On Thursday, Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu inaugurated members of the investigative tribunal that would undertake a probe into the misbehavior that led to the collapse of a 21-story skyscraper building on Gerrard Road in Ikoyi on Monday.
The Governor also signed the instrument authorizing the panel’s composition and granting the tribunal the authority to summon anybody or any organization relevant to the probe.
The tribunal’s members, who were chosen from the private sector, took the oath during an occasion held in the LASWA Building in Falomo, Ikoyi.
Their assignment begins immediately, and they are anticipated to return in four weeks.
Mr. Toyin Ayinde, President of the Nigeria Institute of Town Planners (NITP), is the panel’s chairman, while Ekundayo Onajobi, a lawyer in a private law company, is the panel’s secretary.
Other panel members are a structural engineer, Dr. Akintilo Idris Adeleke; an architect, Yinka Ogundairo; representative of Institute of Builders, Mr. Godfrey O. Godfrey, and Mrs. Bunmi Ibrahim, a real estate lawyer.
The occasion of the tribunal’s inauguration was enveloped in melancholy; Sanwo-Olu was clearly depressed, describing the event as a “sad one” for Lagos.
The Governor stated that the public deserved to know what went wrong. He emphasized that the panel’s efforts would not bring back the lives lost, but it would help prevent similar tragedies in the future.
He said: “We are gathered here to perform a sad but necessary duty, which is the inauguration of a 6-member Panel of Enquiry into the collapse of the 21-storey building at Gerrard Road, Ikoyi, on Monday. It is a solemn moment for me personally, but this is an important assignment. Indeed, the generation coming after will not forgive us if we don’t do the right thing on this incident.
“The inauguration of this panel shows sincerely that the State Government is interested in unraveling and get to the root cause of what happened to the building, so that everyone concerned, including the Government, will learn from the very unfortunate incident. Lagosians and the world will be watching and waiting keenly, with the full expectation that the immediate and remote causes of this tragedy will be uncovered.”
Sanwo-Olu identified with distraught families of victims trapped under the collapsed structure, expressing the belief that the outcome of the investigation would assuage their pains and worries.
The oath taken by the tribunal members, the Governor said, empowers them with adequate privileges of Government powers to conduct independent investigation without fear, favour, interference and restrictions.
The Governor believed the tribunal members would bring their expertise and professionalism to bear in unraveling the infractions that brought down the building.
“What this tribunal will be doing over the course of the next few weeks will have important implications for building safety and for emergency response, not just in Lagos, but in the entire country. It will also go a long way towards ensuring that the families of the innocent victims of this avoidable tragedy experience some sort of closure and get justice,” Sanwo-Olu said.
Ayinde said Lagos was in its “dark period”, given the record of fatalities from the site of the building collapse.
He pledged on behalf of members to discharge the duty with all sense of responsibility and in line with ethics.
“We accept at our own liberty and with humility the important assignment the State has placed before us. We will go ahead with a sense of dedicated responsibility. This exercise can only make the expected difference if we all agree to place value on Nigerian life. As members, we promise to be guided by professional standards and hope that we will chart a new course that will guarantee the safety of lives of Nigeria citizens,” Ayinde said.

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