The fire at Balogun Market was suspected to have been caused by power surge. It was said to have started in one of the shops at 4a.m. The affected buildings are three three-storey buildings, two five-storey buildings and a four-storey building.
Though no life was lost,
Vanguard gathered that about seven private guards sustained minor injuries in
the ensuing stampede.
The fire, which reportedly
started from one of the five-storey buildings, spread to five others before
help could come.
The raging fire was said to
have been fuelled by some of wares, such as clothes, electronics, rubber and
shoes stored in the buildings, which also served as warehouses.
At 2p.m., fire fighters
were still battling to contain the situation. At a point, an exhausted fire
service official was seen shouting desperately on the phone, calling for
support from private firms.
One of the private firms
that arrived the scenes was Julius Berger Construction Company and other banks
in the area. The National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA; Lagos State
Emergency Management Agency, LASEMA; the Police; Nigeria Security and Civil
Defence Corps, NCSDC; Lagos State Building Control Agency, LASBCA; Nigeria Red
Cross Society and Lagos Island Community leaders also assisted in fighting the
inferno.
Over 15 tankers were
brought to the scene.
The fire at Igando, said to
have rendered about 20 families homeless, was said to have started from a dump
site behind Igando General Hospital on Sunday, before spreading to residential
buildings.
The Director, Lagos State
Fire Service, Mr. Rasaq Fadipe, said fire trucks from Sari Iganmu, Isolo,
Ilupeju and Alausa, were on ground to salvage the situation. The incident,
according to him, was the 15th distress call attended to between Sunday and
yesterday.
While fire fighters were
battling to contain the situation at Balogun Market, affected traders were
wailing. One of the pitiable sights was that of a man, who said that a
container of shoes worth over N35 million, was only offloaded on Saturday.
The trader, Mr. Ogbonna, was
seen rolling on the ground, saying part of the money was borrowed.
Another woman, Mrs
Gbadamosi, an attendant in one of the shops, said that her employer had goods
worth N27 billion in his containers.
She said: “We have not
finished offloading the goods from the containers. We left on Sunday with the
hope of continuing this morning (yesterday). I arrived here at 5a.m., only to
meet the whole place on fire.
“We tried all we could to
salvage some of the goods in the containers, but there were only few hands.
Even when we managed to take them somewhere else, the fire spread there and
destroyed them.”
Some of the affected
traders only just returned from their respective home towns, where they spent
the Christmas and New Year break, only to be faced with the disaster.

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