The Nigerian police in Lagos State have vowed to clampdown on sellers and users of fireworks across the state following series of explosions in Lagos Island yesterday in which one person was killed and 10 houses and 11 cars burnt.
Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO,
Ngozi Braide told P.M.NEWS yesterday
that the ban on fireworks usage during the yuletide has not been lifted and the
police would now begin enforcement of the ban.
Braide, who visited the scene of the
explosions on Lagos Island, Lagos, Southwest Nigeria on Wednesday, was shocked
by the magnitude of the damage.
“Using fireworks and bangers in Lagos State
is still banned. Investigation will commence on the importation of such
explosive materials. Are they supposed to store such explosives in a warehouse
in a residential area? Whenever Lagosians see such things henceforth, they
should call the attention of the police. In the past, these explosives
have been used by criminals to commit crime. It has been abused,” she said.
Governor Babatunde Fashola, who also
visited the scene yesterday, described the incident as a self-inflicted
tragedy.
We make rules, we break them. All of these
items are under one form of prohibition or the other and we have men and women
at our various entry and exit points. How did they get in? How did they enter?
Who shipped them in? Who imported them and who cleared them? Who approved them
to come in? Those are very serious issues. We must also ask ourselves: must we
do every business?” he asked.
The governor tasked the people to undertake
a lot of soul-searching and reflections on the choices they make. “Does the way
we do business benefit all of us or do we do business without consideration for
other people’s safety as long as we make money?” Fashola asked. He condemned the
“I don’t care if people die, I don’t care if properties are burnt” business
philosophy of many Nigerians. He lamented that in order for many Nigerians to
make quick profit, “lives and properties had been lost.”
Fashola maintained that everyone must be
involved in the soul-searching process, underscoring that it must not be about
the government alone. He added that the state government will continue to
expand capacities by equipping the Fire Service, equipping the emergency
services and setting up a safety commission.
Fashola disclosed that two weeks ago, the
Lagos State Fire Service responded to 22 fire distress calls, stressing that
such number could be reduced through self-caution, as the government could not
be in peoples’ homes to check who was storing fuel or explosives.
He said all citizens must now lead by
showing some commitment to their own safety, by giving a commitment that: “I
will keep petrol away from my house, I will keep explosives away from my house.
I will not make any illegal electrical connection. I will switch off all my
electrical appliances before I leave home.” He warned that if care is not
taken, it may get to a situation where if the present trend continues, the
state fire service would be overwhelmed.
Meanwhile, members the Lagos State House of
Assembly have called on security agencies to fish out those behind the
importation of the fireworks and mini-explosives that resulted in the tragic
incident at the Jankara area of Lagos Island on Wednesday.
The fireworks exploded, resulting in the
destruction of 10 houses, the warehouse, cars and other properties of
residents in the area.
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