Mortuaries overflowed with bodies Sunday from a church collapse in southern Nigeria that killed at least 160 people, and worshipers said construction of the building had been rushed.
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Hundreds had been inside the Reigners Bible Church International in the city of Uyo on Saturday for the consecration of founder Akan Weeks as its bishop when the metal girders fell and the corrugated iron roof caved in.
Screaming survivors streamed out amid cries from the injured inside.
"There were trapped bodies, parts
of bodies, blood all over the place and people's handbags and shoes
scattered," said computer analyst Ukeme Eyibio.
Officials feared the death toll could rise.
Weeks and Akwa Ibom state Gov. Udom Emmanuel were among the survivors.
Eyibio had parked his car outside
the complex to make a phone call when he heard a deafening crash and
saw that the church had disappeared.
He and three others dragged 10
injured people from an overflow area for worshippers just outside the
collapsed church. They did not enter the main structure because a
construction worker warned it was not safe.
The worker called his boss at Julius Berger construction company, which sent a crane to help lift debris off bodies.
While they waited for the crane, Eyibio helped a man whose legs were trapped under a girder.
"I rushed to my car, got out the tire jack and used that to get the beam off his legs," the 27-year-old said by telephone.
"We managed to get him out, but
we saw others dying all around us," he added. "I'm so traumatized I
could not sleep last night for the horrors repeating themselves in my
mind."
Mortuaries in Uyo were
overwhelmed by the disaster, medical director Etete Peters of the
University of Uyo Teaching Hospital told The Associated Press.
Many of the dead were taken to
private mortuaries scattered across the city, said youth leader Edikan
Peters. Some people were taking the bodies of relatives to their homes
because of the overcrowding.
Peters said he counted 90 bodies
removed from the church before he was stold to stop his tally Saturday
night. Journalists also said that church officials sought to prevent
them from documenting the tragedy, trying to seize cameras and forcing
some to leave the area.
The church had been still under
construction and workers had been rushing to finish it in time for
Saturday's ceremony, congregants said. The governor's spokesman, Ekerete
Udoh, said the state government will investigate if any building
standards were compromised.
Buildings collapse often in
Nigeria because of endemic corruption, with contractors using
substandard materials and bribing inspectors to ignore shoddy work or a
lack of permits.
In 2014, 116 people died when a
multistory guesthouse of the Synagogue Church of All Nations collapsed
in Lagos, Nigeria's largest city. Most victims were visiting South
African followers of the megachurch's influential founder T.B. Joshua.
Two structural engineers, Joshua
and church trustees were accused of criminal negligence and involuntary
manslaughter after a coroner found the building collapsed from
structural failures caused by design and detailing errors. Efforts to
bring them to court have been foiled by repeated legal challenges.
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