The government of the Republic of South Africa, yesterday,
took back home 66 embalmed bodies of victims of the September 12 Synagogue
Church of All Nations, SCOAN, building collapse.
The identified bodies, which had been under the care of the
Lagos State government at the mortuaries of the Mainland Hospital, Yaba, and
Isolo General Hospital, Isolo, were part of the 80 victims from Nigeria and
neighbouring countries who lost their lives in the incident that is undergoing
a coroner’s inquest.
As early as 4am, an entourage of South African government
officials, medical and health workers, military and plain clothes security
personnel, among others, began takingpossession of the bodies at the Mainland
Hospital morgue and Isolo General Hospital, from a special medical team set up
by the Lagos government.
It was gathered that the high-powered entourage, estimated
to number over 100, touched down shortly before midnight at the Murtala
Muhammed International Airport, Lagos in a South African Airways passenger
aircraft.
Soon thereafter, a South African Airways cargo plane landed
at the airport, bearing a comprehensive shipment of incident response equipment
that included four state-of- the-art refrigerated mass disaster, four pick-up
vans, waste disposal trucks, collapsible air-conditioned tents, refuse bins,
trolleys, body bags, generators, Personnel Protective Equipment, PPEs, etc.
The morgue of the Mainland Hospital around 7am yesterday was
a beehive of activities as not less than 50 members of the South African
retrieval team were on ground.
The approach to the morgue was under heavy guard by a
detachment of the Lagos State security Outfit, OP MESA ,who checked
unauthorised entry into the premises even as no less than 10 South African men
and women, dressed in military fatigues, were seen keeping watch as health
officials dressed in PPEs loaded the corpses wrapped in sealed and labelled
body bags, one after the other, into the waiting refrigerated mass disaster
trucks.
The manual loading of the bodies, arranged in rows inside
the specially designed trucks, each with capacity to hold 23 bodies,
took over 10 hours, as the personnel who worked in teams, took scheduled rests
in between.
Solid wastes generated from the activity were packed in
tightly sealed bags and loaded into a refrigerated waste disposal truck for
onward transmission to South Africa, while two collapsible air-conditioned
tents, one for decontamination of the personnel, the other for their relaxation
were also set up on the premises.
Speaking on the incident, Lagos State Chief Pathologist,
Prof John Obafunwa, however, said it was in order and in no way suggestive of a
vote of no confidence on Nigeria by South Africa. Obafunwa, a professor of
forensic pathology, who supervised the handover of the identified bodies, told
Sunday Vanguard that there was likelihood that more bodies would be identified
in due course.
“We have been on ground since last night. My colleague, who
led the other team to the Isolo mortuary is also on ground. The success of this
exercise is due to combined efforts of the South African authorities with the
Lagos State government.
“The South African government decided to take this trouble
because it is at liberty to do so. To the best of my knowledge, the South
Africans have not complained of the way the rescue was handled. We have
been working together. If there are issues, I believe those involved in the
rescue will talk and the issue may come up at the inquest,” he pointed out.
Giving a rundown of the identification process, he recalled
that five families of the victims had earlier presented themselves at the state
government’s centre for collection of tissue samples for DNA identification.
It would be recalled that during his inaugural lecture on
disaster preparedness seven years ago, Obafunwa had recommended the need for
the procurement of similar refrigerated vans for mass disasters in the state,
saying it would have been in order if Nigeria could boast 10- 20 of such
vehicles.
Also speaking, the Chief Executive Officer, TOS Funerals,
Mrs Taiwo Ogunsola, praised Lagos State government for its prompt and sustained
response.
Ogunsola, whose outfit embalmed all the victims of the Synagogue collapsed building, however lamented challenges faced in the preservation of the bodies for the two-month period.
Ogunsola, whose outfit embalmed all the victims of the Synagogue collapsed building, however lamented challenges faced in the preservation of the bodies for the two-month period.
Meanwhile, a minister in the Presidency, Mr. Jeff Radebe,
who led the country’s repatriation delegation disclosed, at a press briefing in
Lagos, last night, that the process of identifying all the corpses from the
Synagogue building collapse had not ended.
He said: “Of the 85 South Africans, we have received 74
bodies from Lagos State government and would be flown to South Africa at 10:50
pm from the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, MMIA, to arrive at the
early hours of Sunday (today). This would be through a chartered plane.
“And on arrival at the airport, short ceremony would be
organised for the victims and the bodies would be handed over to their
relatives.
“The process of identifying all the 85 victims including the
three from Zimbabwe has not ended. He explained that those identified were
through DNA test, adding: “The test would be conducted to identify others who
died in the tragedy.”
The minister added: “Of the 26 persons who were injured and
repatriated to South Africa, 20 have been discharged after they have been
certified okay by our medical experts.”
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