Pastor and
televangelist TB Joshua on Monday again failed to appear at a coroner’s inquest
into a building collapse at his Lagos church which killed 116 people, including
81 South Africans.
TB Joshua had been called to give evidence at
the hearing but his lawyer, Lateef Fagbemi, asked for him to be excused because
of a pending high court application.
Lawyers for Joshua,
who has claimed the collapse may have been sabotage, are attempting to stop the
inquest, arguing that the coroner has exceeded his powers to call him as a
witness.
The high court
hearing will be held next Monday, the inquest was told.
Coroner Oyetade
Komolafe accepted Joshua’s absence pending the high court session.
“Let your client go
to the high court and come back,” he told Fagbemi.
TB Joshua suggests
sabotage over deadly building collapse
Joshua was summonsed
twice to appear at the inquest before the application to stay proceedings was
made.
The engineer of the
collapsed building was in court but said he could not give evidence because he
was ill. Komolafe warned him that he faced jail if he did not appear on Friday.
Expert witnesses have
told the hearing that there was no sign of an explosion or sabotage of the
building, which housed foreign followers of Joshua’s Synagogue Church of All
Nations (SCOAN).
The Lagos state
government has said the building did not have planning permission and that an
inspection had found that other structures on the sprawling SCOAN site were
shoddily built.
On Joshua’s theory of
aerial sabotage from a low-flying plane, Rafiq Arogunjo, of the Nigerian
Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), said the aircraft seen over the building was
on a training mission.
The Nigerian Air
Force C-130 aircraft, flying at 1,100 feet (335 metres), was operating “normally
in line with aviation rules” on the day of the tragedy, September 12, he said.
NAMA officials
reviewed security camera footage of the plane released by church officials and
said the aircraft banked left on four occasions without flying directly over
the building.
Air traffic control
at the nearby Lagos international airport directed the pilot to divert to allow
four incoming flights to land, he added.
The inquest was
adjourned until Wednesday.
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