Lying
in the rubble of the guest house, only able to tell if it was night or
day through a tiny crack, Lindiwe Ndwandwe heard the screams of others
beneath the debris slowly turn silent.
For five days, the 33-year-old was
trapped inside a toilet next to the dining hall of the collapsed
Synagogue Church of All Nations, breathing only through a small hole in
the wreckage.
In the end, she was forced to drink her own urine to survive.
“It’s like a dream to me that really, it’s me that came out from here,
” the South African told AFP on Saturday as she surveyed the remains of the church in the Nigerian city of Lagos.
“I don’t believe it. The tears that I cry, it’s because I don’t believe,” she added.
A total of 86 people were killed and
dozens more left trapped when the guest house attached to the church run
by Nigerian preacher, T.B. Joshua, collapsed on September 12.
Some 350 South Africans were thought to
be visiting the church in the Ikotun neighborhood of the megacity of
Lagos when the three-storey building came down during construction work.
Joshua, one of Nigeria’s best-known
evangelical preachers referred to by followers across the world as “The
Prophet” or “The Man of God”, on Sunday pledged to go to South Africa to
meet survivors and their families.
He observed a minute of silence at his
weekly morning service, and said he would “be travelling to South Africa
to meet people from South Africa and other nations… in memory of
martyrs of faith”.
S’Africa opposition party calls for lawsuit
South Africa’s largest opposition party
yesterday said it will push the government to launch a class action
against the church, where 84 of its nationals lost their lives.
Democratic Alliance shadow foreign
minister, Stevens Mokgalapa, said the fact that rescue workers
complained that staff at the church had impeded their work in the
immediate aftermath of the disaster meant there could be cause for legal
action.
“The DA believes that there is now
enough evidence for the South African government to, at the very least,
explore the possibility of a class action suit against the church on
behalf of the affected families,” Mokgalapa said in a statement.
“It stands to reason that the church and
its members may be criminally liable for the death of a number of South
Africans who could have been rescued from the rubble if rescue work was
speedily permitted.”
PUNCH
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