An Assistant Commissioner of Police, Mr Alaba Haruna, told a Lagos High Court yesterday that an aircraft flew over Synagogue Church of All Nations building at Ikotun-Egbe, a Lagos suburb, just before it collapsed on Sept. 12, 2014, killing 116 people.
He said one of his patrol teams observed an aircraft flying low over the church and other buildings in the premises.
Haruna testified before Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo of an Igbosere High Court on Lagos Island as a defence witness in the trial of the registered trustees of the church and four others. The church opened its defence in a one-count charge of building without approval brought against it by the Lagos State Directorate of Public Prosecutions (DPP) following the dismissal of its no-case submission on March 8, 2016. The other defendants are the two engineers who built the building: Messrs Oladele Ogundeji and Akinbela Fatiregun, and their companies, Hardrock Construction and Engineering Company and Jandy Trust Ltd. Apart from the trustees’ one-count charge, the other defendants are facing a 110-count bordering on involuntary manslaughter.
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) report that Haruna, Area
Commander of the Eastern Ports Command, Port Harcourt, Rivers, was the
Divisional Police Officer at Ikotun-Egbe at the time the building collapsed. He
was led in evidence by the trustees counsel, Mr Oluseye Diyan. Haruna said: “On
that fateful day on Sept.12, 2014 at 12.30 p.m., there was a radio
communication from the police control room at Ikeja that they were receiving
calls from the public of an aircraft flying at low altitude over the church. “I
was directed by the Area Command to confirm the incident and monitor the
aircraft’s activities. “I wanted to go out and direct my men to watch out for
the aircraft when I received another report of an airplane flying at a very low
altitude. I went outside but I couldn’t see it, by that time it had gone. “I received
a call later from Insp. Lucky Ugbaja, stationed at the church that one of the
church’s buildings had collapsed.”
According to him, the radio room had earlier
radioed the Police Airport Command to confirm whether it was carrying out any
activity in the church vicinity. Haruna said when he arrived at the church’s
premises there was a large crowd and the few policemen there were trying to
manage the situation. He said onlookers kept trooping in and the crowd spilled
to the roads outside the church, causing serious gridlock. “We were
overwhelmed,” Haruna told the judge, adding that he called for more policemen
and were provided. According to him, the floors of the collapsed building were
lying one on the other, ” the church members and others at the scene were
engaged in rescue operations. “Those I met there were church worshipers; they
were bringing out so many people from under the rubble. Most of the victims
were alive. Some were injured, some were not. “Later the Red Cross, Life
Savers, National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Lagos State Emergency
Management Agency (LASEMA) arrived and joined us in the rescue.” He said the
rescue mission lasted about seven days.
During cross-examination by the
prosecutor, Dr Babajide Martins, Haruna insisted that he could not recall any
instance when LASEMA officials or the then Commissioner for Physical Planning,
Mr Toyin Ayinde, were prevented by the church members from gaining access to
the site of the collapsed building. He said:“Apart from the LASEMA GM who said
he had a herculean task passing through the crowd, no other had problems
passing through. When Martins asked him why he concluded that the rescuers were
church members or worshipers, Haruna said: “Commonsense suggests that they
were.” Following the prosecution’s application for an adjournment, Justice
Lawal-Akapo adjourned further proceedings until June 28.
NAN
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