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Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland

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Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Demmzy15(m): 12:26pm On Jul 17, 2017
Dangling from his 14th-floor window, Oluwaseun Talabi could hear people on the ground yelling up, urging him to climb back inside his apartment, No. 113, in the 24-story apartment building. A rope of knotted sheets hanging next to Oluwaseun didn’t reach the ground, more than 100 feet below.

“People were shouting, ‘Stay in your flat. They’re going to come and help. They’re going to come and help you,’” he says.

No, they’re not, Oluwaseun remembers thinking. “I wasn’t looking to die in there,” he told ABC News.

He survived, but at least 80 people died in the Grenfell Tower fire, and the death toll may rise. One month later, he’s still struggling to make sense of it all.

Survival mode

The fire, on June 14, had been burning for more than an hour by 2 a.m., and Oluwaseun was in “survival mode,” he says.

The Nigerian-born Oluwaseun, 30, looks strong and muscular, but he says he has lost a lot of weight since the blaze.

Hanging from the window ledge that morning, he asked his girlfriend, Rosemary, to hand him their 4-year-old daughter. He planned to climb down the sheets with the child in his arms. “But my daughter wasn’t having it,” he says, describing her as hysterical.

Flames had already shot up one side of the tower but were not yet visible from the family’s west-facing window. Investigators say a faulty refrigerator started the fire on the fourth floor before it spread to the top floor and, by about 2 a.m., began moving rapidly toward the west side of the building.

Just 15 minutes before Oluwaseun climbed out his window, a fire brigade arrived at apartment 113, not offering an escape route but ushering in five neighbors.

“‘Listen, your flat seems to be the safest flat at the moment,’” Oluwaseun says one of the firefighters told him. “‘We’ll be back,’ they said.”

“The Syrian refugees, they brought them into my flat,” Oluwaseun says, referring to brothers Mohammad and Omar Alhajali. “They brought an Irish guy, called Dennis ... Zainab, her 2-year-old son,” Oluweseun says, counting on his hand. “So there was eight of us altogether.”

Only four of them would escape apartment 113 alive during the chaos of the next two hours.

Grenfell Tower apartment 113

With his crying daughter still inside, Oluwaseun struggled to hoist himself back through the window; he wasn’t going down alone.

“Guess who helped me up? One of the guys that is dead,” Oluwaseun says, spitting out the word “dead.” “The Syrian guy and his brother pulled me back in because I couldn’t pull myself back in.”

One of the brothers, Mohammad, didn’t survive, and Oluwaseun slows his vivid narration of the night to note that Mohammad’s last act on earth, perhaps, was saving his life.

“The Syrian guy didn’t deserve to die,” Oluwaseun says. “I’m here, I could’ve died. I don’t deserve it.”

Mohammad, 23, lived with Omar, 25, and their best friend from Deraa, Syria, Mahmoud Alkarad, 25, next door in apartment 112.

Mahmoud happened to be out for the night, 10 minutes down the road when the fire started.

“I saw Mohammad. He was at the window,” Mahmoud, who arrived outside shortly after 1 a.m., says. He called Mohammad’s phone. “I said to him, ‘Where are you?’ ... ‘Just raise your hand’” so Mahmoud could identify him.

That was the last time Mahmoud ever saw Mohammad, raising his hand at the window. Mahmoud spent the next two hours desperately running from fireman to emergency responder, begging everyone to rescue the eight people in apartment 113.

At 2 a.m., Oluwaseun says, everyone in apartment 113 was still alive. But the next 90 minutes played out as an incomprehensible, chaotic human tragedy.

“It was like they brought them in my flat to die,” he says.

Oluwaseun remembers Zainab on the phone with her brother, her young son sitting next to his daughter on their bed at one point. He remembers Dennis’ face so blackened that Rosemary hadn’t recognized him. And he remembers one of the Syrian brothers calmly reading the Quran on the bed.

Mostly, Oluwaseun remembers his fierce tunnel vision as he tied sheets together and Rosemary’s calm. Sometime after 3 a.m., he says, he tied his daughter onto his back and prepared to climb out the window again. This time, Rosemary was going too.

“This might sound selfish, but God forgive, I hope it’s not selfish ... but I was thinking about me first, my partner and my daughter — and everybody else after.”

Before he climbed back out the window, the fire brigade yelled “Run” through the black smoke. Why at that moment and not earlier, Oluwaseun is not sure.

“I grabbed my missus by her hand, my daughter tied to my back already, and I didn’t look back. I don’t know who followed us,” he says. “I don’t know who stayed in the building. We just ran.”

