TRAGEDY: Bystanders gather next to the ruins of a school that collapsed in Jos, Nigeria, as heavy machinery is seen at work on the site. Photo: MUHAMMAD TANKO SHITTU /AFP
TRAGEDY: Bystanders gather next to the ruins of a school that collapsed in Jos, Nigeria, as heavy machinery is seen at work on the site. Photo: MUHAMMAD TANKO SHITTU /AFP

Children killed in Nigerian school collapse

Chris Ewokor
Twenty-two children have died and at least 132 have been injured after a school building collapsed in Nigeria’s central Plateau state, local officials said.

Saint Academy in the state capital Jos caved in while students were in class on Friday morning. Children were left trapped under the debris.

Volunteers used excavators, hammers and their bare hands to break through the piles of concrete and twisted iron rods to reach many of those trapped. Police told reporters that at least 22 children had died in the collapse, with many more receiving treatment in local hospitals.

The school is believed to have more than 1 000 learners.

Local resident Abel Fuandai told the BBC that his friend's son had been killed and said "the scale of the tragedy is frightening".

The state government said an investigation is underway and cited the school's "weak structure and unsafe location near a riverbank", advising other schools "with structural concerns" to close immediately.

It also advised hospitals in Jos to prioritise treating the injured, "regardless of documentation or payment".

Devastated

Residents said the collapse came after three days of heavy rains in Plateau.

Speaking from hospital, injured student Wulliya Ibrahim told AFP: "I entered the class not more than five minutes when I heard a sound, and the next thing is I found myself here. We are many in the class, we are writing our exams".

Resident Chika Obioha said he had seen a number of dead bodies and that dozens of people had been rescued. "Everyone is helping out to see if we can rescue more people," he said.

"Devastated by the tragic loss of young lives at Saint Academy," United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef) Nigeria representative Cristian Munduate wrote on X.

"Children full of dreams were writing exams when the school building collapsed. Deepest condolences to families affected."

There have been several major building collapses in Nigeria in recent years, with observers blaming a mix of bad workmanship, poor quality materials and corruption.

In 2021, at least 45 people were killed when a high-rise building under construction collapsed in a wealthy Lagos neighbourhood.

- BBC News

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Namibian Sun 2024-11-24

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