Saturday, September 20, 2014

TB Joshua Lagos church collapse: MDC's Greenwich Ndanga killed

A rescue workers at the site of a collapsed building at the Synagogue Church of All Nations in the Ikotun-Egbe neighbourhood of Nigeria's commercial capital Lagos, 17 September 2014 
 The official death toll is 80 but rescue teams are still looking for bodies
A Zimbabwean opposition politician is among at least 80 people who died when a church hostel in the Nigerian city of Lagos collapsed a week ago.
Greenwich Ndanga was the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) provincial chairman for Mashonaland West.
Most of the victims were South Africans who were staying in the multi-storey guesthouse belonging to the church of popular TV evangelist TB Joshua.
The authorities say it it had more floors than its foundation could hold.

Khathuatshelo Ramovha recounts being trapped in the hostel for 13 hours
More than 130 people survived, including one South African woman who was pulled from the rubble on Monday - three days after the building collapsed.
Mr Ndanga's death was confirmed by his family and party officials on Thursday.
MDC spokesman Douglas Mwonzora said he was a pastor and had gone to Nigeria on church business, Zimbabwe's state-run Herald newspaper reports.
A supporter of the Movement for Democratic Change's Morgan Tsvangirai holds his portrait as they attend a campaign rally in Harare - July 2013  
Morgan Tsvangirai has visited TB Joshua
According to the private Zimbabwean paper Newsday, several other Zimbabweans were visiting the Synagogue, Church of All Nations (SCOAN) at the time and escaped unhurt.
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai, a rival of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, is a known follower of Mr Joshua, who is a founder of the the SCOAN church ministry and referred to as the "prophet".
On Wednesday, South Africa's president said 67 South Africans had died in the collapse.
A rescue team from South Africa is now in Nigeria trying to help locate missing South Africans.

TB Joshua
TB Joshua attending to a follower
  • Founded Synagogue, Church of All Nations in the 1990s
  • Runs Christian television station Emmanuel TV
  • The ministry professes to heal all manner of illnesses
  • Controversially this includes HIV/Aids
  • Known as the "Prophet" by his followers
  • Tours Africa, the US, the UK and South America
Profile: Nigerian preacher TB Joshua
In pictures: TB Joshua's ministry in 2005

The Nigerian Emergency Management Agency (Nema) says its emergency workers were at first prevented from participating in the rescue.
Nema spokesman Ibrahim Farinloye told the Associated Press news agency that despite arriving on the scene just over an hour after the collapse at 13.50 local time (12.50) on Friday, they were not given full access to the site until 17:00 on Sunday.
Such accusations have been denied by the church.
Earlier, Mr Joshua said a small plane had been circling over the building before it collapsed, and suggested it was an attempt on his life.
BBC NEWS

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