At some point during those 90 minutes, Mahmoud received a phone call from Mohammad, still in apartment 113.

“‘I can’t find Omar,’ he says ... What do you mean you can’t find Omar? He was with you,” Mahmoud recounts the conversation. “He said to me, ‘It’s smoky in the flat. We can’t see each other.’ I said to him, ‘Just try to shout and say, Omar.’ He was shouting so high. He was shouting, and he didn’t answer.”

‘Have you seen my brother?’

By 3:30 a.m., Omar, Oluwaseun, Rosemary and their daughter had battled their way to the ground floor. “One of the Syrian guys, the one that survived. He came up to us, and he goes, ‘Have you seen my brother?’” Oluwaseun hadn’t.

Mahmoud located Omar, and they called Mohammad again. “‘Where did you go? Why did you leave me?’” Mohammad asked Omar, remembers Mahmoud. “We don’t know exactly what happened.”

Mahmoud had one last phone call with Mohammad, who he says told him, “Just tell my mom to forgive me and please tell her I love them, all the family.”

As flames reached the windows of apartment 113, Mahmoud says, he thought to himself, “Mohammed, he’s not alive. He passed away.”

Sitting in a garden with the charred tower overhead, Mahmoud says, “We saw a lot of things in our life.”

Mahmoud escaped Syria a couple of years ago, making his way to Libya and surviving a journey across the Mediterranean Sea in a small wooden boat to Italy. He flew to the United Kingdom last year to build a new life with his two childhood friends. And it was finally going well, he says. He had just started a job at a local bakery.

“I lost a lot of things from Syria ... everything I had. I lost many times ... Every time we’re losing,” Mahmoud says. “What we can do? We try to live again.”

In recent days, Mahmoud has signed a new yearlong lease, but Oluwaseun, Rosemary and their daughter, like many survivors, are still staying in a hotel room, four weeks later, despite the promises of British politicians.

“We’re not charity cases. I worked hard. We worked hard,” Oluwaseun says.

He’s a site supervisor, and Rosemary is a science teacher.

“We didn’t ask for this. We lived our life like everybody else — wake up, go to work, come back, wake up, go to work, come back.”

Since the fire, Oluwaseun has been afraid of the dark and can’t sleep.

“It keeps playing in my head,” he says, his dark skin going pallid. “I could’ve saved the little boy. Even if I couldn’t do nothing about the adults, could’ve saved the little boy. That just keep playing in my head ... For what reason? Why? Why?”

http://abcnews.go.com/International/improbable-escape-apt-113-haunts-grenfell-fire-survivors/story?id=48566944
[/font]

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Demmzy15(m): 12:28pm On Jul 17, 2017
Seun, Lalasticlala, mynd44 I think this is frontpage worthy!
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Dc4life(m): 2:06pm On Jul 17, 2017
Too Long
Didn't bother to read
lipsrsealed

2 Likes

Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Nobody: 2:06pm On Jul 17, 2017
kkk
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Nobody: 2:06pm On Jul 17, 2017
Igbe
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by holatin(m): 2:06pm On Jul 17, 2017
dat heroic act could wash the dead Syrian guy of his sin when he reach heaven.


the holy Qur'an
Surah Al-Ma'idah [5:32]


And whoever saves one - it is as if
he had saved mankind entirely.
And our messengers had certainly
come to them with ......

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Kendroid: 2:07pm On Jul 17, 2017
All hail our Foreign Afonja grin

1 Like

Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by onyi4edu(f): 2:07pm On Jul 17, 2017
Omg!!! What a traumatic experience for him sad

holatin:
jn
michael142:
Igbe
OceanmorganTrix:
kkk

Ermm!!! Where you guys booking space or simply do not know what to write grin grin grin
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by free2ryhme: 2:08pm On Jul 17, 2017
Demmzy15:
Dangling from his 14th-floor window, Oluwaseun Talabi could hear people on the ground yelling up, urging him to climb back inside his apartment, No. 113, in the 24-story apartment building. A rope of knotted sheets hanging next to Oluwaseun didn’t reach the ground, more than 100 feet below.

“People were shouting, ‘Stay in your flat. They’re going to come and help. They’re going to come and help you,’” he says.

No, they’re not, Oluwaseun remembers thinking. “I wasn’t looking to die in there,” he told ABC News.

He survived, but at least 80 people died in the Grenfell Tower fire, and the death toll may rise. One month later, he’s still struggling to make sense of it all.

Survival mode

The fire, on June 14, had been burning for more than an hour by 2 a.m., and Oluwaseun was in “survival mode,” he says.

The Nigerian-born Oluwaseun, 30, looks strong and muscular, but he says he has lost a lot of weight since the blaze.

