Following
the collapse of the six-storey building At the premises of the Synagogue Church
for All Nations (SCOAN), the founder and spiritual leader of the Church,
Prophet TB Joshua is under immense pressures from members of the public, those
affected directly by the incident and the Lagos State Government due to failure
to assist search and rescue efforts at the site.
It
was revealed earlier by the Commissioner of Planning & Urban Development in
Lagos Toyin Ayinde that before the building project was embarked upon by the
church, they did not submit the plans for the new wings to the Ministry for
Approval.
He
stated that “the investigation will look at Joshua’s claim of low-flying
aircraft and that Initial indications were that the building came down
because extra floors were being added without strengthening the foundations and
samples would be taken from the site” he added.
Despite
the seriousness of the situation, Prophet TB Joshua and members of his staff
failed to act in manners that would suit the situation instead opting to blame
the collapse of the building on the sightings of a “strange aircraft” that
appeared over 3 times before the collapse or the explanation that the building
collapse was a s a result of a deadly attack on the person of the Man of God by
members of the Boko Haram sect
Some
67 South Africans died when a hostel for Joshua’s foreign followers collapsed
last Friday, President Jacob Zuma said in Pretoria on Tuesday, with fears that
the toll could rise further.
Rescue
workers complained that the Church had refused to help in their efforts to
rescue people trapped inside the building who may still be alive. Although the
National Emergency Management Authority stated that the current search for
bodies could end today Wednesday 17th September.
The
South West Region Spokesman for the Agency told News men that “The church is
not co-operating with emergency workers at all,” after disclosing the
latest toll as 67 with 131 survivors.
“For
the first three days of the incident, the church people were very hostile and
prevented rescue officials’ access to the site.
“It
was after the visit of the (Lagos state) governor (Babatunde Fashola) when he
threatened to close down the church that we were allowed to work.
“Perhaps
if we had had early access to the place we would have been able to save more
lives.”
But
there was increasing anger on social media that he should not be above the law.
The
preacher has not publicly commented on the deaths and instead tried to shift
suspicion on to Boko Haram militants and a low-flying plane seen over the
building before the collapse.
Since
Friday he has only posted a series of Bible verses on his Facebook page and
Twitter account. On Tuesday night, he tweeted: “Hard times may test me, they
cannot destroy me.”


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