Another church collapse kills dozens of Nigerians

A church roof has collapsed in south-eastern Nigeria killing at least 60 people, with local media reporting the death toll to be much higher.

The evangelical Reigners Bible Ministry in Uyo, capital of Akwa Ibom state, was packed with worshippers when the roof collapsed on Saturday.

“It is a massive church and the local bishop was being ordained at the service, so there were thousands of people including top government officials there,” Al Jazeera’s Ahmed Idris, reporting from Abuja, said yesterday.

“Few minutes after the start of the service the roof started caving in and suddenly it collapsed, leaving several people dead.”

Bodies of at least 60 victims have been retrieved, according to a rescue official who spoke to the AP news agency on condition of anonymity.

But a hospital director says 160 people were killed.

Etete Peters of the University of Uyo Teaching Hospital said mortuaries are overflowing and the final death toll likely will be much higher. Youth leader Edikan Peters said many other victims are in private mortuaries scattered all over the city of Uyo.

Congregants said the Reigners Bible Church was still under construction when it was crowded with worshippers to ordain a bishop on Saturday. Metal girders crashed and the corrugated iron roof caved in.

The state government said it will investigate to see if building standards were compromised.

Governor Udom Emmanuel was reported to be inside when metal girders crashed onto worshippers and the corrugated iron roof caved in. He did not take any injuries in the incident.

“We have never had such a shocking incident in the history of our dear state,” Emmanuel said on his Facebook page.

The governor’s spokesman, Ekerete Udoh, said the state government will hold an inquiry to investigate if anyone compromised building standards. President Muhammadu Buhari expressed his condolences “over the many deaths and injury recorded following the incident,” presidential spokesman Garba Shehu said in a statement.

While the government insisted that 60 people had died, local media reported much higher death tolls, some 100, and some more than 160.

The state-run Nigerian News Agency said “between 50 and 200” people could have been killed, adding that a rescue operation was under way.

In September 2014, 115 people including three Zimbabweans and 84 South Africans, were killed in Lagos in the collapse of a church belonging to the famous televangelist TB Joshua.

“People are frustrated, this is one collapse too many,” said our correspondent.

“Since the collapse in 2014, we have already seen dozens of buildings collapse in various parts of Nigeria and this is because sometimes it takes a few hundred dollars for some officials to look the other way while contractors do whatever they please.”

— AFP

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