Hanging from the window ledge that morning, he asked his girlfriend, Rosemary, to hand him their 4-year-old daughter. He planned to climb down the sheets with the child in his arms. “But my daughter wasn’t having it,” he says, describing her as hysterical.

Flames had already shot up one side of the tower but were not yet visible from the family’s west-facing window. Investigators say a faulty refrigerator started the fire on the fourth floor before it spread to the top floor and, by about 2 a.m., began moving rapidly toward the west side of the building.

Just 15 minutes before Oluwaseun climbed out his window, a fire brigade arrived at apartment 113, not offering an escape route but ushering in five neighbors.

“‘Listen, your flat seems to be the safest flat at the moment,’” Oluwaseun says one of the firefighters told him. “‘We’ll be back,’ they said.”

“The Syrian refugees, they brought them into my flat,” Oluwaseun says, referring to brothers Mohammad and Omar Alhajali. “They brought an Irish guy, called Dennis ... Zainab, her 2-year-old son,” Oluweseun says, counting on his hand. “So there was eight of us altogether.”

Only four of them would escape apartment 113 alive during the chaos of the next two hours.

Grenfell Tower apartment 113

With his crying daughter still inside, Oluwaseun struggled to hoist himself back through the window; he wasn’t going down alone.

“Guess who helped me up? One of the guys that is dead,” Oluwaseun says, spitting out the word “dead.” “The Syrian guy and his brother pulled me back in because I couldn’t pull myself back in.”

One of the brothers, Mohammad, didn’t survive, and Oluwaseun slows his vivid narration of the night to note that Mohammad’s last act on earth, perhaps, was saving his life.

“The Syrian guy didn’t deserve to die,” Oluwaseun says. “I’m here, I could’ve died. I don’t deserve it.”

Mohammad, 23, lived with Omar, 25, and their best friend from Deraa, Syria, Mahmoud Alkarad, 25, next door in apartment 112.

Mahmoud happened to be out for the night, 10 minutes down the road when the fire started.

“I saw Mohammad. He was at the window,” Mahmoud, who arrived outside shortly after 1 a.m., says. He called Mohammad’s phone. “I said to him, ‘Where are you?’ ... ‘Just raise your hand’” so Mahmoud could identify him.

That was the last time Mahmoud ever saw Mohammad, raising his hand at the window. Mahmoud spent the next two hours desperately running from fireman to emergency responder, begging everyone to rescue the eight people in apartment 113.

At 2 a.m., Oluwaseun says, everyone in apartment 113 was still alive. But the next 90 minutes played out as an incomprehensible, chaotic human tragedy.

“It was like they brought them in my flat to die,” he says.

Oluwaseun remembers Zainab on the phone with her brother, her young son sitting next to his daughter on their bed at one point. He remembers Dennis’ face so blackened that Rosemary hadn’t recognized him. And he remembers one of the Syrian brothers calmly reading the Quran on the bed.

Mostly, Oluwaseun remembers his fierce tunnel vision as he tied sheets together and Rosemary’s calm. Sometime after 3 a.m., he says, he tied his daughter onto his back and prepared to climb out the window again. This time, Rosemary was going too.

“This might sound selfish, but God forgive, I hope it’s not selfish ... but I was thinking about me first, my partner and my daughter — and everybody else after.”

Before he climbed back out the window, the fire brigade yelled “Run” through the black smoke. Why at that moment and not earlier, Oluwaseun is not sure.

“I grabbed my missus by her hand, my daughter tied to my back already, and I didn’t look back. I don’t know who followed us,” he says. “I don’t know who stayed in the building. We just ran.”

At some point during those 90 minutes, Mahmoud received a phone call from Mohammad, still in apartment 113.

“‘I can’t find Omar,’ he says ... What do you mean you can’t find Omar? He was with you,” Mahmoud recounts the conversation. “He said to me, ‘It’s smoky in the flat. We can’t see each other.’ I said to him, ‘Just try to shout and say, Omar.’ He was shouting so high. He was shouting, and he didn’t answer.”

‘Have you seen my brother?’

By 3:30 a.m., Omar, Oluwaseun, Rosemary and their daughter had battled their way to the ground floor. “One of the Syrian guys, the one that survived. He came up to us, and he goes, ‘Have you seen my brother?’” Oluwaseun hadn’t.

Mahmoud located Omar, and they called Mohammad again. “‘Where did you go? Why did you leave me?’” Mohammad asked Omar, remembers Mahmoud. “We don’t know exactly what happened.”

Mahmoud had one last phone call with Mohammad, who he says told him, “Just tell my mom to forgive me and please tell her I love them, all the family.”

