Tragedy struck around 3.30pm in the
Alonge area of Owonroshoki, Lagos, as a Bristow helicopter carrying 10
passengers with two crew members on board, plunged into the lagoon.
It was learnt that four people were killed, while no fewer than six others sustained varying degrees of injury.
The aircraft crashed about five minutes to its scheduled landing time at the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos.
The helicopter, with registration number, 5N-BDG-760540, was coming from one of the oil rigs in the country.
It was learnt that many of the victims
were working for an oil service firm, which was doing a job for a
multinational oil company. The oil workers were coming back to Lagos
when the incident occurred. The identities of the victims had yet to be
known.
PUNCH Metro gathered that some fishermen, who were operating on the water at the time the incident happened, initiated the rescue mission.
Agencies, including the Accident
Investigation Bureau, Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, Lagos State
Emergency Management Agency, the Lagos State Fire Service, the police,
Nigerian Airspace Management Agency, and the National Emergency
Management Agency, were seen making efforts to recover the remaining two
persons in the water.
The two missing persons had yet to be recovered as of 8.30pm when our correspondent left the area.
A resident of Onabanjo Street, Joshua
Oladipupo, said he witnessed the moment the helicopter lost control and
plunged into the water.
He said, “This afternoon around 3pm, I
saw the chopper struggling to find a safe place to land. Suddenly, it
nose-dived and I didn’t see it again. I rushed down to the scene. I saw
two survivors swimming out of the lagoon.”
The Chairman of the boat operators group
in the area, Alhaji Rasaq Isiaq, said he directed his men to rescue the
victims immediately after the crash.
He said, “Initially, the aircraft wanted
to land on a two-storey building, but moved forward and crashed inside
the lagoon. I called my boys instantly and notified the DPO of the
station. We rescued six people alive while four were dead.”
Another eyewitness, Mrs. Funmilola Adebiyi said the security agents arrived in the area about 30 minutes after the incident.
The spokesperson for NEMA, Ibrahim
Farinloye, said, “The Accident Investigation Bureau will make proper
briefing about the incident and other issues after investigation. We
have asked the navy to help in the rescue operation.”
LASEMA General Manager, Mr. Michael
Akindele, said the identities of the victims would be confirmed as soon
as the manifest was received.
He said, “We are still awaiting the
manifest but we were told that 12 people were on board. The four corpses
had been taken to the Mainland Hospital Mortuary. As I speak to you,
rescue operations are still on.”
The General Manager, Public Affairs,
Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, Mr. Fan Ndubuoke, in a statement
confirmed that 12 persons were on board the ill-fated aircraft.
He stated that workers were on ground to rescue the victims.
The NCAA statement read in part, “A
Bristow helicopter with registration number, 5N – BDG – 760540, en route
from one of the nation’s oil rigs has crashed at Oworonshoki in Lagos
this evening.
“The helicopter scheduled to arrive Lagos
at 15.35pm had 12 people on board including the crew. However, the
number of casualties has yet to be determined.
“At present officials of the Accident
Investigation Bureau, National Emergency Management Agency and the
Nigeria Police are at the site providing rescue operation for the
victims.”
Bristow Helicopters Chief Pilot, Captain
Obinna Ojiako, told one of our correspondents on the telephone that the
company was still gathering information on the accident. He promised
that a statement would be issued, which had yet to be done as of press
time.
Officials from aviation agencies,
including the Accident Investigation Bureau and the NCAA, told one of
our correspondents that there were no indications that the pilot made a
distress call before plunging into the lagoon.
Sources said Bristow officials had called
aviation agencies to inform them that the aircraft they were expecting
to land had yet to do so.
The development, it was learnt, made the aviation agencies to trace the whereabouts of the helicopter.
Meanwhile, the spokesperson for the
Accident Investigation Bureau, Mr. Tunji Oketumbi, said a team of
investigators led by its Commissioner, Dr. Felix Abali, had been
dispatched to the site.
Oketunmbi said in a statement, “Investigation has commenced with AIB Commissioner, Dr. Felix Abali, leading the team.”
It is unclear what happened before the
chopper plunged into the lagoon, but pilots said engine issues were
usually the most common among the problems that could make a chopper to
crash.
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