An early morning fire
Thursday gutted the Lagos office and
warehouse of automobile giant, Coscharis Nigeria Limited, owned by business
mogul, Mr. Cosmas Maduka, at Kirikiri Industrial Estate, Lagos, razing goods
worth billions of naira. No life was however lost in the incident.
It was gathered that
investigators are currently battling to uncover the likely cause of the fire,
which started from an electrical spark that later evolved into balls of fire.
They also disclosed
that since the gutted warehouse was undergoing renovations after the sachet
water division was moved to the Alakija area, the new electrical connection in
the building might have caused the inferno.
It was gathered that
the fire started at about 4am and went unnoticed until about an hour later.
Fire fighters from the Lagos State Fire Service and the Nigerian Navy were
later contacted and they battled for over five hours to put out the fire.
However, the flames
were exacerbated by the contents of the warehouse, which was fully stocked with
goods such as tyres, spare parts, gas cylinders, computers, fuel, grease oil,
spray paints, inverter batteries,
lubricants, grease and additives, all said to be valued at billions of naira.
It was also gathered
that the absence of fire hydrant and enough water also proved a hindrance to
rescue operators in battling the flames.
To prevent hoodlums
from pilfering and vandalising some of the goods recovered from the fire, armed police
officers were deployed from the Kirikiri Police Station to safeguard the property and the premises of the company.
Some of the workers
said they could not recover many of the products because some storerooms in the
warehouse were locked up and so they had to wait for the fire service.
They lamented the
company lost billion naira worth of goods, having just restocked on Wednesday, adding that
over four containers of deep cycle inverter batteries were offloaded in the
warehouse.
Assistant Chief Fire
Officer, Lagos State, Mr. Paschal Ologungboye, said they received a distress
call at 6am and operators from the Sari Iganmu, Ijora and Isolo fire stations
were deployed to put out the fire.
He lamented that
despite the number of fire trucks from different stations, including their
headquarters, the lack of water within the premises hampered efforts to
minimise the damage.
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