TB Joshua fails to appear at Lagos building collapse inquest
Prophet T. B Joshua has again failed to appear at the
coroner’s inquest today to explain how 116 people died
in a building collapse at his Lagos church, Synagogue
Church of All Nations (SCOAN).
TB Joshua-Synagogue Church
TB Joshua had been summoned to give evidence at the
hearing into the September 12 tragedy at his church,
which left 84 South Africans among the dead.
Coroner Oyetade Komolafe said last week that Joshua,
would be arrested if he failed to show but Joshua worker
did not appear on Wednesday to be questioned over his
claims that sabotage from a low-flying aircraft and a
terror attack may have caused the tragedy.
“The Man of God has not been personally served the
witness summons,” his lawyer, Olalekan Ojo told the
court when asked about his client’s whereabouts.
“He was unavoidably absent when the sheriff went for the
service. We don’t want the impression to be created that
The Prophet is avoiding the court.”
Expert witnesses at the hearing have previously ruled out
the theory of aerial sabotage or an explosion and the
court has been told that the guesthouse did not have any
planning permission.
Inspections indicated that other structures on the site,
including the church’s main auditorium which Joshua
claims was designed by the Holy Spirit, were structurally
defective.
Ojo refused to accept the witness summons on behalf of
Joshua, saying he was not authorised to do so, but
promised to tell the court when his client would be
available.
Similarly, the building contractors did not receive their
summonses because they could not be identified or
located, he added.
Komolafe said: “We want Prophet Joshua to know that
the court is not persecuting anybody but (trying) to find
the truth. He should come.
“As a prophet of God that he claims to be, he must not do
anything that will make him to be at variance with the
law.”
- Rescuers attacked -
Earlier, the inquest was told that Joshua’s followers
attacked emergency service workers, preventing them
from accessing the stricken guesthouse.
“The first three days (after the collapse) were marred by
the so-called church sympathisers and the crowd,” said
the head of the Lagos State Emergency Management
Agency, Femi Oke-Osanyintolu.
“By the time we attained momentum after 96 hours a lot
of things had gone bad.”
Osanyintolu told the hearing that it was only after the
intervention of the Lagos State governor that rescue
workers could get to the building on the sprawling
SCOAN compound.
The LASEMA general manager said there was “no effective
crowd control” in the aftermath of the collapse, which
engineers have blamed on the illegal addition of extra
floors to the guesthouse.
“The crowd impeded our operation. They did not allow
our personnel and equipment to come in. They
frustrated the emergency workers at the scene,” he
added.
Instead of allowing trained rescue workers with specialist
equipment to search for survivors, only church
members and volunteers were allowed to pick through
the rubble, he said.
“There were restrictions of emergency responders to the
scene of the collapse. On the first day, we were assaulted,
especially my humble self,” he continued.
“We were not allowed to do documentation.
Photographs of the incident were not allowed.
“We asked for the manifest to know the number and
identities of the people in the building, we were not
given. We asked for the building plan, we were not given.”
Osanyintolu, a medical doctor, also rejected the theory
of a blast: “On observation, bodies were not mutilated.
They were not disjointed… the bodies were not burned.”
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