Scores of oil thieves were yesterday feared to have been burnt to death,
while scooping fuel at a site of vandalised pipeline in Ije-Ododo, near
Ijegun in Iba Local Council Development Area of Lagos, when an NNPC oil
pipeline exploded. A witness said the raging fire started when about 30
oil thieves loaded in two canoes arrived the scene and started scooping
fuel into hundreds of 50 kilogramme jerry cans.
Daily Sun learnt
that luck ran out on them, when a mysterious fire started and engulfed
the environment, including the thieves, their jerry cans and other
materials. The fire raged for several hours, as fire fighters stayed
away from the scene of the inferno. Some men of the Nigeria Security and
Civil Defence Corps, (NSCDC) and NNPC officials were at the scene to
assess the situation.
The NSCDC officer who simply identified
himself as Mr. Baiye said: “You can see that the fire is still raging.
We can’t go far to examine the damaged pipeline or know the number of
people killed because the pipeline is buried under water.” Residents of
Ije-Ododo who spoke in separate interviews alleged that the suspected
oil thieves who vandalised the pipeline conspired with the police in
their nefarious activities. Confirming the incident, the Information
Officer, National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, for South West,
Ibrahim Farinloye said NEMA was informed about the incident.
He
said both state and federal firefighters were at the scene of the
inferno but could not do much because it required a technical way to
handle. However, residents of the community blamed the authority of the
NNPC for the explosion. According to them, such explosion had become an
annual ritual. They questioned the motive behind the withdrawal of
security men guarding the pipeline facilities in Oke Agemo axis of the
area.
According to the traditional ruler of the community, Alhaji
Chief Tajudeen Suberu Ododo, the inability of firefighters to put off
the fire was because of the inaccessible road to the scene. A
resident, who identified himself as Isiaka Bello Ajadi told Daily Sun
that: “The fire started around 10:00p.m on Monday night and it was very
serious that many people started running away from the scene.” “Since
1996, we have been writing and appealing to NNPC to sandfill that road
and links us with Abule Ado but they have refused to answer us. See what
has happened now.”
Meanwhile many residents of the community
have since Monday night been relocating from the scene of the incident
for fear of escalation of the inferno, even as Fire Service men,
National Emergency Management Authority (NEMA) and Lagos State Emergency
Management Authority (LASEMA) officials are still battling to put out
the fire.
http://sunnewsonline.com/new/cover/scores-of-oil-thieves-feared-killed-in-lagos-pipeline-fire/
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