days after the ghastly accident in Iworoko, that claimed 15 lives, the monarch of the town, Oba Michael Oluwafemi Aladejana, also passed on.

    One of the prominent indigenes of the town, who craved anonymity, said the trailer accident had worsened the health situation of the monarch.

    “Our monarch was rushed to the hospital after the accident. Though, he had been having health issues before but that accident worsened things for him.

    Read also: Osun deputy governor rescues accident victims

    “When the news got to the town, he was said to have felt so devastated that his family had to rush him to the hospital early on Sunday.

    “The sickness improved on Monday before it relapsed on Tuesday, causing his untimely death”, the source said.

    Speaking with our reporter at the EKSUTH male ward, a survivor, Mr Owolabi Dotun, narrated his ordeal and attributed his survival to what he called the unquantifiable God’s mercy and favour.

    Dotun explained that he left his house with the intention of charging his phone due to power outage but only for him to smell death.

    He said: “On that day, there was no light on my phone, so I decided to charge it in one of my friends’ shops; the friend is a barber.

    “I had just plugged my phone when I heard a loud noise. So I went out to check what was happening; suddenly I saw the truck coming towards me.  The next thing I saw was my body lying under the truck.”

    A survivor, an eight-year-old girl, Egunlusi Wumi Titilayo, explained that she was at the Iworoko mini market with her grandmother and cousin, who died in the accident when the truck on motion swerved and rammed into the market.

    Titilayo added that while she was trying to escape from the scene, having seen her grandma and cousin die, she fell into a drainage where she had one of her legs broken.

    She said: “I was rescued from the scene by some unidentified sympathisers who took me to the hospital”.

    Another survivor, Akanni Amusa Omolayo, a security guard with Omodewa Nursery and Primary School, Iworoko, disclosed that the accident caught him unawares.

    “I was coming from the market side and heading towards Alaworoko’s palace when I heard a noise from the spot of the accident.

    “I couldn’t turn back to see was happening before I was hit by the truck. Glory be to Almighty God for sparing my life till this moment”, he said.

    The survivors’ relations lauded the state government, particularly Governor Fayemi, and the Iworoko community for the quick response and prompt intervention that reduced the casualty figure.

  • Free clinics for survivors of domestic violence 

    A Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) Voices4Sistahs (V4S) has proposed free health clinics for the rehabilitation of domestic abuse survivors.

    The project initiator, Abiola Dejo-Richards, is a UK-based Nigerian and single mother of three.

    She said the initiative was in response to her personal travails and triumphs.

    “As a woman in her 20s and 30s, I had no clue of who I was and I struggled with being me and expressing myself as a woman.

    “I did not know who I was before I contemplated relationship so I just followed who they wanted me to be.

    “I lost a lot of myself growing up in relationships. I suffered a lot of pain, fear, hurt and rejection and they were all bottled up.

    “I had no support system I could trust. I had no mentor, no sisterly friendship I could genuinely trust.

    “I was lost with my own thoughts and just learnt from experience and mistakes,” she recalled.

    The initiative, she explained, will run clinics across the nation with a small business funding scheme that will provide financial support to the small businesses owned by the members of the platform.

    The motto for voices4sistahs is ‘scars don’t make us, speak out’.

    The UK-based nurse said institutional and societal changes are necessary to overhaul women’s right in the nation.

    ”It will be a total transformation to undo the stinking thinking when it comes to the Institution of marriage, culture, religion and domestic violence. Charity begins at home.

    “Families need to stop selling out there daughters. A child you have brought and slaved on and spent a fortune is giving to marriage and allowed to suffer just to save face and afford stigma in the family.”

  • Free clinics for survivors of domestic violence

    A Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) Voices4Sistahs (V4S) has proposed free health clinics for the rehabilitation of domestic abuse survivors.

    The project initiator, Abiola Dejo-Richards, is a UK-based single mother of three.

    She said the initiative depicts her journey of personal travails and triumphs.

    “As a woman in her 20s and 30s, I had no clue of who I was and I struggled with being me and expressing myself as a woman.

    “I did not know who I was before I contemplated relationship so I just followed who they wanted me to be.

