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WSWS : News
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: Nigeria
Ammunition dump explodes in Lagos
By Trevor Johnson
1 February 2002
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Hundreds of people were killed in Nigeria late on Sunday January
27, after an ammunition dump in the centre of Lagos exploded.
Lagos is Nigerias largest city, with a population of 12
million, and the main commercial centre.
The explosion forced thousands of people to flee for their
lives. No official death toll has been released. Lagos daily
newspaper, the Vanguard, has estimated that more than 2,000
people were killed in the explosion, whilst state television cited
unnamed witnesses claiming that between 750 to 1,000 bodies had
been recovered in various parts of the city.
Some 4,000 were initially reported missing and local mortuaries
were full and hospitals overwhelmed by those injured in the blast.
Most recent reports indicate that more than 1,100 people are still
missing, mostly children aged under 11.
The ammunition was stored at Ikeja military base, situated
in a busy residential area and next to one of the citys
main transport interchanges. After it caught fire, shrapnel and
heavy artillery, including bombs, rained down on the streets and
tin roofs of the surrounding neighbourhood. Many buildings, including
the market and a nearby church, were destroyed and a hospital
and local school was damaged.
Scores of explosions sent fireballs over the city. Windows
were shattered up to six miles away. Panic broke out amongst the
inhabitants and tens of thousands ran to find safety. Many of
the dead are women and children, who drowned in the nearby Oke
Afa and Pako canals, as they attempted to get away from the inferno.
Due to the canals being partly blanketed with water hyacinths
and an electricity blackout at the time, it would have been easy
for the panicking crowds to mistake them for a safe haven, or
to underestimate their depth. Others may have been pushed into
the canals by the pressure of the crowd.
On Monday morning fishermen began the task of removing corpses
from the water. Soon a pile of bodies had built up alongside the
sides of the canals, with people desperately looking for missing
relatives.
No clear report has emerged of what caused the ammunition to
explode. Army spokesman Colonel Felix Chukwumah said the explosions
began when a fire spread to the depot. Reports have suggested
the fire started at a market near the depot, but Chukwumah said
it was too far away. Other reports cite a fire at a gas station
as the cause of the disaster.
The conditions at the ammunition dump considerably worsened
the scale of the disaster. The munitions, many of them highly
explosive and described as ageing, were kept under
tarpaulins, without any protection from accidents or the spread
of fire. No water or emergency equipment was available at the
dump, or at the military base alongside it, to douse the flames.
Anger has swept through the Nigerian population, directed at
both the army and the political authorities, for allowing such
weaponry to be stockpiled in the middle of a highly populated
city. Given the growing political instability in Nigeria, many
people initially thought that a military coup was taking place.
This was not an unreasonable assumption given that the many military
coups in Nigerias history have been organised from the Ikeja
base where elite troops are based.
Lagos State Governor, Senator Bola Tinubu, appeared on television
accompanied by Brigadier-General George Emdin, commanding officer
of the Ikeja garrison, attempting to restore calm. It is
a question of accident, not a military invasion, said Tinubu.
The general in command is here with me. Everyone should
be calm. You should stay at home. All speculation about military
changes of power is not correct.
Anger at the army was also provoked by their response once
the bombardment of the area had started. While military personnel
and a few houses and businesses in the immediate vicinity of the
ammunition dump were evacuated, a sprawling shantytown hit by
the explosion was all but ignored. Most of those killed are thought
to have originated from this area.
There is evidence that both military and political authorities
were well aware of the danger posed by the dump. According to
AFP, a member of the Army Wives Association had warned
about the arms dump when a small explosion took place a year ago.
The army wives had been complaining that it was dangerous,
but they did not do anything. They did not care, she said.
As official inquiries have been set up to investigate the causes
of the disaster, both the army and political leaders have attempted
to avoid responsibility. Emdin suggested that the lack of finance
from the government was the problem: It is our old armoury
where we keep heavy calibre bombs. It has been begging for repairs
for quite sometime, the higher authority is aware. Tinubu
suggested the problem was the expansion of the population, with
people moving to live in an area that was once a military encampment
far from the city centre.
See Also:
Nigeria: Unions call off general
strike against fuel price increases
[25 January 2002]
Cholera epidemic spreads
in Nigeria
[11 December 2001]
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