The Lagos State Government has accepted 26 recommendations of the Toyin-Ayinde-led panel that investigated the collapse of a 21-storey building in the Ikoyi area of the state.
Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s administration also rejected two of the 28 recommendations of the panel.
The government, in a white paper, agreed with the recommendation of the panel that the existing two 15-storey buildings still standing at the site of the collapse on Gerrard Road in Ikoyi should be demolished and the land forfeited to the government, Punch reported.
The government also accepted the recommendation of the panel that the developer of the collapsed property, Fourscore Heights Limited, be prosecuted because of the loss of lives at the rubble.
The 21-storey building which was located on Gerrard Road in Ikoyi collapsed on November 1, 2021.
Still standing beside the collapsed high-rise are two uncompleted 15-storey buildings.
The collapsed 21-floor skyscraper trapped over 50 persons, including the firm’s Managing Director, Femi Osibona; his friend, a United States of America-based Nigerian businessman, Wale Bob-Oseni; his personal assistant, Oyinye Enekwe; clients and labourers.
About 44 persons were said to have died as a result of the incident, nine survivors were rescued from the rubble of the collapsed building, while some artisans working in the building before it collapsed are still missing.
Days after the ill-fated incident, while rescue operations were still ongoing, Governor Sanwo-Olu declared that he had set up a panel to investigate the collapse of the building.
On January 5, 2022, the Ayinde-led panel submitted its report to the governor at the Lagos House, Ikeja. The chairman of the panel said the panel spent approximately six weeks on the assignment and submitted the report as well as electronic recordings of all the sections and videos of proceedings in a hard drive to the Lagos State Attorney-General, Moyosore Onigbanjo (SAN).
Ayinde said his panel visited the project site for a general assessment, coordinated the activities of the consultants who conducted tests on the site, received and reviewed documents from relevant ministries, departments and agencies and conducted 35 interviews.
He said the panel interrogated 91 persons, requested and received 21 memoranda and accessed the home of the late Osibona, with a view to gathering useful documents.
Upon the receipt of the panel’s report, Sanwo-Olu set up a four-man committee led by the Commissioner for Special Duties, Tayo Bamgbose-Martins, to produce a white paper on the panel’s recommendation.
The committee subsequently tendered its white paper which is the position of the state government on the collapsed building. While the government accepted 26 of the 28 recommendations of the panel, it rejected two.
Government to sue Osibona’s company, prosecute culpable govt officials
The tribunal’s recommendations partly read:
“The developer, having been negligent, should forfeit the project site to the LASG in accordance with Section 25(4) of the Revised LABSCA Regulation 2019.
“The developer, Fourscore Heights Limited, should be prosecuted in view of the lake of lives involved.
“Based on structural diagnostics survey report, annexed as Schedule 2 to this report, and in the interest of lives in the environment, the tribunal recommends that the existing 2 Nos. 15 storey buildings should be demolished using the controlled demolition technique in order to reduce the effect of the demolition on the surrounding buildings and avoid self and uncontrolled collapse.
“In addition, the tribunal also recommends the evacuation of all occupants within a 45m radius from the extreme boundaries of the blocks in the interest of public safety while arrangements are made for the controlled demolition.
“The various participants should face disciplinary action and prosecution as applicable.
“The civil public servants found culpable should face the civil service disciplinary panel and prosecution where applicable.
“There would be need to take a serious decision on what to do to those who use their political weight to harass and intimidate career civil servants who are merely discharging their statutory functions.”
In its comments, the state government agreed with all the recommendations stated above.
“Lagos State Government agrees with this recommendation and will forward to the Office of the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice to institute appropriate charges against Fourscore Heights Limited.
“Lagos State Government agrees with this recommendation and will forward to the relevant ministry, department or agency to take necessary steps provided by law to carry out the controlled demolition of the two remaining Blacks A and B in an effective and safe manner,” the white Paper read.
The government also agreed that the various participants should face disciplinary action and prosecution as applicable. The government said the attorney-general of Lagos will initiate the process of prosecution for all erring actors.
It, however, said the government officials that acted on the 2019 approval of the building will first be dealt with by the Personnel Management Board.
“The disciplinary process for civil servants has to first be done through Personnel Management Board in line with the public service rules. The disciplinary process is to be set up immediately and concluded within fourteen (14) days,” the white paper added.
Culpable government officials including three town planners and civil servants will be prosecuted for allegedly lying under oath, and for using a private consulting company to create a fake approval that the building was good to go.
Other recommendations of the panel welcomed by the government include that the Lagos State Building Control Agency (LASBCA) should be the only agency authorised to seal buildings found to short of standards and that all other monitoring agencies should go through the LASBCA to seal any project in the state.
Others are that the regulatory authority should be well-staffed, material testing laboratory should be adequately funded and equipped, the National Building Code for Nigeria should be domesticated and that the individuals and companies found wanting in the building collapse should be referred to their professional bodies including the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria.
The panel also recommended the creation of a committee comprising public and private sector to approve buildings above four floors but the government rejected the recommendation, saying instead of four floors, it should be from six floors.
The panel also said a government official should be sanctioned for overbearing attitude but the government discarded that recommendation, saying allegation was not clear.