Nigeria team working on locating missing south africans
Nigeria collapse: Bodies of SA victims return home
The bodies of 74 of the 85 South Africans killed in the building collapse were repatriated from Lagos.
TB Joshua's people maintain that evil forces were behind "the controlled demolition of the building."
SA says it’s unclear what the delay is and hopes to get answers while in Nigeria.
The siblings, aged 18 months and two-years-old, were among the 25 survivors who returned home this morning.
A total of 26 South Africans survived the collapse at a guesthouse run by charismatic preacher TB Joshua.
Govt says its focus is to help survivors and identify and repatriate the bodies of those killed.
A family has described to EWN the direct impact of the Lagos collapse on four children, who are now orphans.
There's been little communication between the church and the families of the building collapse.
SA's High Commissioner to Nigeria told EWN that the death toll in Lagos has risen to 84.
Seventeen South Africans are still unaccounted for following Friday's collapse.
The preacher has been accused of trying to bribe an entire television crew.
The initial reason provided by government is that the bodies are in a bad state.
High Commissioner to Nigeria Louis Mnguni discusses the amount of people unaccounted for in the Nigerian building collapse.
SA's High Commissioner in Nigeria says there are 265 SA survivors with 29 still in hospital.
At least 17 bodies were recovered from the rubble on Wednesday bringing the total death toll to 80.
The ‘prophet’ Joshua’s church has hit back at allegations it’s refused to cooperate with authorities.
Dirco says a South African rescue team made up of 10 experts has been deployed to Nigeria.
20 South Africans are being treated in Nigerian hospitals in the wake of the fatal building collapse.
Emergency workers and journalists were allegedly not allowed near the scene when they arrived.