(Source AP)
A massive fire tore through a waterfront slum in Nigeria's
megacity of Lagos on Tuesday, burning down dozens of shack workshops and
homes. When firefighters didn't turn up, locals tried in vain to stop
the blaze with buckets of water.
The fire hit along the dirty
shoreline of the Lagos Lagoon, an area full of sawmills that process
lumber floated into the city from hundreds of miles (kilometers) away.
Massive piles of sawdust and loose shavings fill the area. By Tuesday
afternoon, a thick plume of smoke rose from the mills over the city's
long Third Mainland Bridge, which links the metropolis to its islands.
Hours
later after the sunset set, the fire still raged in the neighborhood.
Silhouettes of residents could be seen, trying to toss water onto the
massive flames, which stood stories high. The rest of the neighborhood
remained in the dark, with little points of lights from flashlights
dancing across the blackness.
It was unclear if anyone was injured
in the inferno. Officials with Lagos state emergency services could not
be reached for comment into Tuesday night. There were no firefighters,
trucks or emergency equipment seen in the neighborhood, which can be
difficult to reach and dangerous for outsiders.
Emergency services
often lack equipment, manpower and competent staff in Nigeria, a nation
of more than 160 million people whose economy is fueled largely by
crude oil. Across Lagos, many areas lack water lines, meaning officials
often let fires burn themselves out rather than call in water tankers
that can take hours to reach the scene.
Tuesday's blaze was the
second major one in the city in recent weeks. On Dec. 26, a massive
explosion ripped through a warehouse full of fireworks in a crowded
neighborhood in Lagos Island, killing one person and injuring at least
15.
Fire remains a major threat in Nigeria, where many people
store gasoline and diesel in their homes to run generators for
electricity. As Tuesday's fire burned, some drivers pulled over to take
mobile phone images of the fire from the bridge. The only sirens heard
came from convoys of police and soldiers roaring by guarding the
nation's business and political elite.
___Jon Gambrell can be reached at www.twitter.com/jongambrellAP
When News Breaks Out, We Break In. Minute by Minute Report on Cameroon and Africa
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