    “I lost a lot of myself growing up in relationships. I suffered a lot of pain, fear, hurt and rejection and they were all bottled up.

    “I had no support system I could trust. I had no mentor, no sisterly friendship I could genuinely trust.

    “I was lost with my own thoughts and just learnt from experience and mistakes,” she recalled.

    The initiative, she explained, will run clinics across the nation with a small business funding scheme that will provide financial support the small businesses owned by the members of the platform.

    The motto for voices4sistahs is ‘scars don’t make us, speak out’.

    The UK-based nurse said institutional and societal changes are necessary to overhaul women’s right in the nation.

    “It will be a total transformation to undo the stinking thinking when it comes to the Institution of marriage, culture, religion and domestic violence. Charity begins at home.

    “Families need to stop selling out their daughters. A child you have brought and slaved on and spent a fortune is giving to marriage and allowed to suffer just to save face and afford stigma in the family.”

  • The horror we saw, by survivors

    More survivors of the tanker explosion on the outskirt of Lagos on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway have spoken on their ordeals.

    In his post on a social media, Instablog, Kay Baba described the sight as devastating.

    Baba said he saw people burning near him.

    He said: “Thank God for life o! I just witnessed tanker explosion on Otedola Bridge. About 50 cars are in flames. I am still in shock. I saw the tanker exploded. The smell, the heat and cars ramming into the ditch while trying to escape. Lives have been lost to the raging fire.

    “Believe me! Pictures cannot do justice to what I saw – the tanker and the cars burning. The 14-seater and 18-seater busses I saw burning with some people inside. I am still trying to count the number of lives gone.”

    Another eyewitness, whose car got burnt in the explosion, said he saw a school bus with kids burning.

     

    “When I saw the tanker fell and fuel gushing out, I quickly took my phone and left. I told a man parked behind him to run out, but he refused,” he said.

     

  • Survivors on a Mission:  Two Frontline Advocates Leading  Fight Against Human Trafficking

    Survivors on a Mission: Two Frontline Advocates Leading Fight Against Human Trafficking

    Tina Frundt and Bukola Oriola are members of the U.S Advisory Council on Human Trafficking, a panel created following the enactment of the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act during the Barack Obama administration.  In separate encounters, both survivors who lead nonprofit organizations fighting labour and sex trafficking respectively, share insight about their works with HANNAH OJO.

    Tina Frundt, the champion for sex trafficked youth

     

    Tina Frundt

     

    Ms. Frundt is the founder and executive director of Courtney’s House, a nonprofit which provides direct services for domestic sex trafficked youth, ages 11 – 21 in the Washington D.C. metro area. A high profile national advocate on the issue of domestic sex trafficking and a survivor of commercial sexual exploitation of children (CSEC), she trains law enforcement and other non-profit groups to rescue and provide resources to victims.

    What is the child sex trafficking situation in the D.C region and how does Courtney’s House advocate for minority groups?

    Most of my populations are U.S citizens, 85 percent are African-Americans while 15 percent are Latinos. We are the only survival run, African American nonprofit in the DC, Maryland and Virginia area with a specific mission to serve survivors of sex trafficking.  We are able to provide programmes relative to their experience and culture. We are also able to form strong connections which allow us to provide space for survivors to feel safe. Not only are we changing the narrative that our young people can trust the police, we also provide parent support where parents are educated on the red flags for tragic sexual experience in children.

    Since child sex trafficking in the U.S happens across diverse groups, why focusing solely on youths who are U.S citizens?  

    There are 70 organizations that focus on some type of human trafficking in the D.C/ Virginia area. Courtney’s house is the only one African-American run, one survivor run that focuses on U.S. citizens and children including boys. Our referrals not only come from the police, the FBI but also parents, teachers and community members.  We get 7/8 referrals a week without us soliciting and it is also important to know that the age of victims of sex trafficking in the U.S is getting younger.

    Are there circumstances which make children more susceptible to sex trafficking in the U.S than other parts of the world?

