Mac Maharaj, Spokesperson
of the South African government, one of the African National Congress grandees
and a close ally and friend of former president Nelson Mandela.
|
As
many as 300 South Africans were visiting a Pentecostal church in Nigeria last
week when a building in the compound collapsed, killing more than 60 people,
and an unknown number are still unaccounted for, the government said on
Wednesday, Reuters reports.
President
Jacob Zuma said at least 67 South Africans died in Friday's accident at the
Synagogue Church of All Nations in Lagos and described it as one of the worst
tragedies in South Africa's recent history.
The
collapse occurred when three extra stories were being added to the existing two
of a guest house of the church compound.
Led
by the charismatic "Prophet" T.B. Joshua, the Pentacostal church
attracts a global following of Christians who believe Joshua is able to perform
miracles including curing the ill and raising the dead from the grave.
Zuma's
tally conflicted with that of the Nigerian emergency services who late on
Tuesday put the overall death toll at 62. There was no immediate explanation
for the discrepancy.
Members
of the church had at first prevented emergency officials from participating in
the rescue, making it difficult to establish a toll for the injured and dead,
originally estimated at 41. State rescuers were allowed in on Saturday.
Pretoria
described the search and rescue operation as "very fluid" but
defended the credibility of its count of 67 dead, saying it was based on
records and information on the ground from five tour groups that had arranged
for South African worshippers to go to Lagos.
"This
number is based on credible information," foreign ministry spokesman
Clayson Monyela said.
Late
on Tuesday Zuma told the SABC national broadcaster that an unknown number of
South Africans were "not yet accounted for" and that the nation
needed to "grieve together."
Spokesman
Mac Maharaj later said the government believed around 300 South Africans from
four to five groups were visiting the church on Friday but it was not clear how
many were on the spot when the tragedy struck.
"It's
a very popular church with South Africans," Maharaj said.
The regular influx of
visitors from abroad for the church's services, which can last up to a week,
creates demand for accommodation that the church's own guest house has been
unable to meet, and often spills over into local hotels.
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