Since the morning
of last Tuesday, the Ikate Elegushi New Settlement which is one of the
sprawling communities fast springing up along Lekki-Ajah Expressway has been
enveloped by grief and sorrow following the collapse of a five-story building under construction, by Lekki Gardens, which left many people dead in
the area.
According to
reports, the collapse took place few hours after a downpour. Initially, six people were confirmed dead on the spot but by the time the rescue operation ended by 7.20 pm on Thursday, the casualty figure had risen to 34. Most of the
dead persons were labourers hired to work at the site. They had turned the uncompleted building into their temporary abode owing to their inability to raise money to
rent houses within the Lekki- Ajah axis.
On Wednesday when
the tragedy site was visited, rescue operation was going on, even as
sympathizers and victims’ family members were wailing. Some were also praying
that their beloved ones should be miraculously saved.
As some dead
bodies were being evacuated from the building, people burst into tears again.
Several women were rolling on the floor, heaping curses on the developer handling the project.
One woman however,
remained inconsolable amid the tumult. As she wailed and cried, she uttered
repeatedly,“It is finished! my life
is ruined! I have lost all that I’ve laboured for. What am I waiting for
again?” She queried herself.
Speaking later
with Saturday Sun after some sympathizers and relations had calmed her down,
the woman who identified herself as Mrs Kemi Oduberu disclosed she lost her
only son Yinka to the disaster.
According to her,
27-year old Yinka, a bricklayer had resumed work with Lekki Gardens about six
months ago. As if she had premonition of his death, she had advised him to
resign from the construction outfit when she learnt that her son was being owed almost six months’ salary.
“It was as if I had premonition that something tragic would happen to
him. When I was told that he and some of his colleagues were being owed several
months salary arrears, I told him to resign and join me in Ijebu-Ode. He told
me they had promised to pay them on Tuesday, which was the same day he
alongside others died in the collapsed building. Had he come back last Monday which I insisted that he should, this tragedy would have been averted. God, why
me?” The distraught looking woman asked nobody in particular.
Sobbing
intermittently, the 51-year old widow who further revealed that she lost her
husband October last year said her son’s death had added to her sorrow.
“I pray that God will give me the strength to cope with this double
tragedy. How I will cope? I don’t know. Yinka’s father died in October last
year. When we lost his father, he was the one consoling me, promising to take
care of me. He promised to do a lot of things for me, but see where everything has ended. All is vanity. I’m tired of everything about this life,” she lamented.
On what the family
plans to do next, a relation of the widow, Aisha, chipped in that the main
concern of the family is how to retrieve Yinka’s corpse for burial.
“We were told that we will have to complete the relevant procedure and after that, we will take the corpse back to Ijebu-Ode for burial. God knows everything. It is God that knows everything, we can’t question him. But
it is sad that Yinka had to die this way. He would have been alive if they are
not being owed by their employers. I want Lagos State government to take action
on this tragedy, and ensure that those responsible for these avoidable deaths
don’t go scot-free,” she pleaded.
Aisha who added
that it would take a long time to erase the pains of Yinka’s death from the
family said:“Yinka was a quiet young
man, hard-working, energetic and full of life. It is sad and unbelievable that I have to describe him now in the past tense. How the mother will be able
to cope, only God knows.”
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