17 hours ago
Thomas Naadi,BBC Africa, Accraand
Basillioh Rukanga
Locals say the structure, in a school complex, was in use despite lying unfinished for a number of years.

17 hours ago
Thomas Naadi,BBC Africa, Accraand
Basillioh Rukanga

BBC
Three people, two women and a man, have been confirmed dead after a three-storey building that was being used as a church collapsed on worshippers in the Ghanaian capital, Accra, on Sunday.
Interior Minister Muntaka Mohammed-Mubarak said 20 others, most of them women and children, had been rescued and were being treated in various hospitals. There was a "90-95% certainty" that no-one remain trapped inside, he added.
Emergency teams worked through the night under floodlights searching for victims inside the structure's remains.
The cause of its collapse, which happened after heavy rain, is unknown, with the interior minister saying investigations are under way.
The building itself, which was part of a school in Accra's New Town area, was being used despite lying unfinished for several years, according to local people.
"It's a very sad day for all of us," Mohammed-Mubarak said.
He acknowledged that it had been difficult to determine how many people had been in the building at the time of its collapse, and commended emergency responders for their quick response and rescue efforts through the night.
The national fire service has posted images on X of workers at the site as an agitated crowd mill around the scene.
A man who runs a business opposite the collapsed building said he first heard some noise from behind him and when he turned round, he saw the building coming down.
"There was dust, I couldn't see anything from the back," Amadu Mohammed Hafiz told the BBC.
He then heard people shouting from inside the building and called police, who arrived at the scene afterwards.
Other eyewitnesses described the incomplete building as poorly constructed with no major maintenance since construction started.
"Everybody in the community knows the building is very weak, yet they allowed services and activities inside," an eyewitness said.
Hafiz told the BBC that the building had looked like it "could fall anytime".
Operations to check for any more worshippers are continuing and the debris is being cleared.
The incident has reignited the debate about the structural integrity of some of the buildings in the country.
The president of the Ghana Institution of Engineering, Ludwing Annang Hesseh, said that such incidents keeps occurring because of the weak enforcement of the laws.
"We have the laws, we have the regulation and if we do things right, we will not get this problem," he told the BBC.
You may also be interested in:

Getty Images/BBC
BBC Africa podcasts

The raid led to revenge attacks in Jos, with 22 reported dead so far in one of the most volatile parts of the country.

Rabiu Kwankwaso joins the ADC, a coalition poised to take on President Tinubu in the 2027 elections.

DR Congo face Jamaica in a World Cup play-off, hoping to reach the tournament for the first time since 1974, a campaign memorable for the wrong reasons.

Former New York marathon winner Albert Korir of Kenya is banned for five years after admitting to doping.