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WSWS : News
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: Nigeria
Nigerian factory fire kills 45 workers
By our correspondent
25 September 2002
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At least 45 workers lost their lives on the night of September
15 when a fire swept through a Nigerian plastics factoryWest
Africa Rubber Products Limitedin the Odoguny Industrial
Estate, Ikorodu, 40 kilometres north of Lagos. The fire gutted
the factory and the adjacent Super Engineering Limited, both of
which are owned by a conglomerate based in Shanghai and Hong Kong.
There has been much speculation about the number of workers
killed in the fire. The Nigerian Red Cross reported that seven
bodies were found by the police on the night of the fire and 37
more were retrieved the next morning.
According to Reuters, Nigerian newspapers put the death toll
at hundreds, saying that scores of night shift workers are still
missing.
The police have been unable to confirm the higher toll, but
both they and the Red Cross said they expected to find more bodies
as the wreckage was cleared. Eleven workers are receiving treatment
at Noah Hospital in Ikorodu. The Vanguard (Lagos) reported
that seven of them have severe burns and the other four have gunshot
wounds.
According to the BBC, the police are investigating reports
that the factory gates had been locked and the owners had opened
fire on crowds who rushed the complex during the blaze. The BBC
report says that police intervened after local residents invaded
the plant and attempted to lynch the owners, accusing them of
locking the staff in the factory and thus causing their deaths.
General Manager M. Lai denied that there was any policy of
locking doors. He admitted that security guards had fired guns,
but said they had fired into the air to scare away people who
were throwing stones and banging on the gates attempting to break
into the factorys residential area: They had iron
pipes and were arming themselves with whatever was on the ground.
Badly burned workers told an AFP news agency reporter that
they had found doors bolted when they tried to escape. Smoke
filled everywhere and it was difficult to see any escape route,
said 22-year-old Said Adesina, one of the injured workers being
treated in hospital. I had to descend the spiral staircase
to the ground floor. When I got down, the three entrance doors
were locked and I had to go back to look for another escape route,
he said. He told AFP that only three out of the 40 workers in
his section of the plant had survived.
Asukuo Umana, another survivor, said, I work at the refining
section. When I saw that the fire had covered the whole place
and the main gate was locked, I jumped down from upstairs and
ran towards the main gate (where rod is processed). The gate was
locked. A Chinese resident came from his house and helped
him to force the gate.
Anti-riot police drafted to the scene remained on guard until
September 18.
Four days after the tragedy work to remove the debris of the
factory under which other trapped victims might be hidden had
not yet begun. General Manager Li blamed bureaucratic complications,
saying different agencies of government came up with contradictory
directives on what was to be done before the exercise could commence.
Although various causes of the inferno have been suggested,
the actual cause has not yet been ascertained. A senior company
official cynically remarked to This Day that disgruntled
workers could have started the fire.
Feelings are running very high in the area. The Commissioner
of Police has implored members of the public to keep calm, saying
that there will be a full investigation into the cause of the
fire and how the workers were trapped inside the factories.
Dr Joe Okei Odumakin of the Campaign for Democracy said, This
unfortunate incident has raised a fundamental question about the
premium placed on human lives by the Nigerian government, which
could not ensure that maximum safety standards are complied with
in the workplace.
See Also:
Nigerian plane crashes in
city suburb
[7 May 2002]
Ammunition dump explodes in
Lagos
[1 February 2002]
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