A former Lagos State Commissioner for Physical Planning and
Urban Development, Mr. Olutoyin Ayinde, on Tuesday told an Ikeja High Court
that the auditorium of the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN) does not
have a valid building permit.
Ayinde, who is the second prosecution witness in the trial
made this revelation before Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo while being led in
evidence by Mrs. Idowu Alakija, the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) in the
ongoing trial of Trustees of SCOAN and the two engineers involved in the
construction of the collapsed guesthouse, which led to the death of 116
persons, mostly South Africans on September 12, 2014.
The SCOAN Trustees, the two engineers, Messrs Oladele
Ogundeji and Akinbela Fatiregun and their companies, Hardrock Construction and
Engineering Company and Jandy Trust Limited were last month arraigned before
Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo on 111-count charge for their involvement in the
collapsed building.
The 111-count charges preferred against the defendants by the
Lagos State Government borders on criminal negligence, manslaughter and failure
to obtain building permit.
Ayinde told the court that when the court collapsed on that
Friday, he got in touch with the District Officer of the Lagos State Physical
Planning Permit Authority (LASPPPA) to confirm if the Synagogue Church had any
building approval in the system.
“The Electronic Document Management System was searched and
the only building approval for the church did not cover the site of the collapse
building.
“The document, a five-storey building approval was meant for
the church auditorium but as at the time of the collapse, the church auditorium
had gone from five floors to eight floors.
“By the ministry’s definition, the approval the church had
for the auditorium is no longer valid and there was no application for approval
registered for the collapsed building.
“The Building Control Agency pasted their sticker on the
auditorium which had surpassed the approved five-storey but there was no need for
sanctions on the other building because it had already collapsed, Ayinde said.”
Ayinde, a consultant urban planner and a fellow of the
Institute of Town Planners Registration Council of Nigeria explained his role
during his tenure as a commissioner during the administration of the former
Lagos State governor Mr. Babatunde Fashola.
“As a commissioner, I occupied a supervisory role over the
Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development and it’s three agencies.
“The three agencies are; the Lagos State Physical Planning
Permit Authority (LASPPPA), Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA) and
the Lagos State Urban Renewal Agency (LASURA), he noted.”
The former commissioner said a building approval enabled
owners of buildings to be adequately compensated when road construction or
compulsory acquisition by the government takes place.
Ayinde told the court that on visiting the site of the
collapse, there were too many first responders at the scene.
“I visited the site two days after the collapse as I was
attending a retreat outside Lagos when the incident occurred.
“With me were the General Managers of LASPPPA and LASBCA as
well as the Commander of the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) as an advanced team to
receive Fashola.
“The first thing we noticed were there were too many first
responders, many of whom were church members whom we ordered out of the site
because they were clogging the responsibilities of the rescuers.
“I gave a directive that the rescue work should stop at
ground zero to enable the material testing laboratory to conduct tests on the
foundation and columns on the debris”, he said.
Justice Lawal-Akapo however the matter till June 22 for
continuation of trial.
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