    Organized crime is the same and all trafficking cases are the same in most part of the world. It’s the same way that traffickers recruit at airports in the U.S that they recruit at airports everywhere else in the world. It’s the same tactics.   I have done stuffs in Nigeria and Ghana and even on the street outreach, it’s really the same thing.  The same tactics of saying they want to help girls, they say the same thing here. The only difference is that here they work more with guns. It can also be another female recruiting girls to dance at a strip club or pimp control. It’s the same thing done in other countries.

    You have done some works in Nigeria and Ghana, what was your experience implementing survivors programmes in these two places?

    I don’t restrict my services to the U.S because I want everyone to know how to get through survivors and to help them with the services they need. I worked with a nonprofit in Ghana and other places to help them identify survivors in their countries. What I see here in the U.S is what I see in other countries and that is people not staying in their programmes. What I see in Africa now is that you have some organizations doing some amazing works, but they don’t even know how to connect, not even on the survival aspect. Sometimes survivors may be willing to get all the help, but they won’t be able to share information about their trafficking situations. I think that’s really important because everyone is having the same problem.

     

    Bukola Oriola; advocating for victims, empowering survivors

    Bukola Oriola

     

    Ms  Oriola, an ex-journalist with the Century Media Limited, publishers of the defunct New Age newspaper is a survivor of labour trafficking and domestic violence.  In 2013, she founded the Enitan Story, a non-profit organization which advocates for survivors of human trafficking and domestic violence. Also, an entrepreneur, she has published books on human trafficking and presently leads advocacy programmes in Minnesota and Nigeria.

     

    You just completed a term on the U.S Advisory Council on Human Trafficking, how did the position enhance your passion as an anti-trafficking activist?

    The U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking gave me a platform to influence federal government policies in a survivor-informed manner. It afforded me the opportunity to help the government see through the eyes of survivors when drafting or amending policies and programmes that affects victims and survivors of human trafficking within the United States and around the world. As you may already know, I am one of the 11 members of the Council. We published two annual reports that shed light on our findings with federal agencies and provided recommendations. I am very grateful that some of our recommendations from the first annual report are already being implemented. It ranged from engaging survivors in an empowering manner where they are paid as subject matter experts for their labor and expenses, to becoming more trauma-informed in the way that the government and its grantees provide services to victims and survivors of human trafficking.

    What role has The Enitan Story played in preventing human trafficking in the U.S?

    The Enitan Story’s mission is to advocate for victims and empower survivors of human trafficking and domestic violence. As a result, the organization has, and will continue to engage in in-depth community outreach both face-to-face and virtually to capture every audience possible to help them understand that anybody can be vulnerable, and that anyone can become a victim of human trafficking. That way, people are able to recognize the red flags and signs that could potentially lead them into becoming victims of human trafficking.

     The U.S government is targeting professionals such as health and aviation workers to detect and report cases of trafficking, is this a model that can be implemented in Nigeria?

    Yes. Health care providers are more than likely to come in contact with a potential or vulnerable victim of human trafficking within a community. Airport and airline staff on the other hand are also strategically positioned to come in contact with victims or potential victims that are being transported across borders of various countries. Training these sets of professionals could help in prevention or help victims have access to services in a timely manner.

     How can members of the media and the civic society advocate for human trafficking to be made a top priority in developing countries?

    As watch dogs in the community, members of the media can help the government understand the importance of making human trafficking advocacy a priority. Most especially, they can help the government understand the fact that prevention cost less by encouraging the government to provide funding to nonprofit organizations and NGOs for in-depth community outreach in a manner that is educational rather than creating fear. In addition, engaging survivors as subject matter experts, rather than just to share their tragic stories when rolling out such campaigns will be very effective in helping the public understand the dangers of becoming victims of human trafficking within or outside their own countries.

    Do you mind telling us about the project you are working on at the moment and how will this benefit Nigerians?

    The Enitan Story has just been awarded a federal OVC (Office for Victims of Crime) grant through the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) called the Safe Harbor Expansion Grant for Labor Trafficking to identify and serve labor trafficked youth in Minnesota. It is a two-year grant from January 2018 until January 2020. Minnesota is a diverse state in terms of ethnicity and there is a large population of Nigerians living in Minnesota. One way that this grant can benefit Nigerians is for Nigerians living in Minnesota to reach out to us in case they come in contact with any youth, who may be victims of labor trafficking. In addition, we launched Students Against Abuse and Slavery International (SAASI) shortly after my return from Nigeria on a human trafficking awareness tour to five higher institutions in 2015. The goal of SAASI is to engage the youth across various countries, including Nigeria to serve as community advocates. Interested students can fill out an application on our website, www.saasi.org.

