Email

Africa: Seven killed in Nigeria stampede at recruitment drive

Applicants scale a fence during a recruitment drive for the Nigeria Immigration Service in Abuja March 15, 2014. A stampede occurred during the drive when 20,000 applicants forced their way into the stadium resulting in injuries for several candidates, local media reported. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde (NIGERIA - Tags: EMPLOYMENT)

(Reuters) – Seven people have been killed in a stampede at Nigeria’s national stadium during a recruitment drive for the immigration service, officials and witnesses said on Sunday.

Applicants scale a fence during a recruitment drive for the Nigeria Immigration Service in Abuja March 15, 2014. A stampede occurred during the drive when 20,000 applicants forced their way into the stadium resulting in injuries for several candidates, local media reported. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde (NIGERIA – Tags: EMPLOYMENT)

The stampede late on Saturday shows the desperation for jobs in Africa’s second biggest economy and most populous nation, where oil wealth has enriched elites and grown the economy by more than 6 percent a year but has failed to create employment.

Officials said only one entrance to the 60,000 capacity stadium was open during the aptitude test for applicants to join the immigration service.

Reuters counted seven bodies at the National Hospital where the dead and injured were taken.

Tayo Haastrup, spokesman of the hospital, said there were several injured in a critical but stable condition.

We are shocked and deeply saddened by the news of the untimely death of the young citizens who were at the exercise not only to secure jobs but to be allowed the opportunity to contribute towards the development of the nation, said Olisa Metuh, spokesman of Nigeria’s ruling People’s Democratic Party.

(Reporting by Camillus Eboh; Writing by Tim Cocks; Editing by Alison Williams)

Related posts

UK Conservative Party picks Kemi Badenoch as its new leader in wake of election defeat

US election: what a Trump victory would mean for the rest of the world

US-Africa relations under Biden: a mismatch between talk and action