Tb joshua church collapse
Trial of contractors in Nigeria collapse to resume
The guest house belonging to the Synagogue Church of all Nations collapse on 12 September 2014 killing 116 people.
Officials blamed the death on a stampede, describing the incident as unpleasant and avoidable.
The legal tussle between TB Joshua and the Lagos state government has suffered a major setback.
Joshua is expected in court over the church collapse where 116 people were killed, most of them South African.
The Nigerian pastor says those affected by the collapse must ‘set themselves free’ from the tragedy.
Saturday marked exactly a year since the tragedy and a total of 116 people died most of them South Africans.
Survivors, families and church goers gathered at the Gallagher convention Center in Midrand to hold a remembrance ceremony for those who lost their lives in the collapse one year ago..
Young and old have gathered in Midrand singing and praying for those who lost their loved ones in the tragedy.
The church says TB Joshua still wants to visit SA, but for security reasons he won’t be able to attend.
Survivors and families of those who died will gather in Midrand to observe the one year anniversary.
116 people were killed when a guest house at the Synagogue Church of All Nations in Lagos collapsed.
Lindiwe Ndwandwe who survived for 5 days under the rubble after a guesthouse collapsed at TB Joshua's church in Nigeria says God saved her so she could bring life into this world.
Lindiwe Ndwandwe says the scars on her body suggest the guesthouse was bombed.
Last year 116 people died when a guest house belonging to the church caved in.
A High Court dismissed the church’s application to stop the inquest into the Lagos collapse.
The family of one of the South Africans killed in the collapse has questioned the DNA test.
It was a sombre atmosphere at the Waterkloof Airforce Base as the final bodies of 11 South Africans who died in Nigeria were finally repatriated after a lengthy identification process.
The church also confirmed the Pentecostal, self-proclaimed prophet will fund the trip.
Consultant Bisi Adedire said he warned the church they were ignoring regulations.