As flames reached the windows of apartment 113, Mahmoud says, he thought to himself, “Mohammed, he’s not alive. He passed away.”

Sitting in a garden with the charred tower overhead, Mahmoud says, “We saw a lot of things in our life.”

Mahmoud escaped Syria a couple of years ago, making his way to Libya and surviving a journey across the Mediterranean Sea in a small wooden boat to Italy. He flew to the United Kingdom last year to build a new life with his two childhood friends. And it was finally going well, he says. He had just started a job at a local bakery.

“I lost a lot of things from Syria ... everything I had. I lost many times ... Every time we’re losing,” Mahmoud says. “What we can do? We try to live again.”

In recent days, Mahmoud has signed a new yearlong lease, but Oluwaseun, Rosemary and their daughter, like many survivors, are still staying in a hotel room, four weeks later, despite the promises of British politicians.

“We’re not charity cases. I worked hard. We worked hard,” Oluwaseun says.

He’s a site supervisor, and Rosemary is a science teacher.

“We didn’t ask for this. We lived our life like everybody else — wake up, go to work, come back, wake up, go to work, come back.”

Since the fire, Oluwaseun has been afraid of the dark and can’t sleep.

“It keeps playing in my head,” he says, his dark skin going pallid. “I could’ve saved the little boy. Even if I couldn’t do nothing about the adults, could’ve saved the little boy. That just keep playing in my head ... For what reason? Why? Why?”

http://abcnews.go.com/International/improbable-escape-apt-113-haunts-grenfell-fire-survivors/story?id=48566944



Must u change the font

They are too small
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Sleyanya1(m): 2:08pm On Jul 17, 2017
cry
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by LORDKing001: 2:08pm On Jul 17, 2017
ok
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Nobody: 2:08pm On Jul 17, 2017
lalasticlala which kind font be this shocked
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by plainmirror(m): 2:09pm On Jul 17, 2017
Sounds like a scene from nollywood.
@OP have you considered a career in scriptwriting? I think you should give it a shot.
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by free2ryhme: 2:09pm On Jul 17, 2017
We no go hear word again becos dem save nigerian

The ones wey Nigerians dey save we no dey hear ooo neither does it gets front page attention
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Nobody: 2:09pm On Jul 17, 2017
Nice
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by jashar(f): 2:11pm On Jul 17, 2017
ehyah....

1 Like

Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Jeezuzpick(m): 2:11pm On Jul 17, 2017
Lemme just park here.
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by sleeknick: 2:11pm On Jul 17, 2017
sad
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by typumps: 2:13pm On Jul 17, 2017
I read it all and it really a sad incident. I pray we don't experience fire outbreak. The shock alone can't kill not to talk of that long building. I don't blame seun for being selfish, at that point it every man for himself.

2 Likes

Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Empiree: 2:13pm On Jul 17, 2017
Thought this was another fire incident in Hawaii tower yesterday.
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Shelloween(m): 2:14pm On Jul 17, 2017
free2ryhme:




Must u change the font

They are too small
damn nigga, you had to quote the whole thing?

1 Like

Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by ogashman(m): 2:15pm On Jul 17, 2017
ohh how traumatic this could ve been to u....but thank God that u survived against all odds.

1 Like

Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by HajimeSaito(m): 2:15pm On Jul 17, 2017
Demmzy15:
Seun, Lalasticlala, mynd44 I think this is frontpage worthy!

Not all followers of the Sex Award Winner ( S.A.W ) are mindless idiots intent on destruction.
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Yemi7up: 2:17pm On Jul 17, 2017
Dc4life:
Too Long
Didn't bother to read
lipsrsealed
I wish you can go back to read it.
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by Ranoscky(m): 2:18pm On Jul 17, 2017
Too bad. But thank God for your life.
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by adewumiopeyemi(m): 2:18pm On Jul 17, 2017
Ok
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by tlops(m): 2:19pm On Jul 17, 2017
Not a nice experience, to be in such situation.
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by vedaxcool(m): 2:20pm On Jul 17, 2017
Such a sad incident, may Allah reward the deceased and grant him aljannatul firdus
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by free2ryhme: 2:20pm On Jul 17, 2017
Shelloween:
damn nigga, you had to quote the whole thing?

Were your ancestors nigga undecided
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by monimekaz(m): 2:21pm On Jul 17, 2017
He just died for nothing ...war everywhere... Insanity in the world ....too much of them ...world is going to end tonight
Re: Syrian Refugees Rescued Nigerian From Fire! by ayamprecious: 2:21pm On Jul 17, 2017
Summary pls

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