Tragedy struck on Sunday at  the Trinity
 Spare Parts Market in the Olodi Apapa area of Ajegunle, Lagos, as no 
fewer than 150 shops, including their materials, were consumed by an 
inferno.
 It was believed that the fire was 
caused by an electrical power surge  in one of the shops at a section of
 the plaza some minutes after 3pm.
Our correspondent gatherred that the 
infreno started from a shop on the ‘B’ line of the market few minutes 
after the Power Holding Company of Nigeria,  restored power to the 
shopping complex.
The Speed Well Plaza is estimated to accommodate no fewer than  200  shops,  mostly  spare parts traders.
A  resident of the area, who spoke on 
condition of anonymity, said,  “This whole incident started when PHCN 
restored power here around 1.00p.m.
“Not long after that, I saw a thick 
smoke coming from one of the shops on B line,though I didn’t know the 
fire was going to be this big and spread to other parts of the plaza.”
Some of the affected traders, who spoke to our correspondent amid sighing, expressed shock at the mid-Sunday fire.
They lamented the extent of the 
destruction, adding that for them to get back to business, the 
governmentr would need to assist them.
 A distressed trader,  Mr. Izuchukwu 
Agwu,  said, “I am finished. As you are seeing me here, I have lost 
everything I have to this fire incident.
“Unless something is done, I am heading 
back to the village and you know what it means – suicide. I sleep in my 
shop and I have no other business here.”
He added, “I was lucky not to have been 
in there when the fire started. Who knows, I might have been burnt. Now,
 what else do I have? I am heading back to the village tonight.”
Policemen from Trinity Police Station 
with other security personnel provided security at the plaza as fire 
fighters from the Lagos State Fire Service and those believed to be from
 Julius Berger Plc battled to put out the ragging inforeno.
The Director of the Lagos State Fire 
Service, Mr. Rasak Fadipe, explained that the fire was aggravated by the
 inflammable materials stored in most of the shops in the spare parts 
market





 
 
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