It
all began like a joke. A reporter came into the newsroom around 7 p.m
saying he could smell a cable burning inside the building. The security
guards ran inside and tried to locate where the smell was coming from.
They scoured the two upper floors and found nothing.
Electricity supply to the two floors was cut off. But the burning smell continued.
Thirty minutes after, a glow was sighted by the window of the third floor from the outside.
It was then it became clear what was happening. It was fire ravaging the floor.
There was stampede as shards of glass started flying out of the
windows and frantic steps marched upstairs, to deal with the fire.
It was an impossible mission. The office door was locked. But the
staff were undeterred as the door, after much effort was smashed open.
But what greeted the staff was not what they bargained for. It was
not a small fire, it was a smoldering one with great intensity and its
surging force pushed the small party back on a hasty retreat.
This was not a fire that could be put off by pails of water. As it
ravaged the floor, it needed the attention of the professionals.
There was stampede all over the premises as staff picked one item or
the other and made for the ground floor, awaiting the firemen.
Management, editors and staff of TheNEWS, and its sister publication,
P.M. NEWS will never forget Wednesday, 21 November, 2012. Infact,
majority of them are yet to recover from the shock which resulted from
the fire which razed the third floor of its corporate headquarters on 27
Acme Road, Agidingbi, Lagos, Southwest Nigeria.
The Group Senior Editor, Babajide Kolade-Otitoju, Production Editor,
Mr. Akin Obasa, Deputy Editor, Lanre Babalola and others were trapped at
the back of the building and had to scale the fence to escape to the
nearby building.
“When we could not escape through the front of the building because
of flying glass, we had to scale the fence and jump into the next
building beside us,” recalled Tunde Adekeye, Assistant Production
Editor.
Everyone in the building finally got evacuated at exactly 8.10p.m.
Also giving an account of the incident, Kolade-Otitoju, speculated
that the fire could have resulted from power surge from one of the
offices on the third floor.
“One of the cables started burning as a result of power surge and at
that time, it was very minimal,” he said. According to him, the staff
continued to work oblivious of the fact that the building was on fire.
“It was when I came out and saw that the fire was serious that we ran
back into the newsroom and asked the people to leave and within
minutes, the fire had spread and had become fierce.
“The floor is like one big hall partitioned into small offices and
the stuff used to partition the offices were combustible. This aided the
spread of the fire.
“Within 30 minutes, half of that third floor had been razed,” he
noted, adding that they all started calling the office of the fire
service, friends and concerned Nigerians to come to their aid.
‘‘We put pressure on the fire fighters because we have seen entire
buildings razed completely as a result of poor response from the fire
service. We didn’t want our case to be like that.”
He commended the fire fighters saying they came with three vehicles
in quick succession and this gave the staff assurance that the fire
would be defeated.
Deputy Editor, Mr. Lanre Babalola, however described the response of
the fire fighters as disappointing, saying “if they had arrived early,
the fire would not have spread beyond just one office on the third
floor. But I commend them for their fighting spirit because when they
finally came, they put in their best and succeeded in preventing the
fire from spreading to other floors. They displayed professionalism, but
they need to improve on their response time to fire incidents,” he
said.
The Administration Manager, Mr. Rafiu Salau, said the loss cannot be
quantified now, but noted that the third floor would have to be rebuilt.
He said as at the time he was called, the damage had been done. “At
the time I came, it was beyond anybody, but the firemen really did a
good job, even though they did not get to this place early enough,” he
said.
By the time the fire was put off, everything on the floor, books,
documents, office equipment, the ceiling, the roof were all gone, eaten
up by the remorseless fire.
By Henry Ojelu, Eromosele Ebhomele & Bayo Adetu
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