A seven-day-old baby was killed, while
copies of West African Senior School Certificate Examination results
were burnt after fire broke out in the Makoko and Satellite Town areas
of Lagos State on Saturday.
PUNCH Metro learnt that the baby was burnt to death in Makoko after the fire started around 6pm.
It was gathered that a resident was cooking on a stove, but later left it unattended to.
A firefighter said, “We gathered that a woman was cooking food; she left the place and forgot it.
“The fire started from there and razed a lot of makeshift structures to the ground.
“In the confusion that greeted the
incident, the parents of the child left him inside the house. By the
time they remembered that he was in the house and tried to rescue him,
it was too late. The child had been burnt to death. He was supposed to
be named today (Sunday).
“Four fire trucks from the Lagos State
Fire Service responded to a distress call from the area and put out the
fire in the early hours of Sunday.”
In the second fire incident, our
correspondent learnt that an electric spark from a cable triggered the
fire, which damaged 32 flats.
PUNCH Metro learnt that the house used to be a school, known as Stepping Stone Comprehensive Girls College.
A firefighter, who was at the scene, said while a woman was injured, copies of burnt WASSCE results were found in the building.
He said, “The place used to be a school.
It was converted to 32 apartments. A woman was injured, while WASSCE
results of many former students were burnt. We cannot tell the number of
results, but they were many.
“Also, 11 gas cylinders were burnt, with
seven air conditioners. About 20 families were affected. It was the
state fire service that initially responded before the Federal Fire
Service was also called. The fire was put out around 12.25am on Sunday.”
The spokesperson for the National
Emergency Management Agency, South West Zone, Ibrahim Farinloye, said
the agency’s zonal Coordinator, Alhaji Suleiman Yakubu, advised the
owner of the complex to gather the mutilated certificates and report the
incident to WASSCE for issuance of Certified True Copies of the
affected certificates.
Farinloye, who said he could not explain
why the certificates were still in the building after the conversion of
the building to residential flats, said investigations were ongoing.
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