A "mysterious"
aircraft videoed by security cameras as flying over Synagogue Church
guest house shortly before the structure collapsed killing many visitors
and worshippers in September, may have been a Nigerian Airforce jet, a
coroner’s court heard Thursday.
The founder of Synagogue Church, TB Joshua blamed the airplane for the
collapse of the building, and that the church was targeted by
terrorists.
While testifying at the ongoing coroner’s inquest into the circumstances
surrounding the collapse, Toyin Ayinde, the Lagos State Commissioner
for Physical Planning and Urban Development, disclosed that his ministry
enquired from the aviation authorities about the identity of the
aircraft.
Three days after the building collapse, Mr. Ayinde said officials from his ministry were sent to the church to check the coordinates of the site.
Afterwards, a copy of the coordinates and the CCTV footage of the incident was sent to the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, NCAA.
The ministry also attached a three point question that sought to know the identity of the aircraft seen in the video, its altitude, and its flight path coordinates.
“The NCAA
responded that there was a request by the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) that
they might conduct some rehearsals on that day,” said Mr. Ayinde.
The commissioner stated that their calculations determined that the NAF
aircrafts would be flying at altitudes of about 1,100 feet above sea
level – the equivalent of 109 floors above a building.
“We also discovered that the minimum distance the aircraft would be from
the building was about 137 metres, equivalent to one and half-length of
a standard football field,” said Mr. Ayinde.
In the CCTV footage released by the church after the incident, an
aircraft was seen flying over the building on the morning of September
12. On four occasions, an aircraft flew over the building, and minutes
later, the entire structure crumbled.
T.B Joshua had blamed the “strange plane hovering above the building” for the collapse.
According to Premium Times, at Thursday’s proceedings, the CCTV footage was replayed in court.
A still image of an aircraft flying close to the building, taken with a
mobile phone by a member of the church, was also displayed.
Mr. Ayinde said he could not tell if it was the same aircraft that flew
over the building four times. And the letter from NCAA did not
specifically identify the aircraft in the CCTV footage.
“I didn’t see a hovering of an aircraft, I saw aircraft but not
hovering. There is a uniform directional movement and it is
understandable because that area is close to the airport,” said Mr.
Ayinde, adding that the display in court was the second time he was
watching the footage.
“I cannot confirm that it is the same aircraft, it could be four
different aircrafts moving in the same pattern. I did not see that the
aircraft move remarkably close to the collapsed building.”
During cross examination by Olalekan Ojo, the church’s lawyer, Mr.
Ayinde said he could not tell if the aircraft was flying below the
estimated altitude.
Mr. Ojo said that residents of Ikotun, the area where the church is
situated, had lodged a complaint at their local police station about
aircrafts flying at “very low levels” before the September 12 incident.
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