Families
of victims of last Sunday’s Dana flight 992 crash have rejected a Lagos
State proposal to give the victims a joint burial.
The state had reportedly said that if
the families agreed to a joint burial in a dedicated cemetery, the
families would be allowed to exhume the corpses if they wished to
identify them further.
One of the victims’ relative, John
Akande, told our correspondent that the families rejected the option of a
joint burial because of the stress it would bring.
“The process of exhuming the bodies
could be tedious, which is why we rejected it. The government committee
and our own committee will meet to sort things out so that we can all
have the remains of our members on time,” Akande said.
Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola,
who addressed journalists after a four-hour meeting with the families on
Sunday, said they (famlies) agreed to be patient, while government
identified the victims before their release for burial.
He said, “The families agreed with the process we adopted. They agreed to wait while we identify the bodies.
“We subsequently set up a relationship
team (committee) to be made up of people from government and some
members of the families. The committee will coordinate information
between government and families and manage the release of the bodies.”
The families would meet at the mortuary of Lagos State University Teaching Hospital on Monday (today).
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