     

     

     

  • Southern Kaduna killings: Survivors relive ordeal

    Southern Kaduna killings: Survivors relive ordeal

    Survivors of the latest crisis in Southern Kaduna have narrated their experience, saying over 146 persons were killed, 215 injured and 10,000 displaced. GBENGA OMOKHUNU reports 

    IT was an emotional atmosphere as some survivors of the latest crisis in Southern Kaduna relived their ordeal before the leadership of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in Abuja. Some were moved to tears.

    Herdsmen and crop farmers clashed, with over 146 people killed.

    President of CAN, Reverend Samson Ayokunle alongside other members of the association said government has failed in tackling the crisis.

    Ayokunle said, “We have Godogodo community in Southern Kaduna which is predominantly Christian  and the people from Gidanwaya community. For months they have been facing the danger of killing because the Fulani herdsmen have been attacking them from right, left and centre. Many of the people here can no longer stay in their communities where they are given birth to. Many of their brothers and sisters have been killed.

    “We are appealing to the government of the day; it is becoming unbearable. Shall we keep quite when they are killing our people? Every Nigerian has the right to be protected. We are appealing to the IGP and all the security agents, governor of Kaduna State, please do your work and let us see that it is not one-sided. Southern Kaduna is predominantly Christian. Why is it that this is the area targeted, is this not Boko Haram in another colour?

    Speaking on behalf of the nine victims, Rev. Chawaison Nathan, who is the CAN secretary in Godogodo Zone, said he witnessed the clash, adding that over 146 people were killed, 215 injured, 10,000 displaced, 319 houses burnt in 25 villages of Kaduna State.

    Nathan told newsmen that since May 26 last year when the crisis started, the governor only visited one village ones.

    He said, “The nine of us that are here are witnesses to what is happening. We narrowly escaped death as some of us participated in keeping peace in Kaduna.

    “The Godogodo and Gidanwaya clash between Fulani herdsmen and the farmers started on May 26, 2016. It started in the farm when one Angodongo went to his farm around 4 in the evening of the 26th and he was macheted by four Fulani boys, two from Nikte and the other two from Ninte/Gadafi. Angodongo was rushed to the General Hospital in Kafanchan and while he was in the hospital on that day his children and relatives in retaliation went into the Angolo of Ninte and burnt down his house and killed the Ango.

    “While we were trying our best to fish out that boy who did that, the police came to make arrests but while the security operatives were making arrests the Fulani came back on May 31, 2016 and burnt down the entire village. Ninte is a village that has a population of over 1000. It has two big churches, one is a baptist church and the other one is an ECWA church. All the churches have congregations of more than 500 worshippers. And everybody in Nikte earns his living from farming. Five persons were killed.

    “A week later Fulani from Gidanwaya, Atuku and Mailafia moved their cattle to the farmlands of Ninte people and were not grazing in the bush but were grazing on their farmlands. I took it upon myself to report the incident to the area commander but one of the Fulani men who were called to explain said they will not move their cattle.

    “They stayed in Ninte with their cattle for over one and half months. And while they were in Ninte 13 persons from Ninte were killed, a 70-year-old woman was raped. I was the one who took the woman to the hospital. We later signed a peace document on August 1, 2016 and after signing the document a couple was shot in the farm. All the attacks took place in the day. We saw who were attacking us and how our members were killed. They killed 7 of my members and we managed to bury 5. Nobody could go to their farms and 95 percent of the villagers are farmers and in my church I have only two civil servants of a population of over three hundred. Twenty five villages were affected in Godogodo kingdom.

    “319 houses were burnt down, 215 people injured, 50, 000 houses burnt in the 25 villages, over 146 were killed, 215 injured, 10, 000 people are displaced, 30, 000 hectares of farm lands destroyed.”

