Fire razes goods worth millions of naira in Alaba market

fire m

Goods worth millions of naira were Thursday, burnt as the electronics section of the Alaba International Market, Ojo, Lagos State, was gutted by fire.

The inferno which started around 6a.m, was said to have started after power was restored in the area.

During the incident, a resident was said to have called officials of the Lagos State Fire Service, FRSC, to the scene.

It was learnt that firefighters from the Ojo and Sari Iganmu fire stations responded with 10,000 litres of water each.

An FRSC official, speaking with The Punch, said, “The fire would have spread to other shops in the market, but for our prompt intervention. The fire was only able to affect nine shops where they sell electronic products.

“We gathered that the fire started after power was restored to the area, so it is possible that one of the traders forgot to switch off an electrical appliance before going home the previous night.”

In a similar development, an octogenarian, Michael Olabode, was killed in a midnight inferno which affected a bungalow in the Ikorodu area of the state.

In the Ikorodu fire, according to reports, a passerby was the first to notice thick smokes billowing out of the building.

It was learnt that a lady and three men, including the deceased, were in the house.

A source said, “They didn’t know what was happening until the passerby raised the alarm that the house was on fire. The men tried to save the old man, but when they saw that they were also getting trapped in the building, they had to let go and save themselves.

“The man was burnt to death. It is possible that the fire was caused by a lit candle because there was no electricity when the incident happened.”

The corpse of the victim was said to have been deposited in a morgue in Ikorodu by policemen from the Ikorodu division.

The Director of Lagos State Fire Service, Rasak Fadipe, who confirmed the two incidents, decried the level of carelessness of residents.

He said the agency had responded to 64 fire calls from January 1 to 6, adding that fuel stored in residential buildings usually make their job difficult.