Synagogue
Efforts are now
being escalated to ensure that the bodies of 11 people who died in the
Synagogue Church of All Nations building collapse are returned to South
Africa, that country’s Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa said in Pretoria
yesterday.
“We will intensify our efforts to ensure
that the bodies still in Nigeria are returned without delay,” he said
at a ceremony at the Waterkloof air force base, marking the arrival of
the bodies of 74 victims.
“President [Jacob] Zuma has made a
commitment that we need to make sure that we leave no stone unturned,
and that all 85 must be brought back home.
“But that is dependent on the Nigerian
authorities who are responsible for these DNA samples. We are going to
work with them to ensure that eventually, [the other victims]… are
brought back when it is humanly and scientifically possible,” Minister
in the South African Presidency, Jeff Radebe, said.
The sombre-looking families were glued to large television screens fixed near a stage.
The family members arrived in batches, and were ushered to chairs decorated in black cloth.
In the hangar, reporters were separated from the families by a rope.
Soldiers stood by with R5 rifles. Numerous paramedics were also in the room.
The SA Police Service brass band
delivered a rendition of the 1862 American civil war song “Battle Cry of
Freedom” written by American composer George Frederick Root.
Paramedics rushed towards some family
members who began to weep hysterically as director-general in the South
Africa Presidency Cassius Lubisi read out the names of the dead.
Only 74 of the expected 85 bodies of
victims were returned to South Africa – apparently due to DNA sampling
that still needed to be done by the Lagos State Government medical team.
It has been nearly two months wait for
the bodies of 81 South Africans, three Zimbabweans and one Congolese
national using South African travel papers, among the 116 people – who
died in the building, serving as a guest house within the church
premises in Ikotun on the outskirt of Lagos.
http://thenationonlineng.net/new/synagogue-bring-back-11-bodies-south-africa-demands/
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