     

  • Survivors relive how Uyo church building collapsed

    Survivors relive how Uyo church building collapsed

    Some of the survivors of Saturday’s collapsed church building in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital, have recounted their ordeal, saying they escaped by the grace of God.

    Reigners Bible Church International’s building collapsed during a service, killing many worshippers and leaving several others wounded.

    Governor Udom Emmanuel was the special guest of honour at the special service to inaugurate a bishop. He was there with some of his commissioners and special advisers.

    Some of the victims of the disaster are receiving treatment at the University of Uyo Teaching Hospital (UUTH).

    One of the victims, Mr. Thompson Emmanuel, who hailed from Abak, said he could not understand why the building collapsed on the worshippers.

    Emmanuel, 32, is a Personal Assistant to the Special Adviser to Governor Udom Emmanuel on Bureau of Cooperative and Rural Development, Mr. Ekemini Umoh

    He said: “I may not actually know what caused the building to collapse on us. We were inside there and the governor was there. The building collapsed on us all. Many were trapped.

    “That is why I am here in the hospital. I can’t reach my boss now to know where he is because so many people were affected.”

    Another victim, Mrs. Victory Edet, 31, from Itu Local Government Area, said a friend invited her to the church for the ordination of Pastor Akan Weeks.

    Mrs Edet said: “Somebody invited me to the church; so when we got there, we sat down. A few minutes later the governor came.

    “We welcomed the governor. After the congregation finished welcoming the governor, they called the choir to render a song. It was not up to 10 minutes that the house just collapsed.”

    Mrs Edet, who was with her daughter Success, said she sat under the canopy with her baby before the building collapsed on them.

    She said: “Before we knew what was happening, everybody was running. I was sitting under the canopy with my baby in my hands when the building suddenly collapsed. The canopy fell on top of me and hit my baby and me.

    “The person that I came with collected the baby from me. I don’t know how I managed to escape from the scene. The only thing I can remember is that I saw myself outside. Somebody helped me and took me to the hospital. I collected somebody’s phone to call my husband.

    “When my husband came to see me in the hospital, I was not with my baby. Doctors asked my husband to check different hospitals where patients were taken to for my baby. So my baby was found in one of the hospitals. The name of the baby is Success Edet.”

    Miss Esther Akpan from Itu Local Government Area said it was after the congregation had sat down after greeting the governor that the building suddenly collapsed.

    Miss Akpan, 28, said she was in the company of her uncle’s children when the incident occurred.

    She said: “I am a student in Port Harcourt, Rivers State. I came with my uncle to the church because I am staying with him here. He is a member of Reigners Bible Church. My uncle’s name is Mr. George Akpan.

    “We were in the church. Everybody was singing. They said we should stand up to greet the governor. Everybody stood up and later they said we should sit down and we continued in singing praises.

    “Before we knew what was happening, the church building just collapsed. I wanted to run with some of the children. They are my uncle’s children. Two boys, I tried to escape with them; before I knew what was happening, my leg was trapped and I was crying and shouting for help. Nothing happened to the children.”

  • Survivors relieve experience

    The Chairman, Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), Ekiti State, Dr. John Akinbote has said lack of immediate proper medical attention was responsible for the death of six doctors, who died in auto crash Sunday night along Abuja-Kaduna express way.

    Akinbote, who spoke with reporters on his hospital bed at Saint Gerald’s Catholic Hospital, Kaduna, where seven other surviving doctors are receiving treatment.

    He said: “Those who died would have survived if we got good medical attention from the  point of the accident to the Doka General Hospital in Kaduna.

    “It became worse when we got to Doka Hospital, there was no doctor to attend to us and the only nurse on duty had no first aid facilities to administer treatment.

    “I am sure if the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) personnel who took us to Doka Hospital and the nurse on duty had medical facilities to give first aid treatment, our doctors and driver would not have died.”

    There were 13 doctors and a driver in the 18-seater vehicle.

    Another survivor, Dr. Stephen Ayosanmi, said a burst tyre caused the accident.

    It was gathered that the accident occured at the spot where former Minister of State for Labour and Productivity, James Ocholi died along with his wife and son.